FUSION - Tracing Asian Migration to the Americas through AMA's Collection

Past Event

June 13, 2013, 6:00 PM to September 15, 2013, 12:00 AM EDT

FUSION-Tracing Asian Migration to the Americas  through AMA’s Collection

Opening Reception: June 13, 2013 at 6pm
On View: June 13 - September 15, 2013

 

AMA ׀ Art Museum of the Americas          

201 18th Street, NW          

Washington, DC 20006

 

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION Through AMA’s permanent  collection, one  of the most vital sources of modern and contemporary Latin American and  Caribbean art in the United    States, this exhibition examines and generates a dialogue about cultural  diversity. This is accomplished by exploring the migration of artists or their  families to the Americas  from Asia during the second half of the 19th  century and the first half of the 20th century.  By addressing the multiple layers of cultural  exchange, this exhibition aims to enhance understanding of the complex nature  of modern Latin American and Caribbean  societies. Tied to OAS values, and a selection of its observer countries, this  exhibition promotes the cultural diversity of and migration to the Americas and  initiates an exchange of contributions that this multiculturalism has generated.                    

As Latin American studies  scholars Mario Margulis and Birgitta Leander point out, in Latin America and  the Caribbean “the fusion of different  ethnicities is extremely important and gives rise to new cultural phenomena...  such as in language, arts, ideas, values, and beliefs.”

Providing a deeper  understanding of the works within AMA’s collection, the exhibition will illustrate  the convergence of the multiple cultural elements that make up the artist’s  identity and what impact – or lack thereof – these elements have on his or her works. 

The exhibition will discuss  migration of Asian peoples, including Japanese, Chinese, Indian and Indonesian immigrants.  Labor shortages of the mid-1800s through the 1930s drew workers from Asia. The exhibition will show how these various groups  arrived to the Americas, integrated  into local societies, and impacted the visual arts in their new countries: Brazil, Peru,  Cuba, Suriname, Argentina,  and Trinidad and Tobago.

Artists include Japanese-Brazilian Tomie Ohtake who uses  gestural strokes that echo calligraphic styles, Cuba’s  Wilfredo Lam who is of Chinese ancestry, and Suriname’s Seoki Irodikromo who  clearly portrays his Indonesian heritage in his works.

AMA’s collection reflects  the multi-layered cultural composition of Latin American and Caribbean  societies. By engaging with the wide cultural spectrum represented by these  artworks, viewers will gain a richer understanding of modern art and culture of  the Americas.

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