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June 2013

3 posts

Refashioning Race, Gender, and Economy → nyu-apastudies.org

annamay-wrong:

Co-presented with the Museum of Chinese in America

What possibilities do technologies pose for alternative fashions, embodiments, and representations? How can relationships between consumer and producer shift in the digital realm?

Minh-ha T. Pham (Threadbared; Of Another Fashion; Cornell University), Ashley Mears (Pricing Beauty: The Making of a Fashion Model; Boston University), Mimi Thi Nguyen (Threadbared; The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages; University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign), and Sharon Heijin Lee (New York University) discuss the power of social media and other technologies to create platforms for alternative aesthetics and challenge inequitable structures of production.

Admission: $12 general, $7 MOCA members. RSVP to programs@mocanyc.org.  A limited number of A/P/A guests will receive special pricing to attend this program. Details will be announced on our newsletter.

Sharon Heijin Lee is an Assistant Professor/Faculty Fellow in the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis at New York University. Lee is currently working on a manuscript that maps the discursive formation of plastic surgery in South Korea, Asia, and Asian America by asking how it has become economically necessary and a viable form of self-management. Lee’s research agenda seeks to theorize the concealed relations between seemingly unrelated and often uninterrogated spheres—popular and consumer culture, medicine, tourism, the military, and other governmental institutions—and her work has been published in Women and Performance: Journal of Feminist Theory.

Ashley Mears is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Boston University. She is the author of Pricing Beauty: The Making of a Fashion Model (University of California Press, 2011). Mears, who worked as a model in New York and London, draws on observations as well as extensive interviews with male and female models, agents, clients, photographers, stylists, and others, to explore the economics and politics—and the arbitrariness— behind the business of glamour. Pricing Beauty examines the racial and gender aspects of fashion’s labor market at a moment when immaterial commodities (e.g. blogs) are becoming key sources of capital accumulation.

Mimi Thi Nguyen is Associate Professor of Gender and Women’s Studies and Asian American Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign and is co-founder of Threadbared. Her first book, called The Gift of Freedom: War, Debt, and Other Refugee Passages, focuses on the promise of “giving” freedom concurrent and contingent with waging war and its afterlife (Duke University Press, 2012). She continues to understand her scholarship through the frame of transnational feminist cultural studies, and in particular as an untangling of the liberal way of war that pledges “aid,” freedom, rights, movement, and other social goods, with her following project on the obligations of beauty. She is also co-editor with Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu of Alien Encounters: Popular Culture in Asian America (Duke University Press, 2007), and co-editor with Fiona I.B. Ngo and Mariam Lam of a special issue of positions on Southeast Asians in diaspora (Winter 2012). She publishes also on queer subcultures, the politics of fashion, and punk feminisms.

Minh-Ha T. Pham is an Assistant Professor in the History of Art & Visual Studies Department and the Asian American Studies Program at Cornell University. She is co-author of a research blog on the politics of fashion called Threadbared and the founder of a digital archive of the fashion histories of U.S. women of color called Of Another Fashion. Her research primarily focuses on the interrelations of aesthetics, race, and fashion technologies though she has also written about sound and film technologies. She has published in a wide array of forums from academic journals to popular and political magazines. In addition, her research has appeared in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Nation, San Francisco Chronicle,NPR, Chronicle of Higher Education, among other media sites. She is completing a book on the racial and gender politics of fashion blog forms and practices.

We’re looking forward to this panel - see you there!

