Asian-American Art, California Confluences and Crosscurrents.
A study and interpretation of visual art production by individuals of Asian ancestry in
the United States from the mid-19th century to 1965.
Chiura Obata, Setting Sun, Sacramento Valley,1927/1928,
color woodcut on paper, 15 3/4 x 11 in., printed
by Tadeo Takamigawa, Tokyo, private collection,
San Franciso
Project Description:
The Asian American Art Project at Stanford is the most comprehensive study
and interpretation ever undertaken of the history of visual art production
by individuals of Asian ancestry (Chinese, Japanese, Filipino, Korean and
South Asian) in the United States from the mid-19th century to 1965. Already
fully collaborative in structure, the project involves scholars from fields
including American and Asian histories and art histories, Ethnic Studies,
and Women's Studies.
Over the last decade, a research team involving specialists from
institutions including the Smithsonian Institution Archives of American Art,
San Francisco State University, University of California at Los Angeles, and
Stanford University, aided by more than fifty student interns, formed the
foundation for this project. Research results now fill more than twenty
linear feet of files, comprising the most comprehensive and largest resource
about Asian-American art available anywhere. Using this archival research,
the project has now move into an "Interpretive Phase" based at Stanford
University. A major publication resulting from this research will be
available in fall 2008. An exhibition jointly organized by Stanford
University and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco will open in 2008 as
well.
This project will help transform conceptions of American art and the lives
of Asian Americans, and will help shift discussion of American art history
toward the West Coast. It will also contribute new transnational
perspectives on Asian art history, and will provide a multitude of new
information to feed future exhibitions and related scholarly studies.
Current project goals include:
Copy editing of final manuscript for 500 page book to be released in
fall 2008.
Finalizing acquisition of reproduction permissions for approximately
400 images, and acquisition of reproduction quality artwork, to be completed
spring 2008.
Coordination of plans for major international touring exhibition
scheduled to open fall 2008.
Teikichi Hikoyama, Pines on the Shore, ca. 1922,
woodcut, private collection, San Francisco