An Exhibition of Glass Artists in Hawaii Working in the Medium of Glass

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

An Exhibition of Glass Artists in Hawaii Working in the Medium of Glass We are pleased to announce Gathering Glass; an exhibition of glass artists in Hawaii working in the medium of glass. Sponsored by Hawai’i Craftsmen. The ARTS at Marks Garage 1159 Nu’uanu Avenue Honolulu, HI 96817 (808)-521-2903, www.artsatmarks.com Eligibility Open Call to all Artists working with the medium of glass, and living in the State of Hawaii. All artwork must be of original design, utilizing glass as a significant role in the piece, created within the last two years and be available for purchase. Awards $1,000 First Prize, $500 second prize, as well as two honorable mention receiving a $250 gift certificate awards for Bullseye or Olympic Color and an upcoming artist award. Return shipping for selected work shipped from neighbor islands may be covered by our sponsors. All sold work is subject to gallery fees: 60% to the artists and 40% to The ARTS at Marks Garage. Timeline Exhibition: December 3 – 28, 2019. Deadline for submission of images of artwork: 11:59PM November 4, 2019 Jurying: November 6, 2019 Selected Artist Notification: November 8, 2019 Deadline for delivering accepted work in person or by shipping: no sooner than Thursday, 11/28 and no later than Saturday, 11/30 during public gallery hours, noon - 5pm; Installation: Sunday and Monday December 1-2, 2019, 9:00AM to 5:00PM Installation: Sunday and Monday December 1-2, 2019, 9:00AM to 5:00PM Opening Reception: First Friday, December 6, 2019 6:00PM- 9:00PM Pickup of work: All works must be picked-up Sunday December 29, 2019 10:00AM – 3:00PM unless other arrangements are made with The ARTS at Marks Garage. Submission Process Three submissions of artwork per applicant are permitted. Images of artwork will be accepted by jpeg files only before midnight Friday, November 4. Please email all images (no larger than 1000 x 1000 pixels) and completed entry form (see below) to [email protected]. All images should be labeled in the following manner: “YourInitials_01_title of piece.jpg”, “YourInitials_02_title of piece.jpg” and so on. For example: “MM_01_Titletitletitle” Late or incomplete entries will not be considered for the exhibition. Selection Process Artists are encouraged to include a written statement about each submission up to 30 words on the entry form. Jury selection will take place on November 6, 2019. Artists whose work is selected will be contacted by November 8, 2019. Curators Rick Mills is a professor and director who established the Glass Program and Visiting Artist Program at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. His works are in the collection of Elton John, Hawaii State Art Museum, Glasmuseet Ebeltoft (Denmark), Honolulu Museum of Art, Museum of American Glass (New Jersey) and Royal College of Art (London). He is widely exhibited locally, nationally and internationally in places such as the International Glass Kanazawa Japan, Crossings France-Hawaii, The Contemporary Museum Hawaii, Friesen Gallery in Seattle, and Museum of Northwest Art, Washington. Rich Richardson is an Arts Consultant, Tiny Home Builder and co-founder of Chinatown Artists Lofts, First Friday Honolulu and The ARTS at Marks Garage. He was profiled as One of 6 people Making a Difference in Honolulu Magazine in November, 2013. Drop-off / Pickup Deadline for delivering accepted work for the exhibition may be done either in person or by shipping by Saturday, November 30, 2019 at 5pm. Deliver selected artworks to: The ARTS at Marks Garage, 1159 Nuuanu Avenue Honolulu, HI 96819. Shipping and insurance charges to The ARTS at Marks Garage are the responsibility of the accepted artists. All works must be picked-up from the gallery Sunday 12/29 between 10am to 3pm. Delivery and return of work after the exhibition is the sole responsibility of the artists, however, return shipping to the neighbor island artists may be generously paid for by our sponsors, please inquire. Unclaimed work will be disposed of at the discretion of The ARTS at Marks Garage. Contact The Arts at Marks Garage for any other arrangements. Gallery Involvement All accepted artists are encouraged to sign up for a Gallery Host shift to monitor the gallery and interact with visitors who may have questions about glass. Gallery Host shifts are from 12-2:30 or 2:30-5 on Saturdays or Wednesdays. Participating artists who volunteer for hot glass demonstrations, installation or de-installation of the gallery would be greatly appreciated. Liability Although the utmost care will be taken during the installation of the exhibit, we advise that all artists carry their own insurance. Neither our sponsors nor The ARTS at Marks Garage will be held responsible for any damages or theft of artwork while on the premises during the length of the exhibit. Retail Opportunity A small part of the gallery will be curated at the discretion of The ARTS at Marks Garage for small collectable pieces priced at under $100 dollars. Glass holiday gifts and collectables that are easy to transport will available for cash-and-carry and restocked periodically. Each artist is awarded a limited amount of space in this section. All sold work is subject to gallery fees: 60% to the artists, 40% to The ARTS at Marks Garage. Resources for Questions Please call 808-778-6392 or e-mail [email protected] for more information. .
