Projects

My projects include exhibitions, performances, music, and other works of art. Everything I do is about demonstrating the power of our collective imagination.

Ways of Knowing

Diné Bikéyah

An immersive film about the nuclear history of Navajoland, and the people protecting their lifeways.

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Above image: Bobby Leonard Mason, photo by Carmille Dudeck

Ways of Knowing is an immersive short documentary film presented in virtual reality and fulldome formats, where Navajo traditional culture and ecological knowledge reclaim and retell the nuclear legacy of the Southwest. It is an invitation to experience and learn the land — to unsee state borders, land claims, and uranium mines, and instead acknowledge the sacredness of the landscape and its capacity to heal under the loving stewardship of Indigenous elders, scholars and activists.

Premiered at SXSW 2025, the film has since toured across Navajoland and in Japan, where it screened to hibakusha (atom bomb survivors) in Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Tokyo.

Ways of Knowing is a production of Bombshelltoe. Co-produced by Sunny Dooley, Lovely Umayam & Adriel Luis. Film directed by Kayla Briët. Photography by Carmille Dudeck.

WAYSOFKNOWING.US

Going Pop

Online

Dispatches from the ultimate creative project: parenthood.

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Going Pop is a newsletter where I share my reflections on how raising my young child has inspires my curatorial and creative practice. It's inspired by years of witnessing artists and community organizers in my world negotiate the high demands of their work with the joys and challenges of parenthood.

GOINGPOP.CO

Sightlines

Smithsonian American Art Museum

Remapping the nation's capital through Asian American history

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Sightlines: Chinatown and Beyond was an exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum (2024-2025) that highlighted the complex history of Asian Americans living and working in Washington, D.C. from the 1960s to present day. The exhibition was groundbreaking through its hyper-local focus on the surrounding neighborhood of a museum that typically features broad national narratives, and its attention to artists and mediums unconventional to the museum’s exhibitions: the social architect Alfred Liu; the martial arts collective Simba Dojang; the grassroots publication Eastern Wind; and the muralist Cita “CHELOVE” Sadeli. 

As a curator, I advocated for the inclusion of cross-racial narratives in the exhibition to demonstrate the interconnectedness of Asian American history with the Black civil rights movement. I played a key role in exhibition design, layout, and installation. I also stewarded the inclusion of Alfred Liu and Cita Sadeli in the exhibition, including the acquisition of objects into the Smithsonian’s permanent collection. During the run of the show, I researched and developed an online companion that expanded on stories from the exhibition, and curated monthly programs that engaged audiences with the exhibition material through multimedia lectures, martial arts demonstrations, film screenings, and musical performances.

Smithsonian Culture Labs

Worldwide

Transforming the world’s largest museum complex from the inside out

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Above image: Yumi Sakugawa's participatory installation Fashion Forecasts at CrossLines: A Culture Lab on Intersectionality

The Smithsonian Culture Labs was a series of art and culture activations that disrupted museum norms through radical curatorial practices of ethical community engagement, experimental collaboration, and responsible stewardship of knowledge and environment. Through the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, I conceived and co-curated four Culture Labs from 2016-2019 in Washington, D.C., New York City, Honolulu, and Auckland – each transformed raw, unconventional spaces by convening dozens of participating creatives to investigate site-specific, time-sensitive discourse. Artists, scholars, and culture bearers greeted visitors in the spirit of knowledge exchange and co-creation – acting as a counter-model to the top-down approach traditional to museums.

The Culture Labs contrasted from traditional Smithsonian exhibitions – they were rapidly curated while focusing fierce attention to detail regarding ethical community protocol. Culture Labs appeared for 3-5 days, each drawing 10,000-15,000 visitors. In 2017, the Culture Lab Manifesto was published in a special issue of Poetry to share the community-centered framework.

CrossLines: A Culture Lab on Intersectionality (2016)
Smithsonian Arts & Industries Building, Washington, D.C.

CTRL+ALT: A Culture Lab on Imagined Futures (2016)
Former site of the Pearl River Mart in SOHO, New York City, NY

ʻAe Kai: A Culture Lab on Convergence (2017)
Former site of the Foodland in Ala Moana, Honolulu, Hawai‘i

Te Whāinga: A Culture Lab on Civility (2019)
Silo Park, Auckland, Aotearoa (New Zealand)

The Color Curtain Project

Washington, D.C.

