This week, I’m honored to feature six artists who offer a glimpse into the vast complexity and nuance of Asian America. While diverse in their image-making, the artists share a common thread: an urge to be seen and recognized through personal narratives put forth on one’s own terms. Work by the artists featured this week […]
Archives for October 2020
Now You See Me || Jennifer Ling Datchuk
This week, I’m honored to feature six artists who offer a glimpse into the vast complexity and nuance of Asian America. While diverse in their image-making, the artists share a common thread: an urge to be seen and recognized through personal narratives put forth on one’s own terms. As viewers, the intricacies of these narratives […]
Now You See Me || Priya Kambli: Buttons for Eyes
This week, I’m honored to feature six artists who offer a glimpse into the vast complexity and nuance of Asian America. While diverse in their image-making, the artists share a common thread: an urge to be seen and recognized through personal narratives put forth on one’s own terms. As viewers, the intricacies of these narratives […]
Now You See Me || Jerry Takigawa: Balancing Cultures
This week, I’m honored to feature six artists who offer a glimpse into the vast complexity and nuance of Asian America. While diverse in their image-making, the artists share a common thread: an urge to be seen and recognized through personal narratives put forth on one’s own terms. As viewers, the intricacies of these narratives […]
Moved To Act! Demonstrations, Marches, Political Actions
Moved To Act! Demonstrations, Marches, Political Actions was originally the brainchild of photographer/writer, Ellen Feldman, and photographer/gallerist, Karen Davis. Feldman had authored a book about the Women’s Marches of 2017 (We Who March: Photographs and Reflections on the Women’s March, January 2017) and the two women thought images from the book would make a great […]
Focus on Self-Portraiture: Sara J. Winston
I first encountered to work of Sara J. Winston on Instagram. I saw that she was a new mother, like me, and that she had chronic illness, like me. Anyone who has had to sit through hours of infusions recognizes the hand and needle shots. I tried to photograph them for years but was never […]