Recommended publications
  • Kamehameha Schools
    KAMEHAMEHA SCHOOLS KAPāLAMA CAMPUS HONOLULU, HAWAI‘I MIDDLE SCHOOL PRINCIPAL JULY 1, 2019 KSBE.EDU Mission Kamehameha Schools’ mission follows Founder Princess Bernice Pauahi Bishop’s desire to create educational opportunities in perpetuity to improve the capability and well-being of people of Hawaiian ancestry. Today, that legacy is being fulfilled by KS on three K-12 campuses and 29 preschools across the state, as well as through summer and community programs, partnerships, and K-12 and college scholarships ($30M) that touch a total of 47,000 students. MIDDLE SCHOOL PRINCIPAL Kamehameha Schools (KS), Hawai‘i, the largest independent school in the U.S., is seeking a new Poʻo Kumu (Principal) to lead its Kula Waena (Middle School), on the Kapālama campus, located on a spectacular 600-acre hillside campus on the island of O‘ahu. The overarching goal is for Poʻo Kumu to lead students, families, alumni, and staff in achieving the compelling educational mission and vision of Kamehameha Schools: that all haumāna (learners) achieve postsecondary educational success enabling good life and career choices. Kamehameha also envisions that learners will have grounding in both Christian and Hawaiian values and become leaders who contribute to their communities, both locally and globally. This new leader will foster an exceptional learning environment that promotes a purposeful, positive, and progressive school ethos in which students and staff feel inspired, engaged, safe, and valued. The Principal will also create conditions and build capacity for student-centered teaching and learning through powerful student, staff, and parent learning communities. SCHOOL HISTORY As the last royal descendant of the Kamehameha line, Bernice Pauahi Bishop inherited thousands of acres totaling approximately 9% of the total lands in Hawai‘i, making her the largest landholder in the kingdom.
    [Show full text]
  • Iolani Palace Start Time
    10–13 February 2021 A celebration of contemporary art and a dialogue around visual culture, presenting local and global voices to the arts communities in Hawai‘i. WED • 10 Feb 2021 | Iolani Palace START TIME 10am [HST] Opening + Welcome with Kahu Kordell Kekoa • Hawai‘i Contemporary 3pm [EST] 9am [NZDT] Keynote Conversation • Ai Weiwei Global artist discusses social activism and his artistic practice, past and present. FUTHERING TIMING TO COME. Ai Weiwei, Artist TIMES SUBJECT TO Melissa Chiu, HT22 Curatorial Director CHANGE. Art Summit Dialogues — Live A live discussion about Melissa Chiu’s keynote conversation with Ai Weiwei. Sara Raza, Associate Director, Hawai‘i Contemporary Xiaoyu Weng, Associate Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Hawai‘i Triennial 2022 Curators’ Roundtable Curators discuss the premise for Hawai‘i Triennial 2022 (HT22): Pacific Century – E Ho‘omau no Moananuiākea Melissa Chiu, HT22 Curatorial Director Miwako Tezuka, HT22 Associate Curator Drew Kahu‘āina Broderick, HT22 Associate Curator Art Summit Dialogues — Live A live digest/discussion of the Curators’ Roundtable. Fumio Nanjo, Senior Advisor, Mori Art Museum • Curatorial Director, HB17 Nina Tonga, Curator of Pacific Art, Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa • Curator, HB19 Josh Tengan, Curator, Pu‘uhonua Society, Nā Mea Hawai‘i • Assistant Curator, HB19 Talk + Screening • Karrabing Film Collective Elizabeth A. Povinelli (founding member) shares a visual essay on frontier violence, reclamation, and the stakes of staying connected to ancestral places. Screening of short films: The Jealous One (2017) / Staying with the Ancestors, Keeping Country Open, and How We Make Karrabing (2020). Still from The Jealous One (2017) THUR • 11 Feb 2021 | Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum START TIME 10am [HST] Welcome from Hawai‘i Contemporary at Bishop Museum 3pm [EST] 9am [NZDT] Keynote Conversation • Homi K.
