1,745 research outputs found
The Everyday Fantastic
The Everyday Fantastic was a major solo exhibition at Marlborough Fine Art, London, 2009. A book was published to coincide with the exhibition: The Everyday Fantastic, with 100 full-colour illustrations and an essay by David Rayson.
The exhibition and publication showcased four years of exploratory drawings responding to suburban living:
âComfy settees and fringed lampshades; a trip to the local off-licence; bird-watching, of both the human and animal kind. This is the sort of quotidian stuff that makes up David Rayson's depiction of English suburbia, but all of it drawn in bright, heavy, felt-tip inks so that his scenes take on an intense, immediate, disorientating feel, like something from a dream or fever.â
âGabriel Coxhead, Time Out, January 2009
Research drew from the graphic works of historical artists including Francisco de Goya, George Grosz, Otto Dix and works from the Prinzhorn collection, alongside contemporary artists such as Raymond Pettibon and Mike Diana. The exhibition, book and associated guest lectures celebrated the formal possibilities of storytelling, exploring explicit figuration, surrealistic visions and psychological abstractions. The domestic scale and use of modest materials such as ink-pens echoed the worksâ overarching themes of the vernacular and the âhomegrownâ.
Reviews:
TimeOut, criticâs choice 29th January 2009, The Guardian, Pick of the Week 7th and 14th of February 2009, The Spectator, 31st January 2009, and The Week, 24th January 2009.
Lectures:
The Everyday Fantastic (Guest Lecture) Slade School of Art (2009),
The Everyday Fantastic (Public Inaugural Professorial Lecture) The Royal College of Art (2009), Everyone is here to see the show, (Gallery Lecture) The Rochelle School, London (2009).
Everyday Fantastic works in other exhibitions:
Peeping Tom, curated by Keith Coventry; The Vegas Gallery, London 2010 and Kunsthal Ka De (Amersfoort),
Amsterdam 2011.
Nothing in the World but Youth, Turner Contemporary, Margate 2011 (Publication isbn: 978-0955236334
[Review of] Eileen H. Tamura. Americanization, Acculturation, and Ethnic Identity: The Nisei Generation in Hawaii
Eileen Tamura\u27s new book on the first American-born generation of Japanese immigrants to Hawaii is a well-researched and readable study of the period in the early twentieth century, largely between the world wars, when Japanese immigrants to Hawaii realized they were not going to return home and that they would have generational conflicts with their children, entitled to U.S. citizenship as their parents were not until 1952. An outgrowth of Tamura\u27s 1990 dissertation, The Americanization Campaign and the Assimilation of the Nisei in Hawaii, 1920 to 1940,â Americanization, Acculturation, and Ethnic Identity develops the original topic and works back to the beginning of Japanese immigration to Hawaii, but does not work forward past 1940 to record the monumental changes that occurred in Hawaii. Tamura uses numerous personal interviews she conducted with Nisei and always supports her general statements with anecdotal quotes from the subjects themelves [themselves]. While not an oral history, this study nevertheless employs oral material to document research statistics. As a result, the text comes alive; the reader hears real voices, sometimes in Pidgin English or Hawaii Creole English, but more often the educated voices of the generation caught between two cultures which had much in common (educational goals, puritan work ethic, family and community values) but also much that conflicted (American individualism versus Japanese group consensus, voicing opinions versus keeping a low profile)
Obasan: The Politics of the Japanese-Canadian Internment
Joy Kogawa is a well known Japanese-Canadian poet and novelist. Her award-winning autobiographical novel, Obasan (1981),[1] examines the personal wartime internment experience of the author through the fictionalized persona of Naomi Nakane and her Aunt Emily Kato. Obasan, the title character, is Naomi\u27s other aunt, the one who raises her when World War II destroys the family. Emily is a political activist, the voice of protest and conscience in the novel, while the narrator, Naomi, has to work through her own silence and that of all Japanese-Canadians. As a novel with a dual voice, Obasan is able to probe the politics of the internment experience and its effect on the country as a whole as well as to demonstrate the internal, private damage to these loyal citizens who, as a minority group, kept their suffering quiet and were obedient
[Review of] Asian United Women of California, ed. Making Waves: An Anthology of Writings by and about Asian American Women
Making Waves is an impressive collection of writings that includes poetry, fiction, and autobiography and historical, sociological, and political essays about American women who came from China, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, India, Pakistan, Vietnam, Cambodia, Burma, and Thailand. This is quite a feat. While non-Asians tend to stereotype Asians and lump them together, their cultures, traditions, and histories are diverse. Making Waves includes stories of Vietnamese boat refugees, Japanese picture brides, World War II camp detainees, Chinese prostitutes and grandmothers with bound feet, Filipinas looking to escape poverty by marrying American men through the Cherry Blossom network, and the list goes on. The personal accounts are compelling. The background essays-on the Asian American women\u27s movement, on Indian marriage advertisements in the United States, on the Asia American women\u27s labor movement, on Asian-Pacific wife battering, on women in politics and the media, on interracial marriages and families, on Asian American lesbians-give us insight into aspects of these cultures that are not well known. Connie Chung and Patsy Mink are national figures, but most of the women profiled in Making Waves have not been recognized
VARD2:a tool for dealing with spelling variation in historical corpora
When applying corpus linguistic techniques to historical corpora, the corpus researcher should be cautious about the results obtained. Corpus annotation techniques such as part of speech tagging, trained for modern languages, are particularly vulnerable to inaccuracy due to vocabulary and grammatical shifts in language over time. Basic corpus retrieval techniques such as frequency profiling and concordancing will also be affected, in addition to the more sophisticated techniques such as keywords, n-grams, clusters and lexical bundles which rely on word frequencies for their calculations. In this paper, we highlight these problems with particular focus on Early Modern English corpora. We also present an overview of the VARD tool, our proposed solution to this problem, which facilitates pre-processing of historical corpus data by inserting modern equivalents alongside historical spelling variants. Recent improvements to the VARD tool include the incorporation of techniques used in modern spell checking software
Doping of Si nanoparticles: the effect of oxidation
The preferred location of boron and phosphorus in oxidized free-standing Si
nanoparticles was investigated using a first-principles density functional
approach. The calculated formation energies indicate that P should segregate to
the silicon core, whereas B is equally stable in the Si and SiO_2 regions. Our
models thus suggest that, in contrast with nanocrystals with H-terminated
surfaces, the efficiency of phosphorus incorporation in oxidized Si
nanoparticles can be improved by thermal annealing
[Review of] Yukiko Kimura. Issei: Japanese Immigrants in Hawaii
Yukiko Kimura is a retired professor of sociology from the University of Hawaii who has also held a number of research positions in Japan and the United States during her long career. Since retiring in Honolulu in 1968, she has been researching studies of the Japanese in Hawaii and has published several articles in this area. Issei: Japanese Immigrants in Hawaii is her first book
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