Saturday, July 13, 2013

TWArtists Member highlight: Stella Chang, Conceptual Artist & Fashion Designer, since Sep. 2012


little monster series




Artist Statement:
I draw because of the loneliness caused by my uncertainty, and I paint because I like to capture the essence of all those I’ve seen and hold dear but I don’t have the luxury to be with for more than a moment. I create because I’m obsessed with people’s perceptions of things –everything really- and I’m starting with “me.”


In other words, for a person who struggles to define herself, writing an artist statement is no easy task. In all honesty, all my work –from my childhood doodles up to now- reflect my continual journey to search for who I am. Anything else I could write would be a lie, at least some things I am certain of.


Filtered Illustration: Sketch of a woman who's falling asleep, Before & After
Black ink on paper



Artist Bio:
Born in San Jose, CA, raised in Taiwan, Canada, and Detroit, Stella grew up speaking two languages and escaping into the colorfulness of life beyond the status quo of those around her. Wanting to become a Manga comic book artist, while her mother wished for her to be a concert pianist, Stella wound up studying art at New York University. While at NYU, her influences include reknown video art pioneer Peter Campus and contemporary installation artist Kathe Burhardt.


At 19 at the invitation of author Reagan Liu, she illustrated her firs Children’s book “100 Wishes” for Taiwan's Children's Cancer foundation. Same year, her illustrations caught the attention of a Japanese fashion buyer, who then introduced her to the industry of luxury handbags and accessories. From 2004 and onwards, Stella had the fortune to work for brand names such as Calvin Klein, United Bamboo, Malini Murjani of Isabella Fiori, WIT of Japan, and Wakkou KK of Japan.


Stella is currently a handbag designer for LeSportsac.


Untitled fashion illustration published Brand Magazine, Taiwan 2008
In ink pen, colored pencils and industrial markers.



Achievements:
1. Soul Stealer, concept artist for short film by director Shawn Spitler, 2012
2. Cheers, Jordan’s Winery 40th Anniversary 4 on 4 Art Competition, Second Place, 2012.
2. Jump, Solo Video Installation, Rosenberg Gallery, NY 2006.
3. 100 Wishes, Children’s Illustrated Story, published by Children’s Cancer Foundation, Taiwan, 2004. 

http://www.ramblingmasterpiece.blogspot.com/



Monday, July 1, 2013

TWArtists Member highlight: Chia Ying Kao, dancer: memeber since April 2012




 Chia Ying Kao is an award-winning independent dance artist based in New York City since 2004. She recently received her MFA degree in Dance from Sarah Lawrence College where she earned the Bessie Schonberg Award in 2012
Her work has been presented at the Center for Performance Research, Chen Dance Center, Queens Public Library Auditorium, Northport Library Auditorium, Tribeca Film Festival, Manhattan's Union Square for a dance installation, Roulette NYC, the Taipei Cultural Arts Center and Hualien Cultural Arts in Taiwan.
Chia Ying has collaborated with important choreographers, dancers, and institutions such as Sara Rudner, Yvonne Rainer, Paz Tanjuaquio, Bill T. Jones, Hou Ying, Panoramasian Dance Project, Chinese Theatre Works, Chinese–American Arts & Culture Association, New York Chinese Cultural Center, and Earl Mosley Diversity of Dance, among others.
Chia Ying has received several awards and honors including the Best Performance Prize, New Tang Dynasty Television Chinese New Year Global Gala in 2006 and the Most Outstanding Asian Artist Award 2008 in Recognition for Excellence in Dance, given by the Chinese-American Arts Council.
Chia Ying is the recipient of the 2012-2013 TOPAZ ARTS Choreography Residency Program and was invited to take part in the 2012 ICR at the American Dance Festival-Henan. In April 2013, Chia Ying premiered a new work “The Strange Wait” originally commissioned by Ear to the Ground program of NY’s Chen Dance Center. In December 2013, Chia Ying will present her new piece at Triskelion Arts.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