    [Show full text]
  • Position Specification
    Position Specification Honolulu Museum of Art Director Position Specification Director Honolulu Museum of Art The Client The Honolulu Museum of Art (HoMA) was founded in 1927 by Anna Rice Cooke, the daughter of a prominent missionary family. She married Charles Montague Cooke, also of a prominent missionary family, and settled in Honolulu, building a home in 1882 on Beretania Street, where HoMA resides today. From the beginning, Anna Rice Cooke, who spoke fluent Hawaiian, wanted a Museum that reflected the unique attributes of Hawai’i’s multicultural makeup. Not bound by the traditional western idea of art Museums, she also wanted to create an institution that showcased the island’s natural beauty and climate in an open and airy environment. Her thoughtful consideration is evidenced in the charming courtyards that interconnect the various galleries throughout the Museum. The permanent collection has grown from 500 works to more than 50,000 pieces spanning 5,000 years. The Museum has one of the largest single collections of Asian and Pan-Pacific art in the United States, including an unrivaled collection by artists of Hawai’i and the Pacific. The collection also contains significant holdings in American and European painting and decorative arts, 19th- and 20th-century art, an extensive collection of works on paper, Asian textiles, and traditional works from Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. Other highlights include the Samuel H. Kress collection of Italian Renaissance paintings and the James A. Michener collection of ukiyo-e prints. HoMA is dedicated to the collection, preservation, interpretation and teaching of the visual arts, and the presentation of exhibitions, performing arts and public programs specifically relevant to Hawai’i’s ethnically diverse community.
    [Show full text]
  • Hawai'i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts Solicitation
    Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts Solicitation for Hawai‘i State Art Museum (HiSAM) CURATORIAL PROGRAMMING FOR 2022 IN RELATION TO HONOLULU TRIENNIAL Submission Deadline: July 23, 2021 2:00 pm HST BACKGROUND The Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) was established in 1965 as the official state arts agency of Hawai‘i to promote, perpetuate and preserve culture and the artsin Hawai‘i. The purpose of the Art in Public Places Program is enhance the environmental quality of the public state buildings and spaces for the enjoyment and educational and cultural enrichment of the public. http://sfca.hawaii.gov/ The Hawai‘i State Art Museum (HiSAM) is located on the 2nd floor of the No. 1 Capitol District Building, 250 South Hotel Street, in downtown Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Admission is always free. The museum is open Monday – Saturday, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm, and with extended hours on the first Friday of each month from 6:00 – 9:00 p.m., except for state and federal holidays. View some of the best contemporary art from across the state of Hawaiʻi in our exhibits. Solicitation is for temporary assistance to develop, implement and curate exhibits at the Hawaii State Art Museum and provide programs and community events to increase access to the arts during the Honolulu Triennial. Contract Dates-August 2, 2021-December 31-2022 Opening dates of exhibit and programs to take place in Spring 2022 with statewide public engagement including but not limited to Hawaii State Art Museum, Bishop Museum and Iolani Palace.
    [Show full text]
  • Honolulu Academy of Arts Redacted.Pdf
    Applicant: Honolulu Academy of AI1s (dba Honolulu Museum of AI1) Application for Grants and Subsidies Ifany item is not applicable to the request, the applicant should enter "not applicable ". I. Background and Summary This section shall clearly and concisely summarize and highlight the contents ofthe request in such a way as to provide the State Legislature with a broad understanding of the request. Include the following: 1. A brief description of the applicant's background; Founded in 1927, the Honolulu Museum of Art (formerly known as the Honolulu Academy of Arts) is one of the world's premier art museums. The museum presents international caliber special exhibitions that engage a wide variety of audiences including residents and visitors to Hawai'i. The Honolulu Museum of Art features a collection of more than 50,000 works of art spanning 5,000 years including works by Hokusai, van Gogh, Gauguin, Monet, Picasso and Warhol, as well as traditional Asian and Hawaiian art. Located in three of Honolulu's most beautiful buildings, the Honolulu Museum of Art is dedicated to the collection, preservation, interpretation, and teaching of the visual arts, as well as the presentation of exhibitions, film and video, performance, and public programs specifically relevant to Hawai 'i' s ethnically diverse community. New York architect Bertram Goodhue designed the 1927 building as a series of galleries that surround courtyards, taking advantage of natural light and Hawai'i's climate. In 2001, the museum expanded with the Henry R. Luce Pavilion Complex, designed by John Hara. Today, the building features six interior courtyards, 29 galleries of art, a cafe, shop, and the Doris Duke Theatre.
