深夜福利影视-深夜福利影院-深夜福利影院在线-深夜福利影院在线观看-深夜福利在线播放-深夜福利在线导航-深夜福利在线观看八区-深夜福利在线观看免费

【phim sex dong tinh nu nhat】Enter to watch online.Say's 'Almond' Dreams in Living Color

【phim sex dong tinh nu nhat】Enter to watch online.Say's 'Almond' Dreams in Living Color

Allen Say discusses his illustrations and new book, “Almond,” during a discussion March 7 at JANM. (Photo by Annakai Hayakawa Geshlider)

By ANNAKAI HAYAKAWA GESHLIDER, Rafu Intern

“That was probably the strength of this book: I didn’t know what I was doing.”

So said Allen Say, author of the new children’s book “Almond,” at the Japanese American National Museum on March 7. “Almond” was released just four days earlier, in celebration of Hinamatsuri.

In 2000, JANM held a retrospec-tive of Say’s original drawings and paintings, and since then, Say has released several of his books at the museum.

The book talk was part of the day-long community event Chal-lenging Borders, put on in tandem with the museum’s current exhibit. In the exhibit, called “Transcendi-ents: Heroes at Borders,” artist Taiji Terasaki honors people from L.A. and beyond fighting discrimination and injustice at borders — physical and not — around the world.

Say’s latest tells the story of Al-mond, a seven-year-old girl faced with a new girl in school — a violin prodigy. Almond feels she is known only for her beautiful hair, and longs for a talent, like her new classmate. Say combines sparse words with pas-tel drawings and charcoal sketches.

At the talk, Say projected pages of his new book and described his process. To create “Almond,” Say drew in pastel atop photographs, a new style for his work. Many of the photographs upon which Say drew resulted from moving the camera while the shutter was open.

“That blurred thing — the won-derful thing that happens — most people throw [those pictures] out,” said Say. The book is “set between reality and dream,” he added. “It’s a very narrow space.”

Say admires 18th-century artists Sengai Gibon and Yosa Buson, whose sumi-epaintings combined text and image — just like picture books. In an interview with the American Lit-erary Association, Say said he views picture books as a form of haiga, the “combination of haiku and picture that sets off a resonating music that you hear with your eyes.”

Say was born in Yokohama in 1940 to Japanese and Korean parents. Determined to become a cartoonist after the war, Say apprenticed him-self to the artist Noro Shinpei at the age of 12. At 16, he made his way to Los Angeles in search of work, and has lived mainly in the United States since.

While attending high school in Azusa, Say continued to study art. For years Say worked as a com-mercial photographer, alternating photography with drawing and painting. In the 1970s, he wrote and illustrated his first book, “Dr. Smith’s Safari,” and began illustrating for other authors.

In the late 1980s, Say quit pho-tography completely and committed to writing and illustrating books for kids. Say has now both written and illustrated nearly 30 books.

Like “Almond,” many of Say’s books deal in dreams, in longing for something else. Say’s “Grandfa-ther’s Journey” tells the tale of his ojii-chan’s back-and-forth journeys between Japan and the United States. “Sleeping and waking are two sides of the same continuum,” said Say, de-scribing his work on “Grandfather’s Journey” in 1998.

When asked how he feels return-ing to Little Tokyo, Say expressed similar feelings conveyed in “Grand-father’s Journey.” “Of course it’s not the same place anymore…and, it’s the same thing that I feel everywhere I return to. It’s not there anymore. The Japan that I knew I grew up in doesn’t exist.”

At the end of “Grandfather’s Jour-ney,” Say recalls his own childhood in Japan. “I miss my old friends. So I return now and then, when I can not still the longing in my heart,” Say writes. “The funny thing is, the moment I am in one country, I am homesick for the other.”

Dorothy Yumi Garcia, a teacher who attended the book talk, has been collecting Say’s work since the ’90s. Garcia teaches children’s literature, and brought a class of students to Say’s exhibit at JANM in 2000. She feels that Say’s work plays a crucial role in the world of children’s litera-ture. “I mean, how many children do you see illustrated that are Asian, not from the internment, and not looking like a doll?” she said.

Garcia believes teachers have a strong responsibility to rep-resent everyone in their classrooms. She has a collection of 3,000 books, most of which are “children’s books that tell stories of underrepresented people and underrepresented situa-tions — incarcerated families, very early gay families, black, white, tan.”

In her classes on children’s litera-ture, Garcia asks students to examine which books receive awards. “You have to be very mindful of the sourc-es who are rewarding these things and what they’re about,” she said.

Garcia feels that Say’s work of-fers a fresh breath from the tropes present in literature about children of color. Often, children’s books can “over-exoticize people who built this country.” Instead, Say’s work “tells a story that’s…not always about your suffering,” said Garcia.

“Not every children’s book about somebody who’s Asian needs to be about the camps. While that is impor-tant, a lot of Asian children just play video games. And not everybody likes sushi, and sometimes they just want a burger.”

Find “Almond” and Say’s other books at the library or at JANM’s bookstore.

Latest Updates

主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产精品免费观看视频播放 | 国产偷情久久久精品专区 | 国产爆乳无码一区二区麻豆 | 国产av无码片毛片一级久二区 | 国产激情一区二区三区成人91 | 国产av福利久久精品can | 国内精品视频一区二区三区八戒 | 国产福利小视频在线观看的一区 | 精品国产影片在线观看 | 国产高清免费不卡观看 | 国产精品免费无 | 国产午夜理论线观看 | 精品无码人妻夜人多侵犯18 | 国产午夜精品一区二 | 激情欧美一区二区三区中文字幕 | 国产91丝袜高跟系列 | 国产成人av三级 | 东京热无码a√国产精品 | 爆爽av国产剧情精品原创一区 | 国产欧美精品在线一区二区三 | 国产麻豆md传媒视频 | 91在线国内在线入口 | 911久久精品无码免费看 | 二区三区妓女原神 | 国产毛片高清一级国语 | 国产精品专区在线免费观看 | 精品国产一区二区三区精品日韩 | 国产一区二区精 | 丰满肥臀大屁股熟妇激情视频 | 国产尤物一区二区三区在线观看 | 精品一区二区三区高清 | 国产午夜鲁丝片av无 | 91麻精品国产91久久久 | 国产日韩激情无码一区 | 精品国产一区二区三区四区vr | 成人av一区二区三区精品 | 国产激情久久久久影院 | 爆乳无码中文字幕在线观看 | 国产精品人成在线观看 | 国产高清国内精 | 国产91高潮流白浆在线播放un |