An art book & culinary experience that reflects on Afro-Asian solidarity & community.

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The Color Curtain Project is a series of dinner parties and art book presentations that bring individuals of African and Asian diasporic identities together. By breaking bread, learning history, and sharing stories, the project encourages constructive dialogue around political and social justice challenges that entwine global experiences today.

The project takes its name from The Color Curtain (1956), a travelogue by Richard Wright, who authored the American literary classics Native Son and Black Boy. The Color Curtain summarizes Wright’s observations as an African-American reporter covering the Bandung Conference — an epic convening in April 1955 held in Bandung, Indonesia between twenty-nine Asian and African countries eager to establish a coalition denouncing racism, colonialism, and nuclear war. The Color Curtain is not a comprehensive or technical account of what transpired in Bandung; Wright did not delve into the political and bureaucratic dealings between statesmen. Rather, The Color Curtain offers a personal snapshot of his experience witnessing the collision of Afro-Asian identities, and their collective struggle to find political, economic, and social freedom after many decades of colonial rule.

Many people do not know about The Bandung Conference or The Color Curtain, but their  themes, achievements, and shortcomings still reverberate today. The Color Curtain Project aims to celebrate and critically reflect on the connections between past and present by offering a contemporary interpretation over dinner and urging guests to think about what has changed, if at all, between the Afro-Asian diasporic relationship since 1955.

The Color Curtain Project is a collaboration between Washington, DC- and New York-based scholars, artists, and entrepreneurs: Tammy Nguyen, Aerica Shimizu Banks, Seda Nak, Erik Bruner-Yang, Desirée Venn Frederic, Lovely Umayam & Adriel Luis.

THECOLORCURTAINPROJECT.COM

Ritual Intervention

Smithsonian American Art Museum

Tina Villadolid calls in the spirits of those who the Smithsonian sacrificed in the name of research.

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Ritual Intervention: Sightlines was activated by artist Tina Villadolid at the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Kogod Courtyard in 2024, in response to recent revelations that the Smithsonian had secretly collected human remains in the early 1900s to aid in pseudoscientific research proposing white supremacy. Villadolid's series of Ritual Intervention shed light on lesser-known Filipino histories throughout the United States. In this case, she laid focus on the Filipinos whose brain samples were acquired without consent, and which have been part of the Smithsonian's collections for over a century.

The activation, which took place at the opening of the exhibition Sightlines: Chinatown and Beyond, expanded the notion of Washington, D.C.'s "local community" by acknowledging those whose bodily remains have been put in storage in the region. Using natural materials of the Philippines, quotes from Secretary Lonnie Bunch's official response to the investigation, and polaroid photos taken at the site of the intervention, Villadolid met the moment of reckoning with an approach to bring people together, honor her ancestors, make space to heal.

Photos by AJ Mitchell

 

It Speaks for Itself?

Gaslight Gallery, MD

Wen-hao Tien's body of work gives voice to what calls from within.

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It Speaks for Itself? was a solo exhibition featuring works by multidisciplinary artist Wen-hao Tien, exhibited at Gaslight Gallery in Frederick, MD in 2022. She investigates of a wide range of mundane materials, making works of line, sculpture and painting to depict the inescapable beauty of nature. She says, “Although my artistic process is about honing and evolving my thoughts and emotional senses, I am more interested in how you see it. How does a particular piece speak to you? What will you say back?”

As the curator, I followed Tien through her creative process over the pandemic years – including Zoom studio visits while she was quarantined in a Taiwan hotel room, watching mold on an orange grow into what eventually became the focus of an artwork. Sifting through her body of work and hearing what she longed to communicate to a world emerging from isolation, we landed on the exhibition concept as a leap of faith that audiences would find the message in the work by listening to their own inner voices.

Curator's statement: We are bombarded with so much content, constant reactions, and no shortage of words – but it remains difficult as ever to find meaning. Sometimes what cannot be communicated must instead be sensed, evoked, intuited. When every moment is followed by endless opinions, this may be the only way we can recall how to trust ourselves. Artist Wen-hao Tien’s body of work is rich with various plays on language, but it never quite seems to be about what is said or written. Instead, the artist invites us experience how the words land on us, how they feel while ingested, and how we each uniquely respond. It Speaks for Itself? is a new conversation about our nature of communication.