TWArtists Member highlight: Benrei Huang, painter: memeber since May 2012

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

TWArtists Member highlight: Yung Yung Tsuai: dancer & writer: member since April 2012



We have to find our place in the universe in order to forgive.

http://thedifferenceinbutterflies.com/dance-videos_270.html






http://thedifferenceinbutterflies.com/dance-videos_270.html

Yung Yung Tsuai has taught at the Martha Graham School of Contemporary Dance. She came to the United States on a scholarship directly granted to her from Martha Graham after a meeting in Taipei City, Taiwan in 1970. Since then she has worked with the Daniel Nagrin Workgroup, Pearl Lang and Dancers,  the Vanaver Caravan, and Susan Stroman. She founded the Yung Yung Tsuai Dance Company in 1980. She has taught, performed and worked as a visiting artist for NYU, George Washington University, Brigham Young University and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center. In the past three decades she has worked with the Yangtze Repertory Theater, La Mama Theater, and the Papermill Playhouse among others. 


http://thedifferenceinbutterflies.com/

Sunday, April 1, 2012

TWArtists Member highlight: : Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai, writer, poet, spoken words artist: member since Jan. 2012

 Spoken word artist Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai has been featured in over 450 performances worldwide at venues including the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, the House of Blues, the Apollo Theater, Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, and three seasons of the award-winning “Russell Simmons Presents HBO Def Poetry.” The author of Inside Outside Outside Inside (2004), Thought Crimes (2005), No Sugar Please (2008), and the CD’s Infinity Breaks (2007) and Further She Wrote (2010), Tsai has shared stages with Mos Def, KRS-One, Sonia Sanchez, Talib Kweli, Erykah Badu, Amiri Baraka, Harry Belafonte, and many more.  (www.yellowgurl.com)



http://www.yellowgurl.com/

Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai is a Chicago-born, Brooklyn-based Chinese Taiwanese American spoken word artist who fights for cultural pride and survival through how she spits and how she lives.  As a teenager, Kelly developed a passion for spoken word at the birthplace of the international poetry slam movement, the Uptown Poetry Slam in Chicago.  She also appeared as a series regular on PBS’ “Sneak Previews” and wrote weekly for the Chicago Tribune as a teen movie critic.
Her love of poetry, politics, arts, and entertainment deepened as she flexed her skills as a founding member of Sirenz, an all female spoken word group that wove together experiences of the Asian, Black, and Latina American diasporas.  Over the last ten years, she has become one of the country’s leading innovators of spoken word poetry.  Touring extensively worldwide, she has featured at over 450 shows across the continental United States, Hawai’i, Canada, China, England, France, Germany, Kenya, the Netherlands, and Trinidad.
A highly sought-after performer on the college circuit, Kelly’s inciting, intimate, and entertaining poetry performances have rocked stages at venues like the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, the House of Blues, the Apollo Theater in Harlem, the Kennedy Center, Lincoln Center, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, and three consecutive seasons of the Peabody award-winning “Russell Simmons Presents HBO Def Poetry.”
Kelly has shared stages with Mos Def, KRS-One, Sonia Sanchez, Erykah Badu, Jill Scott, Talib Kweli, DMX, Michael Eric Dyson, Wyclef Jean, Tracy Morgan, Amiri Baraka, Abiodun Oyewele of the Last Poets, Kurtis Blow, Harry Belafonte, and many more.  Throughout her evolution as a writer, performer, filmmaker, and multidisciplinary hip hop theater artist, Kelly constantly strives to broaden the impact and reach of spoken word poetry in its efforts to transform political realities, revolutionize arts and entertainment, and empower audiences across the globe.

