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It is now part of the museum's permanent collection. [7] In 1997, the Frank H. Watase Media Arts Center was established by Robert A. Nakamura and Karen L. Ishizuka, to develop new ways to document, preserve and make known the experience of Americans of Japanese ancestry. In 1999, the Manabi and Sumi Hirasaki National Resource Center (HNRC) was ...
Estelle left her watercolor collection in the care of Allen Hendershott Eaton, an art collector who notably amassed a large collection of camp artwork. [21] After the Eaton collection was narrowly saved from a private sale in 2015 and acquired by the Japanese American National Museum (JANM) , Ishigo's watercolors were conserved and loaned to ...
Two other area museums showcased his work in 2000, and in 2001 the JANM retrospective, "In Living Color: The Art of Hideo Date," opened to the public. [2] The JANM exhibit's curator, Karin Higa, published an accompanying book on Date and his work under the same title. Date died at his home in Queens one day after his ninety-eighth birthday, in ...
George Hoshida (1907, Japan-1985, Hawaii) was a Japanese American artist known for his drawings made during World War II, when he was incarcerated in three US internment camps and two Justice Department camps between 1942 and 1945.
He taught New Genres at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts for 20 years. He was a Cultural Affairs Commissioner for the City of Culver City from 2004 to 2010. He received a Getty Visual Arts Fellowship in 2000 and a COLA Artist Award in 2007 given by the Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles .
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Henry Sugimoto, Self Portrait in Camp, 1943, oil on canvas, 22 x 18 in Henry Sugimoto, half-portrait, Los Angeles, California, September 1967, 4 x 5 in.. Henry Yuzuru Sugimoto (March 12, 1900 – May 8, 1990) was a Japanese-American artist, art teacher and a survivor of Japanese American Internment during World War II.
Clara Breed was born in Fort Dodge, Iowa, in 1906.Her parents were Estelle Marie Potter and Reuben Leonard Breed, a Congregational minister. The family lived in New York and Illinois, before moving to San Diego in 1920 following the death of Reuben Breed. [3]