Artist's statement: My practice explores how identity crosses, merges, and transcends culture. Words (legible or illegible) and everyday mundane objects are my sources of inspiration. Growing up in post-cold war Asia with the previous two generations of my family displaced by natural disasters and war, my work responds to our changing societies, the environment, and our lives in flux. As an interdisciplinary artist, I have studied orthodox Chinese calligraphy with great effort. I am deeply moved by where a simple shape and curve can take me—every stroke vibrates, has music.

Bravespace

Online

A New Music Compilation for Meditation, Mindfulness, and Collective Healing

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Above image: Bravespace cover art by Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya

Bravespace is a compilation of original songs, sounds, and meditations created by Asian American women and non-binary artists and musicians, presented by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. Arriving amidst a period of collective trauma and heightened xenophobic violence, Bravespace offers listeners a refuge for contemplation, grief, and growth.

Commissioned at the beginning of the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown, APAC spent almost three years collaborating with these musicians, artists, and cultural practitioners to vividly capture how an intensely challenging moment could lead to personal discovery and collective healing. Bravespace, which received critical support from the Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative, adds complexity to the greater landscape of meditation and healing arts tools by centering perspectives that have long been marginalized.

Curated and produced by
Adriel Luis
Hollis Wong-Wear
Erika Shimizu

Participating artists
Low Leaf
MILCK
Arushi Jain
Our Daughter
Kwonyin
Erika Shimizu
Ana Roxanne
Hollis
mayx
JusMoni
Chong the Nomad
Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya

Listen on Spotify

Listen on Apple Music

Listen on all platforms

Lifelines

Online

Accounting for the experiences of women in nuclear policy during the Covid-19 pandemic

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Lifelines is a collection of personal reflections about the experiences of nuclear policy and technical practitioners during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic (2020 - 2021). Many of these stories come from women in the field who, like everyone else, suffered the immediate physical and mental strain of this crisis: fear of widespread illness and death; the loneliness of lockdown; and the exhaustion from a frenetic lifestyle that collapsed the boundary between personal and professional space.

Yet they also wrestle with biases and challenges — as nuclear experts who double as mothers, or junior and mid-careers reckoning with gender barriers reinscribed in virtual, socially-distant work environments — that complicate their vision of a secure future for the world and for themselves.

Introduction by
Lovely Umayam

Illustrations by
Elisa Reverman

Essays by
Victoria Wu
Anu Damale
Chantell Murphy
Ana Velasco

Anecdotes from
The Gender Champions for Nuclear Policy Gendered Impacts of Covid-19 Survey

Web design by
Adriel Luis

Visit Lifelines

3AM - Time Sensitive

3AM: Time Sensitive

Reston, VA

The Myanmar collective's U.S. debut examines the depths of global empathy and solidarity.

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Above image: From 3AM, Still in the Present

In February 2021, Myanmar's military overthrew the democratically-elected government. The coup led to a civil war that continues to this day. I had visited Myanmar in 2018, where I met artists Ma Ei, Ko Latt, and Yadanar Win. Their collective, 3AM, dissolve the lines between art, activism, performance, and media. When the war broke out, I immediately reached out to see how I could support them.

To draw attention to the conflict in Myanmar, I connected with the Tephra Institute of Contemporary Art in Reston, VA to curate Time Sensitive, with all proceeds going to the artists. The experience helped me more deeply understand how I can contribute to affecting change as a curator during global crises – by deepening relationships, raising awareness, and surfacing urgent works of art.

Exhibition Statement: 3AM's work responds to social conditions that are pressing in Myanmar, but that resonate throughout the world – the repression of social critique, the complexities of queer life, and the effects of globalization, to name a few. Ever since Myanmar's military coup in February this year, internet shutdowns, public uprisings, and police violence against demonstrators and artists, the nation's turmoils have been placed back in the global spotlight.

Time Sensitive marked the first time 3AM's works were exhibited in the United States, in support of the collective's efforts to share Myanmar's lived experiences, critical perspectives, and radical imaginations with the rest of the world.