AWARDS & RESIDENCIES

Kelly has won a number of awards and residencies for her work as a spoken word artist.  In 2004, the Illinois Arts’ Council awarded her the Governors’ International Exchange Award to support her attendance at the 6th Women Playwrights International Conference in Manila, Philippines.  In 2007, she was awarded the Urban Artists Initiative NYC Award by the Asian American Arts Alliance and New York Foundation for the Arts.  In 2008, Idealist in NYC named Kelly as one of their “New York 40″ of the top New Yorkers who make a positive impact in the five boroughs.  Kelly was a finalist for a Creative Capital Fellowship in Performing Arts in 2009, which recognizes innovative artists who are at a catalytic moment in their careers. AngryAsianMan.com listed her as one of “The 30 Most Influential Asian Americans Under 30″ in 2009. In 2010, she was profiled in the HBO documentary, “East of Main Street: Asians Aloud.” In 2011, she was named an Asian Women Giving Circle Grantee for her spoken word theater project, “Say You Heard My Echo.”
Her solo residencies include Hedgebrook, the Norcroft Retreat for Women Writers, Michigan State University Residential College for Arts & Humanities, and Unit One/Allen Hall, in addition to New World Theater’s Summer Playlab, the Asian Arts Initiative, and the Abrons Arts Center via her work with Mango Tribe.  She is a proud alum of the Kundiman Asian American Poets Retreat, the Voices of Our Nation Foundation Writers of Color Workshop, the Cave Canem Workshop, and the Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop.  In 2007, she attended and performed at the World Social Forum in Nairobi Kenya as a delegate representing the Hip Hop Theater Festival.  She was also the youngest poet featured at the first International Conference on Chinese Poetry at Simmons College in 2004. She has received funding from Poets & Writers, Inc. in support of her creative work and has been a juror on panels for the Her Mark Poetry Contest, Hedgebrook Retreat for Women Writers, Leeway Foundation, Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation, and Brooklyn Arts Council.

ON THE STAGE

Kelly was a part of the original collective for Mango Tribe, an Asian Pacific Islander American women’s multidisciplinary spoken word theater troupe.  She wrote, performed, and choreographed for Mango Tribe’s three mainstage productions (“Sisters in the Smoke” (2002), “The Creation Myth Project” (2004), and “Un/knowing Desire and Empire” (2006)), as well as Mango Tribe’s national tour from 2002-2006.
In 2004, Kelly joined the original cast for We Got Issues!, an arts-based civic transformation project based on feminine centered leadership for the hip hop generation.  Conceived by Rha Goddess and J. Love Calderon and executive produced by Eve Ensler and Jane Fonda, Kelly choreographed and performed for the national tour of We Got Issues! from 2005-2007.  In 2007, Kelly also performed in acclaimed theater artist Ping Chong & Co.’s “Undesirable Elements: Asian America” for the 1st National Asian American Theater Festival.
Kelly’s spoken word and dance works include Urban Bush Women’s “Are We Democracy?” (2004), InSpirit’s “Becoming” (2004) and “roam – a solo in two voices” (2007) by Malinda Allen, and VTDance’s award-winning “The Grandmother Project,” (2006).  She also choreographed Julia Ahumada Grob’s solo show “He(R)evolution” (2006). In 2006, her ensemble drama “Murder the Machine” was excerpted at the Chicago Hip Hop Theater Festival. In 2009, she co-wrote and performed the critically lauded “American Ethnic” for Chicago’s Remy Bumppo Theater Company. In 2010, she co-wrote and performed the ensemble work “Home: Far & Near” for Philadelphia’s Asian Arts Initiative and performed in Howard Zinn’s “Voices Of A People’s History of the United States” with Harry Belafonte and Allison Moorer for New York University. Kelly is currently the 2011-2012 Urban Word NYC-New York Live Arts (formerly Dance Theater Workshop) Artist-In-Residence.

