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Art 4 UConn

FebruaryFebruary 11, 12:15 PM
RecitalsPlus: A performance by an advanced music student in the School of Fine Arts
February 14, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005)
February 14, 5 PM
Music on a Sunday Afternoon
February 18, 12:15 PM
Gallery Talk: The Collection Connection. Museum Director Dr. Thomas Bruhn will talk about 19th-century Japanese color woodcuts from the collection.
February 21, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Deep Cover (1992)
February 25, 12:15 PM
RecitalsPlus: A performance by an advanced music student in the School of Fine Arts
February 28, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Red Rock West (1992)
MarchMarch 4, 12:15 PM
Gallery Talk: From Amazing Stories to Weird Tales
Assistant Curator Eve Perry
March 7, 2 PM
Sunday Films: Neo-noir / Memento (2000)
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The William Benton Museum of Art is a member of the Connecticut Art Trail, a partnership of fifteen world-class museums and historic sites across the state. Click here to sign-up for the Art Trail’s e-newsletter, announcing updates on packages, events and exhibitions at member museums.

Current Exhibitions
January 22 – March 30, 2008 The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts from the Japanese American Internment Camps 1942-1946 In Japanese, the word gaman means, “enduring the seemingly unbearable with patience and dignity.”
This exhibition is based upon a ground-breaking book (The Art of Gaman, Ten Speed Press, 2005) by Delphine Hirasuna, who is the exhibition's guest curator. It presents arts and crafts made by Japanese and Japanese Americans who were interned in concentration camps in California, Wyoming, Arizona, Utah, Idaho, Colorado, and Arkansas during World War II. The exhibition features nearly 200 objects made primarily from scrap and found materials by those detained in the camps and gives a sense of the full range of artistic activities that existed within the internment camps that saw the forced relocation of 120,000 Japanese and Japanese Americans. The exhibition also demonstrates the resiliency of the creative spirit—how human beings are able to create objects of beauty and meaning with humble materials and under the most difficult circumstances.

Akira Oye, Cow Carving, Akira Oye took up wood carving while interned at Rohwer, during which time he carved the figures of many familiar animals and birds. After the camp closed, he never carved again. Reprinted with permission from The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts from the Japanese American Internment Camps 1942-1946. Copyright © 2005 by Delphine Hirasuna, Ten Speed Press, Berkeley, CA. Photo Credit: Terry Heffernan.
This exhibition is based upon the book The Art of Gaman: Arts and Crafts from the Japanese American Internment Camps 1942–1946 by Delphine Hirasuna (Ten Speed Press, 2005) and was first held at the San Francisco Museum of Craft and Folk Art. The touring exhibition has been organized by the William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut, and the Oregon Historical Society in collaboration with the National Japanese American Historical Society. The Benton presentation is made possible with the support of the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism and the Nathan Hale Inn and Conference Center, and in partnership with the University of Connecticut Asian American Cultural Center, Asian American Studies Institute, and the Foundations of Humanitarianism program.

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