Jun 12, 201319 notes
Jun 10, 20135,532 notes
#FashionatMOCA #FrontRow #vera wang #cfda #cfda awards #cfda 2013 #museum of chinese in america
Jun 10, 20137 notes
#museum of chinese in america #museum #asian fashion #front row #FrontRow #FashionatMOCA #MyFrontRow #ShanghaiGlamour #chinese american #designer #fashion #opening ceremony #humberto leon #carol lim #street style

March 2013

1 post

Play
Mar 18, 20136 notes

February 2013

1 post

Feb 25, 20136 notes
#MOCAcontest #marvels and monsters #alt.comics #museum of chinese in america

January 2013

1 post

Jan 23, 20133 notes
#MOCAcontest #museum of chinese in america #marvels and monsters #alt.comics

December 2012

3 posts

Dec 28, 2012
#mocacontest #museum of chinese in america #marvels and monsters #alt.comics
Dec 28, 201255 notes
#MOCAcontest #marvels and monsters #alt.comics #museum of chinese in america
Dec 4, 20123 notes
#MOCAcontest #museum of chinese in america #alt.comics #marvels and monsters

November 2012

3 posts

Nov 7, 2012218 notes
Nov 7, 201211 notes
#Alt.Comics #Marvels and Monsters #Museum of Chinese in America #MOCAcontest
FIRST #MOCAcontest WINNER!

We are SuperExcited to announce that Lisa Lim’s Grandmother is our October winner. You can see her butcher-knife-wielding granny here. Lisa’s work will be displayed onsite at the Museum, and she is now in the running for our grand prize. Congrats, Lisa! And stay tuned for a new SuperHero posting later today…

Nov 7, 20122 notes
#MOCAcontest #Marvels and Monsters #Alt.Comics #Museum of Chinese in America

October 2012

7 posts

Oct 24, 20121 note
#MOCAcontest #Marvels and Monsters #Alt.Comics #Museum of Chinese in America
MOCA, AAWW and Hyperallergic Present: Halloween Costume Ball

substancedigi:

What are you doing on Halloween? Dressing up as a superhero and partying at one of New York’s coolest downtown museums? We thought so.

Hyperallergic is partnering with the Museum of Chinese in America and the Asian American Writers Workshop to throw a Halloween Marvels and Monsters Ball on October 31.

Come to MOCA at 215 Centre Street from 8–11 pm dressed as your favorite superhero or supervillain and join us for an open bar, nibbles, and music by DJ Mas.

Tickets are $10, or just $5 for members, and will be on sale at the door. Best costume wins a tricky treat!

Hosted in MOCA’s Maya Lin-designed home, the party takes its theme from two ongoing exhibitions at the museum. Marvels and Monsters showcases an array of images of Asians and Asian-Americans in mainstream comics, from evil kung-fu masters to conflicted teenagers. Alt.Comics explores how Asian-American artists and writers have innovated the medium of the comic book.

Hyperallergic editors and writers will be there (with masks on, though, so you can’t recognize us), and you should too.

The Marvels and Monsters Ball will take place on October 31 from 8 to 11 PM at the Museum of Chinese in America, 215 Centre Street.

RSVP on Facebook



via Substance Digital http://bit.ly/TvhRZ9

So excited!

Oct 22, 20121 note
Oct 18, 20122 notes
#MOCAcontest #Museum of Chinese in America #Marvels and Monsters #Alt.Comics
Can you clear up the guidelines for the "If I Were a Superhero" drawing contest? I checked out the MOCA site, but the details still seem a little unclear. Thanks

Sure thing! You can submit by sending the image directly to us at info(at)mocanyc.org, or by posting it on your own tumblr and sending us a link so we can reblog. (We recommend tagging it #MOCAcontest as well so we can find it!)

Once per month, the curators will select their favorite pieces, which will be on digital display in the Museum. Then, at the end of the exhibition a Grand Prize winner will be selected from these the finalists. The winner will receive a copy of Secret Identities: The Asian American Superhero Anthology, a copy of Secret Identities Volume 2: Shattered, and a T-shirt created for the exhibition by Jerry Ma and signed by the artist.

Hope that helps!

Oct 18, 20121 note
Oct 17, 201222 notes
#MOCAcontest #Museum of Chinese in America #Marvels and Monsters #Alt.Comics
Oct 15, 201242 notes
#MOCAcontest #Marvels and Monsters #Alt.Comics #Museum of Chinese in America
Oct 10, 201292 notes
#MOCAcontest

September 2012

5 posts

Sep 27, 20124,423 notes
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