3AM: Time Sensitive was viewable at the Tephra Institute of Contemporary Art in Reston, VA from August 28, 2021 to January 8, 2022.

Still from Civil War (2021)

DETAILS @ TEPHRAICA.ORG

Wavelength

Smithsonian Folklife Festival

A series of art projects that illustrate the connection between humans and sea life.

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Wavelength was a series of art projects presented at the 2022 Smithsonian Folklife Festival that demonstrated the connections between humans and sea life. Works included: a mosaic of a whale and dolphin composed of origami sea creatures folded through community sessions led by artist and legendary skateboarder Peggy Oki; a series of stone shark sculptures created by Tongva artist and scholar L Frank Manriquez; a life-sized baby humpback whale sculpture and an installation of stickers depicting fish names in ʻŌlelo Hawaiʻi by artist and ocean engineer Jane Chang Mi; and screen prints by Soul & Ink Crew.

Photos by Phillip R. Lee

In the Future

New York City

Jess X. Snow presents a portal to the future where our Asian community is safe.

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This mural on Mosco St in Manhattan’s Chinatown imagines a future where we transcend white supremacy and anti-Asian violence. It was envisioned and painted with youth in the W.O.W. Project community in Chinatown, and BIPOC community members. The mural depicts a youth holding a red envelope casting a spotlight on Chinatown elders in monumental embrace as indigenous plants of Lenapehoking (NYC) grow from the concrete and soar into the sky above them. ? Starting this fall, visitors to the mural will be able to use Augmented Reality to see the mural animate to life and immerse themselves a virtual healing space of ambient music and letters depicting wishes for the future written by community members. Visitors globally are invited to share an offering that manifests safety, mutual care, and communal protection for the future of our Asian community in a virtual mural experience.

Photos by Marion Aguas

Funded by:
Wing on Wo Projects
Smithsonian APA Center
NYU A/P/A Institute

Producing Team:
Mei Lum, Denise Zhou and Adriel Luis

Assistants & Teaching Artists:
Singha Hon, Zoraida Ingles, Jia Sung, Tomie Arai

Graphic Design Team:
Art direction: Tiffany Jen
Type Design & Layout: Michael Enten

DETAILS @ JESSXSNOW.COM

There, There

Online

Seoul and D.C. artists reflect on what it means to be present in an era of absence.

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What does it mean to be present in a year marked with so much absence? When we look back and say “I was there,” where will that have been? In this online exhibition, four artists respond to shifting notions of selfhood, togetherness, civic participation, and what it means to be a part of this moment.

There, There features new works by Julia Kwon, Lisa Park, Nara Park, and Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries, and is curated by Adriel Luis.

It is a part of IA&A at Hillyer’s Sister Cities grant from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities to facilitate artistic exchange between Washington, DC and Seoul, South Korea. Many thanks to our partners at The Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C., and all the collaborators and artists involved in this exhibition.

Featuring

Lisa Park, #data-driven vlog, 2020, video

Julia Kwon, Back To Normal is Not Enough, 2020, mixed media

YOUNG-HAE CHANG HEAVY INDUSTRIES, IS THAT ALL THERE IS?, 2020, video

Nara Park, Mediation I, 2020, 3D-printed nylon sculpture

This online exhibitions was viewable on the Hillyer website from December 2020 to January 2021.

Care Package

Online

Poems, meditations, films, and other cultural nutrients for times like this.

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We are able to exhibit courage and strength in our greatest moments – but what about our most impossible times? Where do we find wisdom within the vast unknown? How do we stay grounded when everything is up in the air?

Care Package is a collection of creative offerings by artists, writers, and scholars who the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center collaborated with in recent years. The works take a range of approaches to addressing uncertainty, anxiety, and grief through vision, reflection, and healing. Most have been exhibited in past programs, but have never been made widely accessible until now.

