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The Kitchen Table Stories Project is a multimedia healing justice

project centering the voices

and narratives of the local

Asian, South Asian and Pacific Islander diaspora. The goal of

this project is to create collective power through art, and to claim space in our community with our stories, traditional practices,

and cultural wisdom.

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El Proyecto Kitchen Table Stories es un proyecto multimedia de justicia curativa que centra las voces y narrativas de la diáspora local de Asia, el sur de Asia y las islas del Pacífico. El objetivo de este proyecto es crear poder colectivo a través del arte y reclamar un espacio en nuestra comunidad con nuestras historias, prácticas tradicionales y sabiduría cultural.

El creciente racismo contra las personas de ascendencia asiática, del sur de Asia y de las islas del Pacífico (ASAPIA), agravado por el aumento de las pequeñas empresas cerradas propiedad de ASAPIA y los restaurantes familiares debido a los efectos devastadores de la pandemia y la política de la era Trump, está contribuyendo a el silenciamiento y borrado de las voces de ASAPIA en nuestras comunidades. El proyecto Kitchen Table Stories tiene como objetivo interrumpir las narrativas anti-asiáticas, combatir el borrado y crear un sentido de lugar y permanencia cultural para las comunidades de ASAPIA a través de la voz aliada. Reconoce el cuidado como una forma de arte que se basa en la sabiduría cultural, la curación ancestral y el poder colectivo, y tendrá lugar en múltiples espacios comunitarios físicos y virtuales.

¡Actualmente estamos enfocados en celebrar el Mes de la Herencia de la AAPI! Desplácese hacia abajo para conocer las actividades y eventos locales que se llevarán a cabo en el área de Evanston y más allá durante mayo de 2021.

El Proyecto Kitchen Table Stories es apoyado en parte por el Evanston Arts Council y la Illinois Arts Council Agency

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Kitchen Table Stories Exhibition 

I am honored to have been awarded the 2021-2022 Curatorial Fellowship at the Evanston Art Center.  The Kitchen Table Stories exhibition will be a collection of work created by local Asian, South Asian, Pacific Islander artists.  For more information visit Evanston Art Center's website.

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Kitchen Table Stories Exhibition

July 9 - August 21, 2022

Evanston Art Center

Opening Reception: July 15, 2022 6-9pm

Curator’s Statement

Traditional cultural and healing practices are creative embodiments of a people, and are often expressed through the arts.  They have been passed down from generations and are integral to daily life.  Few customs and traditions throughout the world have been untouched by colonialism and imperialism, and many have been misappropriated or eradicated.  Decolonizing the arts involves reclaiming, renewing and reaffirming these practices.  It necessitates critically examining the structures that are in place to oppress and erase people and communities.  It is decentering the dominant white narrative and shifting focus to spaces, voices, and stories that represent people who are racialized and marginalized due to their social identities.  

The Kitchen Table Stories exhibition is a step towards reimagining the spaces that have historically excluded Asian, South Asian, and Pacific Islander American voices.  Despite the current movement towards the decolonization of museums and galleries, artists of color remain underrepresented across the US.  The attempts to be more inclusive are often exercises in fetishization, exoticization and tokenization of black and brown artists.  Who are the cultural gatekeepers of these spaces?  Who decides which stories are told?  Who tells them?  Who contextualizes them?  Who witnesses them?

 

The Kitchen Table Stories exhibition is a celebration of stories shared by local artists who identify as Asian, South Asian and Pacific Islander.   Artists were asked to share the stories that have been passed down to them from ancestors through family and friends, and create work that reflects their own lived experiences.  The result is an exploration of the intersections of immigration, citizenship, race, culture, social identity, multigenerational relationships, and family history.  In the spirit of stories that are shared at the “kitchen table,” the guest is invited to participate by engaging in discourse that considers the importance of telling our own stories and the power of the arts in that process.  The audience is asked to reflect on universal themes such as language, food, home, family, heroes and belonging through the lens of their Asian, South Asian and Pacific Islander neighbors in a space that centers hospitality as an art form that draws on cultural wisdom, lineal healing, and collective care.

Placemaking Project

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"Unless we know ourselves and our history, and other people and their history, there is really no way that we can have positive interaction where there is real understanding"


- Yuri Kochiyama, Human Rights Activist

Did You Know?

Over 10% of Evanston's residents identify as ASPA, and that percentage isn't accurate.  Due to the limitations of boxes on census and city surveys, the term "Asian American" does not resonate with many who identify as ASPA.  South Asians, for example, seldom identify with the term because the general understanding is that Asian American refers to East Asians.  Filipinx, and other communities whose countries were colonized by the Spanish, sometimes identify as Latinx.  Further, in Evanston, there are many mixed families, especially White-ASPA families, with family members who might identify as "mixed race."

