Tuesday, September 07, 2010

Individual Artists Fellowship

Visual Arts
2008 Deborah Gottheil Nehmad

2008 Laura Ruby

Performing Arts
2006 Rev. Dennis D.K. Kamakahi (music composition)

2006 Yukie P. Shiroma (dance choreography)

Visual Arts
2006 Wayne Levin (photography)

2006 Yida Wang (painting)

Performing Arts
2002 Rachel Berman (dance)


2002 Kenny Endo (music, ethnic music composer)


2002 Karen Yamamoto Hackler (theatre, playwright)

("Eco Circus" 2002 Play @ Kennedy Center article) http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2002/Apr/26/en/en17a.html

2002 Phyllis S.K. Look (theatre, director)


2002 Lisa Matsumoto (theatre, playwright)


(Remembering Lisa Matsumoto article)

2002 Donald Reid Womack (music, chamber)


2002 Matthew Wright (dance, choreographer)


Visual Arts
2000 Maureen-Michele Kaili Chun (conceptual art)



2000 Charles H. Cohan (printmaker)


2000 Sally French (painting)


2000 Rick Mills (glass)


2000 Charles Souza (sculpture)

2000 Romolo Valencia

2000 Fae Yamaguchi


Performing Arts
1999 Celia Chun
(Thesis Work 2007 "Spring Footholds" @ Kennedy Theatre)

1999 Elmer Kudo

1999 Herbert Mahelona

1999 Lynne Nakasone

1999 John Signor

John Signor (Musical Director) has worked on Waikiki Nei and ‘Ulalena and created sound design for Hanau Ka Moku and Kahekili. He holds graduate degrees from Juilliard,

California Institute of the Arts, and the University of Miami. He uses his talents as a multi-instrumentalist to compose for dance, theater, and film and as a teacher at LCC.




1999 David Ward
Seabury Hall faculty member. Dance degree from Portland State

1999 Harry Wong III
("What I'm Reading" article on Harry Wong - Kumu Kahua Theatre Director)

Visual Arts and Crafts
1998 Maile Andrade (mixed media)


1998 Gaye Chan (conceptual art)

1998 Donald Dugal (drawing)
(Don Dugal works from "Faculty Exhibtion" 2005)

1998 Patricia Hickman (fiber)

1998 Hanae Uechi Mills (painting)
"Hanae Uechi Mills figurative and still life monoprints, and vitreographs combine her mixed- media painting and pastel techniques with printmaking. She has an MFA from the University of Hawaiʻi and is currently a private art tutor for children. Mills received the SFCA Individual Artist Fellowship which gave her and fellow art recipient in Sculpture, the late Michael Tom, the opportunity to offer a children's art workshop at Linekona. Her work is included in collections such as the SFCA, Neiman Marcus, Pilchuck Glass School Print Archives in Washington, and Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp, Belgium. In 2003, Mills' figurative monoprint "Sensei" of Koganji Temple, was awarded Juror's Choice in the inagural Shaefer Portrait Competition at the Maui Arts and Cultural Center ." - from the 32nd Annual "Commitment to Excellence" Art Exhibition brochure August 17-26, 2010

1998 Frank Sheriff (sculpture)



1998 Michael Tom (sculpture)

Music Composition
1997 Jay Kauka (music, Hawaiian)
(lyrics for Ka Wailele ʻO Nuʻuanu)


1997 Neil McKay (orchestra)

1997 J. Mark Scearce (orchestra)


1997 Jerre Tanner (orchestra)

1997 Alan Trubitt (chamber)
(Memorial blog + obituary)


1997 Donald Reid Womack (orchestra)
see 2002 info.

1997 Dr. Byron Yasui (band)
Byron has been on the music theory/composition faculty at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa since 1972, where he presently chairs the graduate studies in music. Dr. Yasui has performed as an ukulele soloist with the Honolulu Symphony and is recognized as a master of both jazz and traditional ukulele styles.