Featuring
Yumi Sakugawa
Jess X. Snow, Kit Yan & Peter Pa
Sham-e-Ali Nayeem and Qais Essar
Whakarongo by Jack Gray
Photosynth by Low Leaf, Alex Abalos & Adam Labuen
Current, I by Lehua M. Taitano
Tea(r)ism, by Naoko Wowsugi
Kitchen Remedies People's Kitchen Collective
The Corner of Heart-to-Hearts by Chad Shomura & Yumi Sakugawa
What Time Is It On The Clock Of The World? by Nobuko Miyamoto & Juan Perez

VIEW THE EXHIBITION

Te Whāinga

Auckland

A Culture Lab on civility, and what it truly means to coexist as community, society, and humanity.

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Above image: Rosanna Raymond performing BackHand and Away (2019) amidst Miranda Smitheram's Ko Pikiwhara Te Mauka / And Here I Visit the Bones (2019)

2019 situated us in a host of collisions between our complex histories, enduring systems and beliefs, greater awareness of our ecological pressures and our future aspirations. People throughout the world and from various walks of life recognized that the solutions to today’s greatest challenges, inevitable tensions and intersections can only be realized by seeking compatibility of aspirations without denying these fundamental cultural and cognitive complexities amongst one another.  Featuring world-class artists, scholars and cultural practitioners – all critically examining the notion of civility – Te Whāinga was a unique opportunity to explore what it truly means to coexist within our communities, societies, and humanity.

Te Whāinga was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center and Auckland Museum (curated by Dina Jezdic, Kālewa Correa, Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis & Adriel Luis) and took place at Silo 6 and Silo Park, Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand in October 2019.

Featuring
Ahsin Ahsin
Rodney Bell
Marc Conaco
Elliot Collins
Maria Dumlao
Dr. Léuli Eshrāghi
Erin Fae
Tanu Gago
Jack Gray
Rebecca Ann Hobbs
Hina Kneubuhl
In*ter*is*land Collective
Kerry Ann Lee
Qiane Matata-Sipu
Carl F.K. Pao
Rosanna Raymond
Miranda Smitheram
Kereama Taepa
Rosabel Tan
Tufala Meri (Reina & Molana Sutton)
Pati Solomona Tyrell

Elevator Pitch

New Orleans, LA

Christine Sun Kim, New Orleans Airlift, and Rick Snow create a multi-sensory experience with Louisiana's Deaf community.

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Elevator Pitch is an interactive art installation that celebrates New Orleans as a multi-sensory musical experience. Created by New Orleans Airlift, Christine Sun Kim, and Rick Snow, it is the Music Box Village’s latest “musical house” structure, offering visitors a visceral, innovative encounter with sound. Elevator Pitch is inspired by Kim’s childhood memories of crowding elevators with her Deaf friends, and shouting so loudly that they could feel the vibrations of each others’ voices. Meanwhile, elevators are often known to hearing people as sites of “awkward silence,” thus the concept of this installation challenges when and where various people have a voice. Born Deaf herself, Kim approaches Elevator Pitch by investigating how Deaf communities of New Orleans experience a city so deeply defined by music, and by highlighting how Deaf people are vital to this culture of sound. This piece is developed in collaboration with local composer and educator Rick Snow, whose work involves instruments, lighting, media, and sculpture to create immersive experiences; and New Orleans Airlift, the art collective and architectural team behind the Music Box Village. Airlift has stewarded an environment of creative collaboration, with the goal of widening access to sound and music to communities locally, nationally, and globally.

Photos by Camille Lenain

Elevator Pitch is presented by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center with generous support from the Smithsonian Year of Music, Smithsonian Women’s Committee, and Shift Design.

Elevator Pitch features the voices of thirteen members of the Deaf community of Southeast Louisiana:
Fallon Frederick
Jay Isch
Natalie Delgado
Ari Latino
Kimberly Durette
Mary Hoang
David Welch
Brittany Welch
Jimmy Gore
Grace Graugnard
Walker Estes
Sarah Tullier
Tate Tullier

She Who Dies To Live

Hawaiʻi, USA, Australia

A multimedia spoken word experience that reimagines Death as a vital vein of Pasefika experience.

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Jocelyn Kapumealani Ng, Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner & Terisa Siagatonu perform She Who Dies To Live at the Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, 2019. / Thumbnail: Jocelyn Kapumealani Ng, photo by Lyz Soto

What if our health depended upon telling the truth about what is happening to us? This multimedia spoken word experience reimagines Death as a vital vein of Pasefika experience, rather than an end to our island narratives. Featuring an all-female lineup of performers representing Fiji, Samoa, the Marshall Islands and Hawai‘i, She Who Dies to Live represents a convergence of different Pasifika voices, and of various art forms and storytelling methods.