Despite the fact that ASPA's have lived in Evanston for generations, and there is a solid and growing number of ASPA's in Evanston, historical data, community stories, and artifacts are nowhere to be found.  The lack of documentation of a community is a function of white supremacy.  It is a systemic erasure of a people.  The perpetual foreigner stereotype is one that has been applied to ASPA's in the U.S.  Regardless of whether they were born in or the US or your family has been in the US for multiple generations you are not American.  This certainly rings true if it is supported by a lack of documentation that a community ever existed.

“By not showing up in American history, by not hearing about Asian Americans

in schools, that contributes to that sense of foreignness.”

 

- Sarah-SoonLing Blackburn, Teacher-Educator

  Southern Poverty Law Center’s Learning for Justice initiative

In 2021, the TEAACH Act was passed in the state of Illinois, mandating that Asian American history be taught in all IL K-12 public schools.  Although this is a significant step towards ensuring that ASPA people and stories are brought to light, we have to ensure that the ASPA experience in the U.S. is not reduced to a monolithic experience and limited to facts and dates.  We can start by ensuring that students who are learning in our D65 and D202 have access to ASPA people and stories in their own community.  ASPA students should be able to read, see and hear about people whose stories reflect their own, and non ASPA students should be able to find ways to make personal connections to the ASPA experience in their own community.  How can we teach Asian American history without knowing our own ASPA history here in our city?

The Kitchen Table Stories Project is partnering with the Evanston History Center on a project called "Placemaking."  The goal is to establish an accessible archive of the ASPA community in Evanston.  We are currently researching historical documents and artifacts, and gathering oral histories to include in the archive.  The goal is to unearth these stories that have been hidden for so long, and to establish a timeline for the ASPA community in Evanston.

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TEAACH

What is TEAACH?

 

With its historic passage in April 2021, the Teaching Equitable Asian American Community History (TEAACH) Act amended Illinois School Code, ensuring that every public elementary and high school student in Illinois learns about the contributions of Asian Americans to the economic, cultural, social, and political development of the United States.

 

Beginning with the 2022-23 school year, every public elementary school and high school shall include in its curriculum a unit of instruction studying the events of Asian American history, including the history of Asian Americans in Illinois and the Midwest, as well as the contributions of Asian Americans toward advancing civil rights from the 19th century onward.

 

Ensuring that Asian American history is taught in our schools lays a foundation for cross-cultural education for all students in Illinois and advances racial equity.

(From Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Chicago)

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TEAACH Programming and Professional Development

Kitchen Table Stories Project will be hosting a series of TEAACH Professional Development Workshops in summer 2022 and throughout the 2022-2023 school year. Through Kids Create Change, we will also be offering art-based programs for students K-8 during the 2022-2023 school year.

More info coming soon!

Resources

Mes de la Herencia de los Isleños del Pacífico Asiático Americano 2021: 31 maneras de celebrar en mayo y más allá - Haga clic AQUÍ para ver el calendario de actividades de la Sociedad Asiática.

"Para conocer a un pueblo, conocer sus historias"

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Echa un vistazo a la colección de historias de PBS que explora la historia, las tradiciones y la cultura de los asiáticos e isleños del Pacífico en los Estados Unidos en celebración del Mes de la Herencia Asiático-Pacífico Americana este mes de mayo AQUÍ .

PBS: La historia de identidad, contribuciones y desafíos experimentados por los estadounidenses de origen asiático.

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Asian Americans es una serie de películas de cinco horas que narrará las contribuciones y los desafíos de los asiáticoamericanos, el grupo étnico de más rápido crecimiento en Estados Unidos. Las historias personales y la nueva investigación académica arrojarán una nueva perspectiva sobre la historia de los Estados Unidos y el papel que los estadounidenses de origen asiático han desempeñado en ella. Míralo AQUÍ gratis.

Listas de libros de ASAPIA

Recursos y actividades de ASAPIA para niños, familias y educadores

Casa del libro de artistas

La artista Regin Igloria comparte cómo hacer libros básicos hechos a mano con materiales reciclados como parte de la serie de talleres virtuales de artes de libros de Artists Book House.

Conozca el significado de la tradicional grulla de papel de origami AQUÍ.

Aprenda sobre Suminagashi AQUÍ .

Recursos para ASAPIA

Organizaciones culturales

Recursos locales - Área de Chicago

Artista: Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya

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#StopAsianHate #StopAAPIHate

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“Los cambios que tenemos que hacer en este país van a ser para la liberación de todas las personas, porque nadie es libre hasta que todos son libres”.
- Fannie Lou Hamer
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Para obtener una guía de esta INCREÍBLE capacitación, haga clic AQUÍ .

¡Siga el proyecto Kitchen Table Stories en las redes sociales!

In the news...​

Daily Northwestern

May 2022

Daily Northwestern

May 2022

Daily Northwestern

April 2021

Evanston Art Center

April 2021

City of Evanston

May 2021

Dear Evanston

September 2021

Our Evanston

October 2021

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