Dance, Theater and Photography
1996 Cheryl Flaharty (dance, choreographer)
(Artistic Director for IONA - click "Inside IONA")
http://www.iona360.com/home.htm



1996 Eva Lee (dance, choreographer)
(Art Lunch lecturer Sept. 2007)

1996 Peter Rockford Espiritu (dance, choreographer)

(Audio MP3 interview "Long Story Short with Leslie Wilcox" Aug. 2008)

1996 Renee Iijima (photography)

(Honolulu Academy of Arts: Artists of Hawaii 2000 article)


1996 Victoria Kneubuhl (theatre, playwright)


1996 Anne K. Landgraf (photography)
KCC Faculty Member

1996 Franco Salmoiraghi (photography)


Visual Arts and Crafts
1995 Sean K.L. Browne (sculpture)


1995 Dorothy Faison (painting)



1995 John Koga (sculpture)


1995 Hans Ladislaus (sculpture)

1995 John Takami Morita (printmaking)


1995 Esther Shimazu (ceramics)


1995 Glen Yamanoha (painting)

1995 Doug Young (painting)

Monday, June 07, 2010

Hiʻiakaikapoliopele

Hiʻiakaikapoliopele: Visual Stories by Contemporary Native Hawaiian Artists
Diamond Head Gallery, Second Floor May 7, 2010 - July 17, 2010


"This exhibit features selected works from
Hiʻiakaikapoliopele: Visual Stories by Contemporary Native Hawaiian Artists, an invitational exhibition organized by Maui Arts & Cultural Center in fall 2009 with partial support from the County of Maui and Kauahea Inc. Five works from this exhibit were purchased for the Art in Public Places Collection.

The participating artists are Mark Chai, Hoaka Delos Reyes, Solomon Enos, Puni Kukahiko, Pualani Lincoln Maielua, Marques Hanalei Marzan, Matthew Kawika Ortiz, Carl F.K. Pao, Abigail Romanchak, Maika‘i Tubbs, and Miki‘oi Wichman.

The artists drew inspiration from the books recently published by Awaiaulu: "Ka Mo‘olelo o Hi‘iakaikapoliopele," the Hawaiian language text, and "The Epic Tale of Hi‘iakaikapoliopele," the English translation. They tell the story of Hi‘iaka’s odyssey through the Hawaiian Islands. This version by Ho‘oulumāhiehie appeared originally as a daily series in the Hawaiian-language newspaper "Ka Na‘i Aupuni," from 1905 to 1906.

Gallery Director Neida Bangerter of the MACC’s Schaefer International Gallery curated the exhibition. Artist and Assistant Professor of Art at the University of Hawai‘i, Maile Andrade, MACC’s Cultural Program Director, Hōkūlani Holt, and Executive Director of Awaiaulu, Dr. Puakea Nogelmeier, served as consultants. Holt and Nogelmeier also served as advisors to Ho‘oulu: The Inspiration of Hula, currently in HiSAM’s Diamond Head Gallery.

MACC’s exhibit complements the "Roots" section of Ho‘oulu: The Inspiration of Hula, which also illustrates Hi‘iaka’s epic tale through works from the APP Collection and original paintings by visual artist Solomon Enos."

-Exhibit information from SFCA page


Artwork
Pieces purchased for the APP Collection

Hiʻiaka's Skirt Becomes A Surfboard for Lohiau
Mark A. Chai
recycled green plastic, reclaimed wood, 2009

Wahine ʻōmaʻo
Marques Marzan
naʻau puaʻa (pig gut), 2009

He ʻIwa Ke Aloha E Hoʻomao Aʻe Nei
Abigail Romanchak
etching ink, paper, carborundum, 2009

Pūhenehene
Pualani Lincoln Maielua
kapa from wild wauke of Kalopa, natural dyes, 2009

Carl Franklin Kaʻailāʻau Pao
acrylic and pencil, 2009

(for more information on artists please continue reading)

Newspaper Article

Cultural Connections
By Lehia Apana The Maui News 9.27.2009

'O ka hele a ka wahine u'i

At the passage of a beautiful woman

Meha ka leo i ke kula

The voices on the plain are stilled

'A'ohe hauwala'au a na manu

The chatter of the birds is silenced

Ua la'i ka nohona me ka maluhia.

Life is made peaceful and calm.

- excerpt from "The Epic Tale of Hi'iakaikapoliopele"


Exhibit Signage and Artwork Labels
The adventurous tale of Hiʻiakaikapoliopele is timeless. It embodies
relationships of love, power and duty, connecting Hawaiian customs
of the past to cultural values of today. Every time the story is told it
will influence the identity of generations now and to come.

