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January 19– April 6, 2008
TRADING TRADITIONS: CALIFORNIA’S NEW CULTURES
Way Beyond the Melting Pot
Great Hall Low Bay

Presented by the History Department

Read recent comments from visitors to this exhibition

Laotian American (Mien) athletes at Oakland High School. Photo Lonny Shavelson. From Under the Dragon.

The Oakland Museum of California’s new TRADING TRADITIONS: CALIFORNIA’S NEW CULTURES exhibition (January 19–April 6, 2008) vividly depicts how immigrants to the Bay Area don’t just want to fit in, but to remain distinct within the community at large and among other newcomers.

There are cities within cities—Koreatown, Japantown, Chinatown, Fremont’s enclaves of Southeast Asians and Afghans; Russians in San Francisco; and Latinos in the Fruitvale and Mission neighborhoods—that provide continuity and daily interaction with the wider community.

Based on the book Under the Dragon (Heyday Books), Trading Traditions explores the daily mix of California's new communities through photographs by Berkeley writer and radio journalist Lonny Shavelson, commentary by Oakland author and editor Fred Setterberg and Shavelson, and sound design by James LeBrecht, head of Berkeley Sound Artists, and Shavelson. They present the Bay Area as a virtual street fair, with food, music, and culture in constant exchange.

Immigration can mean loss, cultural isolation, and change, which Setterberg and Shavelson convey eloquently. It’s possible to maintain tradition within a household, but not on the street, where markets, movie theaters, places of worship, street signs, and conversation offer a cacophony of choices and distractions.

Shavelson has captured many such scenes:
  • Mien teenagers from an Oakland high school sporting their hair in cornrows

  • An African American leading the Chinese lion dancers in San Francisco’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade

  • Latino converts to Islam sharing a Mexican lunch outside the mosque

  • An Iranian Jew counseling Cambodian refugees in Fremont via the common language of art

  • A Chinese man wearing a sombrero to blend in with his Latino neighbors

The photographs and text, mounted on sailcloth and suspended from the ceiling, give the installation movement and life. The soundscape fills the exhibition with street, prayer, and festival sounds—aural snapshots—from scores of local environments.

To interview curators Shavelson, Setterberg, and LeBrecht, or project director Dr. P. Christiaan Klieger, please call 510/238-4740.

Pchum Ben, Cambodian Festival of the Dead, San Jose. Photo Lonny Shavelson. From Under the Dragon.

PUBLIC PROGRAMS
Saturday, January 19 Opening Day (2-5 p.m.)
Lion dance by Kei Lun Martial Arts Performing Team (3 p.m.)
Latin folk music with La Familia Peña-Govea (2-4 p.m.)

Sunday, January 20 (12–5 p.m.) Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration “Faith in California” (2 p.m.). African American Buddhists, Hare Krishnas, and Muslims discuss their mix of spiritual practices. South African Freedom songs by Vukani Mawethu.

Thursday, February 14 (1 p.m.). Curators Lonny Shavelson and Fred Setterberg give a free talk about their book and exhibition and sign books.

Sunday, February 17 (2 p.m.). “The Afro-Caribbean and Black Native American Presence in California.” Lonny Shavelson talks with Caribbean historian Val Serrant, Tomi Seon of the Islands of Fire dance company, and Don Little Cloud Davenport from the Black Native American Association about their communities’ contributions to California history. Followed by a celebration of Afro-Caribbean and Black/Native American traditions led by the Sistas-Wit-Style dancers and musicians.

First Fridays After Five, March 7. Performances at 7 and 8:15 p.m., James Moore Theatre
Introduction by curators Fred Setterman, Lonny Shavelson, Christiaan Klieger
Contemporary Persian ballet Shahrzad Dance Company
Korean fusion jazz band Puriak
Modern dance by Navarrete x Kajiyama Dance Theater
Persian music by Taghi Amjadi (in gallery)

Sunday, March 16 (12:40–4:30 p.m.) Family Explorations! Celebrate California’s Cultures
Balinese music with Gamelan Sekar Jaya
Somei Yoshino Taiko Ensemble with Native American vocalist Jane DeCuir
Indian dohl drummer Ustad Lal Singh Bhatti
Tortilla making

Sunday, March 30, 1:30–2:30 p.m. Cambodian celebration.
Enjoy Cambodian dance, music, and food in the museum gardens. Take a tour of the Trading Traditions exhibition with curator Lonny Shavelson. Included with museum admission.

Saturday, April 5, 3-4 p.m. Anthony Brown’s Asian American Orchestra. Percussionist, composer, and ethnomusicologist Dr. Anthony Brown leads his orchestra is a matinee concert for all ages and musical tastes. Included with museum admission.

Trading Traditions: California’s New Cultures was funded by the Oakland Museum Women's Board, the Oakland Museum of CA History Guild, Zellerbach Family Foundation and the Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation. The museum’s Art and History Galleries will be closed for renovation Jan 2, 2007 through Oct 2009, but exhibitions, public program, and the store and café will continue as usual.

 

 

 

 

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