Inspirar para el futuro: Héroes nikkei menores de 30

La serie de este mes presenta entrevistas a jóvenes nikkei de 30 años o menos de todo el mundo, que están ayudando a dar formar y construir el futuro de las comunidad nikkei o realizando un trabajo innovador y creativo, compartiendo y explorando la historia, cultura e identidad nikkei.

Diseño de logo por Alison Skilbred

culture en

Miye Sugino—Art as Advocacy: “To me, art is a reclamation of identity”

As one of JANM’s 30 Changemakers Under 30, Miye Sugino had amassed an impressive body of work and accomplishment most adults never achieve, all before receiving her high school diploma. Miye’s art and writing has gained national and international recognition including being one of twenty U.S. Presidential Scholars in the Arts through the National Young Arts Foundation. In addition, she has been an art mentor at San Quentin Prison through Empowerment Avenue and an intern at Loyola Law School’s Project for the Innocent.

Miye, born in Chicago to a Japanese American father and a Korean American mother, grew up …

lea más

culture en

Ancestry & Artistry: The Works of Annie Sumi

Japanese Canadian Annie Sumi is many things: songwriter, ethereal folk artist, and, recently, co-creator of the Kintsugi exhibition at the Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre in Toronto. Providing creative insight inspired by family heirlooms, her work on Kintsugi weaves together the threads of her ancestry with her artistry as a musician.


Ancestry

Sumi originally hails from Ontario, Canada. Second-generation Scottish through her mother’s side, she recalls that she grew close to the songs and traditions that were brought to Canada from her grandparents’ hometown of Glasgow.

“My family that lives in Scotland don’t do them anymore, but we still do it …

lea más

culture en

From Chibi-K to Chicago: Code Switching and Curatorial Practice with Nolan Jimbo

While his life and work can be traced from Los Angeles to Paris then on to contemporary art museums and art galleries, the one consistent throughline for Nolan Jimbo is his connection to the Japanese American community.
 

A Japanese American Childhood in Los Angeles

Selected one of the 30 Changemakers Under 30 to celebrate JANM’s 30th anniversary in 2022, Jimbo grew up in the Silverlake neighborhood of Los Angeles playing Japanese American basketball for the Hollywood Dodgers, spending summers at local Obon festivals, and participating in Japanese American youth organizations such as Rising Stars. He ran in the …

lea más

identity en

Karen Tengan Okuda: Exploring and Expressing Her Uchinānchu / Okinawan Identity

As a second-generation Uchinānchu (Okinawan immigrant), Karen Tengan Okuda lives and works on the unceded lands of the Eora and Dharug peoples (Sydney, Australia). Okuda works as a Social Media Community Specialist for Special Broadcasting Service Australia. 

She is also a founding member and an editor of a magazine, Shimanchu Nu Kwii (meaning “voices of Shimanchu” in Uchināguchi). 

“The magazine was born out of a desire to create a space where Shimanchu (island people) all over the world can connect with each other and share our stories,” said Okuda. Focusing on themes such as “Honoring Our Ancestors” and “Shimanchu …

lea más

community en

Politics, Taiko, and Nikkei Activism with Kota Mizutani

Introduction

Kota Mizutani grew up in rural Sonoma County, California, where he gradually became aware of Japanese American traditions that surrounded him as a child; teriyaki festivals, obons, taiko performances. He began playing taiko himself at the age of six, he told Discover Nikkei in a recent interview, and it was history and community surrounding Japanese drumming that grounded him in his Nikkei identity. These days, he is 26 years old and continues playing with Mark H Taiko in the Washington DC metro area.

He has also become a strong voice for the Japanese American community in politics as a …

lea más

Etiquetas

advocacy Annie Sumi art artist artists Australia Australian California Canada Chcago Chibi-K Chicago curators diaspora hapa identity Inspire Forward JACL Japanese American JCCC Karen Tengan Okuda language Little Tokyo Los Angeles magazine