Kau ka moʻolelo punihei no Hiʻiakaikapoliopele i kona wā iho nō.
Hoʻokino ihola ia i nā pilina o ke aloha ka mana a me ke kuleana,
e hoʻopili ana i nā loina o ka wā i hala me ka nohona o kēia lā.
I kēla me kēia manawa e haʻi ʻia ai ka moʻolelo,
hoʻololi aʻela ia i keʻano iho o nā hanauna, i kēia wā a i kēia
mua aku.

(From exhibit wall)

Artists

1. Hiʻiaka's Skirt Becomes A Surfboard for Lohiau
recycled green plastic, reclaimed wood, 2009

Artwork Label: Hiʻiaka arrived on Kaua'i only to discover that Lohiʻau was dead. Using prayer and lomilomi, she returned him to life. That evening she sent her attendant to gather grass, sedge and seaweed to make her a new skirt. The next morning, while still dark, she awakened him to go surfing, but he reminded her that they had no surfboards. Hiʻiaka beckoned the waves to rise. A great gust of wind suddenly struck and an enormous swell arose, billowed up, and towered steeply. Hiʻiaka's skirt became a surfboard for Lohiʻau. Lohiʻau surfed the wave, shifting his stance, coasting forward over the broad part of the break and moving back along the narrows, gliding back and forth.

"Mark Chai’s garage workshop is a hop away from Kailua Beach. The salt-scented air and the sound of the surf permeate the place, which is filled with a jumble of thick plastic sheeting, reinforced corrugated cardboard, PVC pipe and X-ray film bags. Chai’s co-workers at The Queen’s Medical Center save cast-off materials for him, from heavy plastic containers that he heats and reshapes into tables, to PVC boards that he drills and cuts with a jigsaw into interlocking curled forms to create ceiling lights.
From the inorganic materials, Chai creates organic shapes inspired by the ocean. “I like curves and waves,” he says, “and I’ve always been fascinated by being in the water. The curves resurfaced in my work after I moved back to Kailua in 2003.”" (From Honolulu Magazine.
Kailua: Portrait of a Place. April 2010)


2. Wahine ʻōmaʻo
Marques Marzan
naʻau puaʻa (pig gut), 2009

Label:

Chant Number 345
Kuʻu aikāne
Kuʻu aikāne hoʻi
Kuʻu aikāne mai ka lā o lalo ē

A pō Kaʻena i ka ʻehu kai
Kīpū ihola i ka lau o ka ʻilima
ʻEʻehu i ka lā ka ʻulu o Poloa

E hoʻokoʻo mai ana ka ʻoe iaʻu, i ke hoa o ke anu
Ko hoa i ke koʻekoʻe a ka wai me ke kai

Auē hoʻi ē!
Kuʻu aikāne
Hoʻi mai ana kāua
Eia au ʻo Wahineʻōmaʻo
Ō kū, ō ka, hoʻi mai ana hoʻi

My beloved aikāne
My most intimate companion, indeed
My aikāne from the setting sun in the west

Obscuring Kaʻena in the sea spray
Settling amid the leaves of the ʻilima
Reddened in the sun are the breadfruit of Poloa

It is you who supports me, a friend in the cold
Enduring with you the chill of the waters and the seas

Oh, indeed!
My dear aikāne
Let us come back together
Here am I, Wahineʻōmaʻo
Get up, give it a go, let us return


Hiʻiaka's most trusted ally, Wahineʻōmaʻo, is the only one able to assuage
Hiʻiaka's wrath, once incurred. She embodies her calm, her compassion, her love.
These cherished traits is what stays with her, always at her side, becoming the
foundation from which her development blossoms.


Info: With some of the artwork the materials themselves are rigged with underlying
messages. The artist placard of Marques Hanalei Marzan, for example, lists the
materials quite simply as"Naʻau puaʻa." Translation: pig guts. The washed-out
pig intestines are filled with air similar to a balloon, dried in the sun, then woven.
The result is a series of ethereal paʻu skirts titled "Paʻuopalaʻa." Displayed
vertically, the three paʻu both literally and symbolically represent one's naʻau
means "guts," but Hawaiians often refer to the naʻau as a person's source of
wisdom. Marzan writes in his artist statement, "Hiʻiaka's strength is literally
manifested in her paʻu, her skirt. This magical shield of her mana alludes
to the greatness that resides within, that which we can barely comprehend."
(info. from "Cultural Connections" article)