She Who Dies To Live features Jocelyn Kapumealani Ng, Kathy Jetñil Kijiner, Terisa Siagatonu, and Jahra "Rager" Wasasala, and portions are directed by Lyz Soto. It was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center. Chapters of the production were presented live in Honolulu, Hawaiʻi as a part of ʻAe Kai: A Culture Lab on Convergence; Salt Lake City, Utah as a part of Pasifika First Fridays; and Brisbane, Australia as a part of the Pacific Arts Association Symposium at the Gallery of Modern Art.

AFTEREARTH

Worldwide

Jess X. Snow's short film about the human relationships that connect us with the planet.

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AFTEREARTH is an immersive short film, directed by Jess X. Snow, about how four women from different parts of the world draw their understandings of motherhood through connections with the environment. Featuring a chant by Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, a poem by Isabella Borgeson, a song by Kayla Briët, and a heartfelt reflection between Wan Ping Oshiro and her son Kit Yan, AFTEREARTH is ideally experienced as a 3-channel installation.

AFTEREARTH debuted at the ʻAe Kai Culture Lab and has since been screened at campuses and festivals throughout the United States.

Director: Jess X. Snow
Co-Producers: Kit Yan & Adriel Luis
Production Designer: Peter Pa
Starring: Hinaleimoana Wong-Kalu, Isabella Borgeson, Kayla Briët, Wan Ping Oshiro & Kit Yan

AFTEREARTHFILM.COM

Fashion Forecasts

New York City

Illustrator Yumi Sakugawa’s concepts ask, “What does your soul want to wear in the afterlife?”

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Fashion Forecasts imagines an alternate futuristic reality where everyday fashion is spiritual, intersectional, intergenerational, collaborative, sustainable, and influenced by different Asian and Asian American histories, cultures, and traditions. The exhibition and book features new clothing and accessories that may emerge as identity, technology, and environment evolve. Representing the multiple stages of the fashion process—from design to manufacturing to adornment—she shows that fashion, like identity, can be simultaneously personal and performative, serious and whimsical, instinctive and avant-garde.

Originally commissioned for the Crosslines Culture Lab in 2016, in September 2018 an expanded version of the book was published and distributed by Retrofit Comics, with a book launch and exhibition at Pearl River Mart in NYC.

Photos by Hanifa Haris

ALLLLLL NATURAL

Baltimore

An exhibition featuring art about what’s real, what’s fake, and what’s both.

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Above image: Chiang Tai, Traffic Island Series (2017)

Well, of course we’re obsessed with authenticity. Why shouldn’t we be? Our news is fake, our food is genetically modified, and we’ve even trained ourselves to stop answering the phone because it’s usually a bot calling. The thin line between reality and fantasy has thickened into a world in purgatory – and it’s here that we encounter the artists featured in ALLLLLL NATURAL. Each of the works in this show uniquely illustrates the tensions between what is and what isn’t. They question if all that emerges from the earth is necessarily real, and if that which is made in our hands and our minds is immediately synthetic. Composed of materials that are organic, manufactured, or of dubious origin, the artists here beckon us to suspend our grip on reality, and recognize that the very core of human nature is our instinct to make believe.
ALLLLLL NATURAL is on view at School 33 Art Center in Baltimore from October 12 – November 24, 2018.

Featuring

Selin Balci

Maggie Gourlay

Antoinette Suiter

Chiang Tai

Catherine Mapp

Caroline Hatfield

Kaitlin O’Keefe

 

Uprooted

Washington, D.C.

An art exhibition that examines active relationships with home.

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Above image: Kay Gordon, Cot (2017)

When someone says “make yourself at home," what are they really asking of you? Are you supposed to fashion the place in such a way that it feels intimate to you, or are you to adjust your sense of intimacy in the first place? Uprooted is a show that recognizes both as viable pathways to belonging. The works presented here rest in the tension between intimate and alien. The artists express that being at home is an active relationship with place, an ongoing practice in making the foreign familiar, and that being rooted isn’t the same as staying put.