    [Show full text]
  • Hawaii! HONOLULU for View from Your Living Room Window
    Your typical day Learn English & Have Fun invites you to in Beautiful Hawaii! HONOLULU for View from your living room window. MLR Comments and Thanks “A perfect way to learn English: Get Mary as your prof. and live with her for a month!” - Sylvie (learner) English “Thank you for taking such good care of our daughter while she was studying English this summer. You made Homestays her trip so wonderful that she wants to go back again next year!” - Mr. M. (parent) for E.S.L. in “Auntie Mary, thank you for your hospitality and help during my week-long trip to Hawaii. It was very nice, relaxing, and interesting to stay with you, and visit your favorite local places.” - JJ (learner) HAWAII “Dr. Radnofsky has always demonstrated an open mind Stay with an American professor and a willingness to tackle challenges of all kinds, which while learning English and strikes me as the hallmark of a truly gifted and dedicated educator.” - Dr. S. (colleague) visiting Hawaiian paradise! “Dr. Radnofsky creates great activities, shares her Each stay includes: knowledge generously, and is patient with beginners. I • Private bedroom & bathroom in large, learned a whole lot from her.” - Carol (learner) air-conditioned Waikiki apartment • Access to pool, jacuzzi, gym, putting green • Wireless Internet The Socrates Institute is a 501(C)(3) nonprofit organization incorporated in 1995. Our mission is to provide educational materials • Home-cooked breakfast, lunch, & dinner and services to make teaching and learning more effective, rewarding, • ESL study materials, books, etc. and beneficial to society. Your participation and tax deductible • Personalized English lessons in the morning contributions allows us to create and disseminate high quality educational materials to learners around the world.
    [Show full text]
  • LSTA Five-Year Plan, 2008-2012
    Hawaii State Public Library System LSTA Five-Year Plan, 2008-2012 For submission to the Institute of Museum and Library Services State Programs 1800 M Street NW, 9th Floor Washington, DC 20236-5802 Office of the State Librarian Hawaii State Public Library System 44 Merchant Street Honolulu, HI 96813 Jo Ann Schindler, State Librarian June 30, 2007 HSPLS LSTA Plan 2008-2012 June 30, 2007 Page 2 OVERVIEW This Five Year Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) Plan defines the direction and goals which the Hawaii State Public Library System (HSPLS) will adopt to improve our technological resources to better serve our public through its network of 51 public libraries on six islands throughout Hawaii. Vision Statement: Connecting Communities with Collections State Librarian Jo Ann Schindler envisions a library system which constantly strives to improve access to information, research collections, and recreational reading. She seeks to ensure that HSPLS will provide the State’s life-long learners of all ages: • with a resource-rich environment that celebrates life, the human experience, and Hawaii and the world’s cultural heritage, and • with the information resources and research skills and strategies needed to succeed as informed citizens of tomorrow. Mission Statement The mission of the Hawaii State Public Library System is to provide Hawaii’s residents, in all walks of life, and at each stage of their lives, with access to education, information, programs and services, and to teach and nurture the love of reading and the habit of life-long learning. Needs Assessment This document begins with a needs assessment describing our State’s physical setting and the challenges which we are now facing in providing library services and collections in a time of on-going fiscal constraints and high vacancy counts.