3. He ʻIwa Ke Aloha E Hoʻomao Aʻe Nei
Abigail Romanchak
etching ink, paper, carborundum, 2009

Label: As Hiʻiaka travels from Hawaiʻi Island to Kauaʻi she encounters many desirable men.
After Hiʻiaka reaches Kailua, Oʻahu she is fed plentiful amounts of lūʻau by Kaʻanahau,
the most handsome man of Kailua. As she ate the luʻau, Hiʻiaka was noticing the man's
good looks, and he, at the same time, was recognizing that this lūʻau - eating woman was
a stunning beauty. After dual desires were fulfilled between Hiʻiaka and Kaʻanahau, Hiʻiaka
continues her journey to the island of Kauaʻi. Before departing from Oʻahu Hiʻiaka expresses
deepest feelings of love by offering this chant to Kaʻanahau.

KAU KANALIMA KUMĀMAONO O KA MOʻOLELO O HIʻIAKA
Chant 56

4. Pūhenehene
Pualani Lincoln Maielua
kapa from wild wauke of Kalopa, natural dyes, 2009

5. Pā
Carl Franklin Kaʻailāʻau Pao
acrylic and pencil, 2009

A sound; to sound; beat, rhythm, as of a dance; stroke, as of an instrument; thump of a gourd
down on a pad, with one quick slap of the fingers as the gourd is raised; signal to begin
a dance or drumming.

Sunday, June 06, 2010

HIsam Pool

Art Museum pool to be converted

State's $1.5 million project will end liability, provide visitor seating for events

The $1.5 million project is mostly aimed at addressing the liability that the swimming pool — unused since at least the 1990s — has become. But the work is also part of a bigger push to increase space for the Downtown art museum.

"It is a beautiful spot," Peter Rosegg, O'ahu commissioner for the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, said of the shady courtyard behind the museum where the swimming pool now takes center stage. "But it is a huge waste of space."

Because the pool isn't open, the courtyard is blocked off to the public.

Visitors to the art museum can see the pool, though, when they walk onto a lānai overlooking the courtyard or sit at the museum's cafe, Downtown@HiSAM.

Historic preservationists are backing the plan to fill in the pool — largely because the state has pledged to retain the historic feel of the 7,700-square-foot courtyard area and preserve the original tiled deck that surrounds the pool.

The project also includes disability access improvements.

Money for the work comes from the state's Works of Art special fund.

Under the plan, the state will partially fill in the pool and create a sunken seating area and garden in its place. The areas surrounding the pool will feature planters, seating and "opportunities for placement of sculptures," Rosegg said.

Work is scheduled to start in August, and wrap up in February 2011.

Rosegg said the pool is an "attractive nuisance," and that the courtyard revitalization will "remedy potentially dangerous conditions surrounding the pool area and provide a usable space ... while respecting the history" of the building.

He said he knows of no instance of someone trying to get into the pool.

But he added the swimming pool is also sucking up maintenance costs, even though it's unused. The state spends $10,000 a year to keep the pool clean.

The pool dates back to 1928, when the building was a widely used YMCA. Countless service members and schoolchildren used the facility at its peak, and at one time school competitions were held in the pool, which is 75 feet by 30 feet.

In 1987, the Hemmeter Corp. bought the property for about $11 million and completed some $29 million in building renovations. The building changed hands again in 1990, when the BIGI Corp. of Japan bought it for $80 million.

The state started leasing the building in 1990 for offices.

It bought the building in 2000, for $22.5 million.

Two years later, the Hawai'i State Art Museum opened at the site.

Ron Yamakawa, executive director of the Hawai'i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, said the courtyard work comes as the art museum is in desperate need for more space, especially for its popular programs for schoolchildren.

He said the new courtyard could be used as a teaching or gathering place.

Rosegg added that there's no doubt some will be sad to see the pool go — especially those who remember swimming in it in their childhood. But he added that the only other alternatives were doing nothing or revamping the pool for use.

He said refurbishing the pool to be used would have been impractical and expensive, since it would have required the pool be brought up to code and the state would have had to hire lifeguards. The state didn't pin a dollar estimate to a refurbishment project because it was considered too pricey.

Rosegg added, "The pool, while a significant part of the Armed Forces YMCA programming, is not appropriate for the current use" of the building, which houses the art museum in addition to other state offices, a popular cafe and a gift shop.

He also said, in response to questions about whether the state should be revitalizing the courtyard in the midst of a fiscal crisis, that the work will create jobs, do away with pool maintenance costs and improve the museum experience.