ON THE PAGE

Kelly has self-published three chapbooks: Inside Outside Outside Inside (2004), Thought Crimes (2005), and No Sugar Please (2008).  Her poetry and essays have been widely published in literary journals and magazines like Drunken Boat, Pedestal, Hawai’i Women’s Journal, Montage, Monsoon, Tea Party, The F-Word, The Indypendent, Wicked Alice, AWOL Magazine, Shades Magazine, Versal Amsterdam, The Kartika Review, Words. Beats. Life. The Journal Of Global Hip Hop Culture, Asian American Literary Review, and New York Theater Review.
Anthologies that have featured Kelly’s poetry and essays include Just Like A Girl: A Manifesta (Girlchild Press, 2008), We Got Issues!: A Young Woman’s Guide to A Bold, Courageous, and Empowered Life (Inner Ocean Publishing, 2006), We Don’t Need Another Wave: Dispatches from the Next Generation of Feminists (Seal Press/Avalon, 2006), His Rib (Penmanship Books, 2007), and The Spoken Word Revolution Redux (Sourcebooks, Inc. 2007).  She is currently at work on her first full-length collection of poems under the working title A Guidebook for Huaqiao.

ON THE SCREEN

Kelly’s first spoken word video, “By-Standing: The Beginning of An American Lifetime” (Dir. Karen Lin, 2007), was a ground-breaking integration of spoken word and in-camera style of music videos.  It was an official selection of dozens of film festivals across North America and won both the 2007 Media that Matters War & Peace Award and the 11th Annual Urbanworld VIBE Honorable Mention for Narrative Short.  “By-Standing…” was also broadcast on PBS’ “Reel New York” and ImaginAsian TV’s “Short Cuts.  Youth Noise commissioned her second spoken word video “Weapons of Mass Creation” (Dir. Kamilah Forbes, 2007) for their nationwide Summit Tour for grassroots youth activists.
In 2008, Kelly’s PSA on APIA voting rights directed by Karen Lin was a San Diego Asian Film Festival Reel in the Vote PSA Contest finalist.  Her production company, Moving Earth Productions, also launched its first independently produced spoken word video “Black, White, Whatever…” (Dir. Jazzmen Lee-Johnson, 2008), which was featured on the homepage of Youtube for 24 hours on November 3rd, 2008, the day before Barack Obama’s historic election. The video garnered over 200,000 hits online shortly after its viral release, coverage by the nation’s top bloggers, and a feature on NPR’s “The Brian Lehrer Show.” 

ON SOCIAL CHANGE

Kelly’s formative experiences as a community organizer, domestic violence counselor, oral historian, and youth worker deeply inform her commitment to the arts and entertainment as a means to forge the foundations for social justice, non-violence and the uplift of underrepresented people, ideas, and movements.  She holds a double B.A. with high honors in Urban Planning and Comparative Literature from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). She was awarded the 2010 Outstanding Asian American Alumni Award from the Asian American Cultural Center at UIUC, following in the footsteps of author/journalist Iris Chang and filmmaker Ang Lee. She is also a proud alum of Michelle Obama’s Public Allies and worked previously with the Posse Foundation Inc., founded by MacArthur Genius Grant recipient Debbie Bial.
Kelly has facilitated workshops in high schools, colleges, domestic violence and rape crisis centers, and juvenile detention centers across the U.S. and Europe.  She has also brought her unique approach to spoken word to her workshops at the World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya and the Centro de Las Lenguas in Chiapas, Mexico.  She gave keynote performances at the 2008 College Democrats National Convention and the 2009 & 2011 Campus Progress National Conference, sharing the bill with Bill Clinton, Nancy Pelosi, Van Jones, Amy Goodman, Kalpen Modi, and John Oliver from “The Daily Show.” She has hosted youth events like Youth Speaks’ Brave New Voices (Inter)national Poetry Festival, Young Chicago Author’s Louder Than A Bomb, and Urban Word NYC’s Citywide Slam.  Kelly also hosted the National Poetry Slam’s Asian American Showcase and organized with Women Outloud, the Asian American Artists Collective Chicago, Young Asians with Power!, and the National Asian Pacific Islander American Spoken Word Summit.

her youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/kztsai


Wednesday, March 28, 2012

TWArtists member highlight: 薄茵萍: sculptor, painter: member since March 2012

 薄 茵 萍


 有人說這個年代的誘因太多,使得藝術不能純粹。其實,路怎麼走主要的還是在於自己的決定。

 後現代對我來說不只是多開了幾扇門窗,而是四面牆都推翻了,視野更廣闊了,也有了更多選擇自由,卻是失去了很多安全保障,可是,藝術本就不能有太多的保障制約。

 藝術是一種瞭解事務本質的媒介,選擇了藝術也就是尋得了一種生活方式和存在的態度。而且是無論以什麼形式呈現,也都如梵谷所言,「是一種莊嚴存在的方式」。

 一個脆弱的軀殼何其幸運地尋到藝術做為人生的堡壘。於是,觀察、思辨甚至於批判便成為我生活中內在的藝術形式,而油畫、版畫、木刻等外在表達形式則是為了滿足我有如工匠的雙手。尋求內在與外在、感性與理性的平衡和契合,是持續不斷的功課。 




http://www.skyart.org.tw/artsky1.htm


TWArtists member highlight: 張美華 JENNY M.CHANG: pastel painter, member since March 2012

出生

1950 生於台灣彰化

教育

1986 在楊城俄核俄州藝術學院進修 (~1988)
2000 拜張哲雄為師學習粉彩(~2002)
2001 美國國家藝術俱樂部研習粉彩
2002 拜康州Herman Margulies為師

經歷

2005 任北美粉彩畫家協會之會員資格審核主席
2005 任紐約女藝術家協會聯展救災義賣籌備召集人
2005 應邀參加國立台灣藝術教育館 “國際粉彩畫家邀請展”
2006 紐約第三屆女藝術家協會聯展 (Women Artists Associate of New York) 籌備兼主辦人
2007 獲得 Who’s Who in American 邀請參加殊榮
2009 奧杜邦藝術家協會理事,年刊負責人(~2010)

個展

2005 應邀參加法國 “國際粉彩藝術沙龍” 聯展開幕盛會
2006 應邀參加法國 “國際粉彩藝術沙龍” 聯展開幕盛會
2006 榮獲奧杜邦藝術家粉彩畫公開賽佳作獎
2007 應邀參加法國 “國際粉彩藝術沙龍” 聯展開幕盛會
2008 99°藝術中心舉行雙人個展
2009 99°藝術中心舉行雙人個展
2010 應邀99藝術中心-國際粉彩十人聯展

得獎

2003 畫作「墨西哥小鎮」榮獲康州康乃狄克粉彩協會理事會傑出畫家獎
2004 作品「向日葵」獲得女畫家筆會靜物優秀畫家獎
2004 「家的回憶之二」獲得康州粉彩協會傑出作品獎
2005 作品「黃瓜」獲得台灣會館國際粉彩畫公開賽佳作獎
2005 作品「地鐵風貌」榮獲女畫家筆會公開賽粉彩第一名
2006 第二屆紐約台灣會館國際粉彩畫公開賽佳作獎
2006 作品「地鐵風貌-2」榮獲奧杜邦藝術家金牌獎殊榮

介紹

張美華是位優秀的台灣旅美畫家,她自幼便愛繪畫。二十多年前移民美國,於1986-1988年在楊城俄核俄州藝術學院進修,兒、女 長大後得以拜師習藝,曾在張哲雄的畫室進修五年,先由靜物寫生入手,而後再畫人物、風景。對於具有矇矓美感的粉彩色料情有獨鍾,並展現了她的才華,其作品 風格寫實兼具情趣。其優秀的粉彩作品曾先後獲得入選美國粉彩畫協會、奧杜邦藝術家、美國專業藝術家聯盟、婦女畫家筆會、康州康乃狄克粉彩協會等重要藝術組 織的公開賽,並多次獲獎。2006年“地鐵風貌-2”粉彩作品,獲得金牌獎殊榮。






http://www.99dac.com/main/artist.php?artist_id=40