    [Show full text]
  • Children & Youth
    The State Capitol and surrounding areas will overflow with youthful energy at the 18TH ANNUAL ChildrenChildrenHo‘ohanohano && - HonorYouthYouth Our Children DayDay SUNDAY • OCT. 2, 2011 • 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Join over 300 exhibitors and community organizations for a day of free interactive, educational, and fun activities for the whole family under the “Big Top” tents and on the grounds surrounding the capitol. • Games & rides • “Teen Zone” • Demonstrations • “Green Zone” • Guided tours • Food & drink vendors 8780-0032 5:11 JR • Non-stop entertainment Children & Youth Day is the first major event of Children & Youth Month celebrated each year in October. Free parking available at all neighboring state and county public parking lots. SPONSORS: For more information or a complete listing of events, visit www.HawaiiCYD.org. • Designed and printed courtesy of HMSA. CelebratingCelebrating Hawaii’sHawaii’s 20112011 ChildrenChildren && YouthYouth MonthMonth Ho‘ohanohano - Honor Our Children Sunday, October 2, 2011 Sunday, October 2, 2011 (continued) Sunday to Saturday, October 16-22, 2011 CHILDREN AND YOUTH DAY EARLY LEARNING ZONE TEEN READ WEEK: HAWAII STATE PUBLIC LIBRARY SYSTEM 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. (State Capitol Grounds) www.LibrariesHawaii.org HawaiiCYD.org Sponsored by Good Beginnings Alliance. Join public libraries statewide to celebrate Teen Read Week (October 17-23), Sponsored by Hawaii Children’s Trust Fund, McDonald’s, Honolulu Star- State Capitol Grounds. Free. A family friendly area that provides families with its theme “Picture It @ Your library!” Read graphic novels and other Advertiser, Olelo, Cox Radio, Hawaiian Hope, State of Hawaii and the City and with young children an opportunity to learn about services and programs that illustrated materials, seek out creative books, or imagine the world through County of Honolulu.
    [Show full text]
  • SFCA 2020 Annual Report
    State Foundation on Culture and the Arts C2020ulture ANNUAL REPORT State Foundation on Culture and the Arts TABLE OF Contents 00 Board of Commissioners 01 Mission 02 Year in Review 03 2019–2020 Budget 04 Strategic Plan 06 Community Mahalo / FY21 & FY22 Goals 08 COVID-19 Impact Infographic 10 Education 14 Schools Served 16 Feature: Culture 20 Community Grants O F 22 Biennium Grants BoardCOMMISSIONERS Folk & Traditional Arts Partnership 24 July 01, 2019 – June 30, 2020 28 Art in Public Places Program Lloyd Unebasami, Chairperson 32 Hawai‘i State Art Museum Susan Browne, At-Large Nalani Brun, Kaua‘i County 35 ARTS First Partners Jane Clement, Hawai‘i County 38 SFCA Financial Summary: Revenues Ronald Michioka, City & County of Honolulu 39 SFCA Financial Summary: Expenses Karen Tiller Polivka, At-Large Clyde Sakamoto, Maui County 40 SFCA Financial Summary: Excess Revenues Sherman Warner, At-Large 41 SFCA Staff Allison Wong, At-Large 2020 ANNUAL REPORT Red and orange pennants “Mahuika” by Māori artists Mata Aho Collective, on display as a part of the Honolulu Biennial at the Hawai‘i State Art Museum. MissionTo promote, perpetuate VisionWE CELEBRATE and emphasize the cultural richness and diversity of Hawai‘i. and preserve culture and WE BELIEVE in equitable access, transparency, the arts in Hawai‘i. and community-based decision making. WE SHARE in the responsibility to perpetuate the Native Hawaiian culture and the arts. WE VIEW art and cultural engagement as critical to the educational, economic, and social well-being of individuals, communities, and the state of Hawai‘i. 01 State Foundation on Culture and the Arts Year IN REVIEW Fiscal Year 2020 began with normal expansion of programs, Major shifts of how we work included all “in person” public and streamlining processes, hiring and training of new staff.
    [Show full text]
  • Hawai'i State Art Museum Events
    Hawai‘i State Art Museum Events Accession Exhibit Opening Art Lunch Friday, September 2nd Tuesday, September 27th 6:00 - 9:00 PM 12:00 - 1:00 PM Hawaiian Tools Opening reception for the Accession exhibit at HiSAM, featuring recent acquisitions from Gordon ‘Umialiloalahanauokalakaua Kai the Art in Public Places Collection of the will share his 45+ years of experience Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the crafting na mea Hawai‘i, including na mea Arts. Live music with Ledward Kaapana, beer kaua (things of war) and implements of daily and wine will be sold by Friends of the use (such as the pahoa (dagger), ihe (spear), Hawai‘i State Art Museum. Second floor hina‘i hinalea (fish trap) or poi pounder. Umi Sculpture Lobby. and his wife Janice are part of a small group of Native Hawaiian artists working to perpetuate the craft of making tools and weapons that were once essential to survival in these islands. Umi Kai will talk about the time-consuming process of transforming raw materials into functional, high quality works of art and show examples of his craftsmanship. First floor Multipurpose Room (to the right as you enter). www.kaikompany.com Art Lunch is a free monthly art lecture series at the Hawai‘i State Art Museum, held on the last Tuesday of the month. Bring your own lunch (or buy one at Artizen cafe!) and feed your creativity! First Friday Second Saturday Friday, September 2nd Saturday, September 10th 6:00 - 9:00 PM Sculpture Accession Exhibit Opening Ledward Kaapana The Hawai‘i Craftsmen will provide all materials and instruction for making Live music with Ledward Kaapana, a slack sculptures with wood or with paper and tape key guitar and ukulele master.
    [Show full text]
  • Newcomers Club of Honolulu Tours (June 2014 – Dec
    Newcomers Club of Honolulu Tours (June 2014 – Dec. 2020) 2020 Tours 2017 Tours Virtual Tour: The Boston Pops - Christmas Album Hawai'i Symphony Orchestra Virtual Tour: 50 Famous Pieces of Classical Music U. S. Army Museum Fort DeRussy Virtual Tour: Oahu Travel Guide PBS Hawai'i Virtual Tour: Reimagining Doris Duke's Shangri La Hawaii State Art Museum (HiSAM) Virtual Tour: Koko Crater Botanical Gardens East-West Center Virtual Tour: The USS Arizona at Pearl Harbor Japanese Cultural Center of Hawai'i (JCCH) Virtual Tour: The Honolulu Zoo Twilight Tour The Royal Hawaiian Hotel Hawaiian Railway Society & Model Train Museum Honolulu Zoo Twilight Tour Arcadia Retirement Community The Liljestrand House Kualoa Ranch, Hollywood's Hawaii Backlot 2019 Tours Holiday Pops Concert 2016 Tours Manoa Chocolate Factory Hawaii's Plantation Village Diamond Head Theater Backstage National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Private screening of the "Downton Abbey" movie (NOAA) Center, Ford Island Broadway in Hawaii - Phantom of the Opera North Shore Coffee Tour & Shark's Cove for Lunch Kahalu'u Gallery and Gardens Windward Coast Road Trip and Beach Picnic The Hawaii State Library Hawai'i Mission Houses Museum Honolulu Museum of Art Ho'omaluhia Botanical Garden Honolulu Fire Museum and Educational Center Gemstone Lucoral Museum Queen Emma Summer Palace Honolulu Police Department Headquarters Kawaiaha'o Church University of Hawaii Hamilton Library's Honolulu Coffee Experience Center Preservation Department Honolulu Fire Museum and Educational Center 2018 Tours Holiday Pops Concert 2015 Tours Hawaii Pacific University Holiday Shopping at Aloha Stadium Swap Meet Culinary Institute of the Pacific Lion Coffee Factory Kahala Hotel and Resort Board of Water Supply Waihe'e Tunnel Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum Univ.
    [Show full text]
  • A Downtown Noontime Lunch and Learn:–Cont’D
    July 2014 A Downtown Noontime JULY Lunch and Learn: FREE EVENTS he last Tuesday of every month, ence. Audiences have made prints and AT HISAM arts and culture aficionados make mini-books, sang in Japanese and Hawai- their way to the Hawai‘i State ian, danced, tried their hands at Chinese The public is invited to these free T events for July 2014 to be held at Art Museum for the Art Lunch noon- opera theatrical sword-fighting, played musical instruments, and even participat- the Hawai‘i State Art Museum in the No.1 Capitol District Build- ed in building a “mini-Hawaiian hale”. ing at 250 South Hotel Street in “Hawaiian saddlemaker Albert downtown Honolulu. See feature Moniz finished his Art Lunch by bring- stories and photos of these events ing the audience with him out on the in this enewsletter. Not subscribed lawn and cracking a very long bullwhip to eNews? Join here for monthly in the air,” reminisced Museum Educa- updates. tor Susan Hogan. “I will never forget Lloyd Sing with apprentice Mahi`ai Lance La Pierre how the sound bounced off Ali‘i Tower First Friday with a resounding CRACK!” On break for the Fourth of July time lecture series. Launched in January As of July 1st, 2014, 115 Art Lunch- Second Saturday 2005 as a public engagement project by es have filled the Multipurpose Room What’s So Positive about Negative then Museum Educator Michael Naylor, with laughter and learning. One of the Space? the series has continued to feature an Saturday, June 14, 2014 incredible line-up of notable artists and 11 a.m.-3 p.m.
    [Show full text]