Uprooted featured work from an open submission that I selected as the exhibition’s juror. It showed at IA&A at Hillyer, and was the first independent exhibition that I curated in Washington, D.C.

Featuring
Jenny Balisle
Mills Brown
Kay Gordon
Jessica Frances Grégoire
Stacy Isenbarger
Niloufar Kazemzadeh
Katie Laton
Ruth Lozner
Jillian MacMaster
Mi-Hee Nahm
Bundith Phunsombatlert
Judith Pratt
Ann Stoddard

ʻAe Kai

Honolulu

A Culture Lab on Convergence, and how different ways of life inform our relationships with Earth.

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Above image: Chad Shomura & Linh Huỳnh, Earthly Correspondences (2017)

Ae Kai, the shoreline, brings together elements stretching from mountain to ocean and serves as a gathering place for exchange and convergence. Traditionally in Hawai‘i, some of the most important conversations are held at ‘Ae Kai when the sun is up and the waves are out.

‘Ae Kai: A Culture Lab on Convergence took place in the former site of Foodland in Ala Moana Center, an 18,000 square foot supermarket situated in the neighborhood between Waikiki and Kaka‘ako that instantly draws nostalgia among the island's locals. We transformed the gutted space – turning the meat locker into a blackbox theater, the poke stand into a DJ booth, the stripped freezer aisle into a catwalk. The show featured over 30 artworks that explored the meeting points of humanity and nature in Hawai‘i, the Pacific Islands and beyond.

Maile Andrade, ‘Āina Mea‘ai (Food Land)

Robin Lasser & Adrienne Pao, Dashboard Hula Girl Dress Tent: In Search of Aunty Keahi

Adam Labuen, Low Leaf & Alex Abalos, Photosynth

Lehua Taitano & Lisa Jarrett, An Aberrational Poetics: Inside Me an Island Shaped Whole

Charles Jean-Pierre & Keanu Sai, The Commissary / Ua Mau Ke Ea

Ane Bakutis, Jamie Makasobe & Hina Kneubuhl, Hālanalana

Photos by Tara Rock.

‘Ae Kai was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center (curated by Kālewa Correa, Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis & Adriel Luis and took place at the former site of Foodland in Ala Moana, Honolulu, Hawaiʻi in July 2017.

Featuring
Maile Andrade
Rosanna Raymond
Léuli Māzyār Lunaʻi Eshraghi
Ricky Tagaban
Havana Libre
Craig Santos Perez + Brandy Nālani McDougal
Lehua Taitano + Lisa Jarrett
Kayla Briët
Abigail Kahilikia Romanchak + Charles Cohan
Sloane Leong
Monica Jahan Bose in collaboration with Hina Kneubuhl + Sloane Leong
Adam Labuen + Low Leaf in collaboration with Alex Abalos
Robin Lasser + Adrienne Pao
Ane Bakutis, Jamie Makasobe + Hina Kneubuhl
Nicole Moore
Chad Shomura + Linh Huỳnh
Kit Yan, Peter Pa + Jess X Snow
Angel Chang
Kayla Briët
Wooden Wave
Sid M. Dueñas
Keanu Sai
CHELOVE + MasPaz
Charles Jean-Pierre + Keanu Sai
Tom Pohaku Stone
Ian Masterson
Carl Pao
Aloha Got Soul
Wiena Lin
Shizu Saldamando
Naoko Wowsugi
Katelin Lili’inoe Rose Branco
Jahra ‘Rager’ Wasasala, Jocelyn Kapumealani Ng, Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner + Terisa Siagatonu
John “Prime” Hina
Solomon Enos
Aaron Kawai‘ae‘a
Calvin Hoe
Maikai‘i JK Tubbs
Words Beats & Life

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Hurry Up and Wait

Philadelphia

Glimpses into some of the many complex steps between and beyond getting from Point A to B.

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Above image: Hye Yeon Nam, still from Cheeeeese (2014)

It takes so much to move a life. To be an immigrant, one endures relocation in many flavors — physical, mental, social. One endures recontextualization. Immigration is a unique kind of teleportation, one which requires you to leave behind certain pieces, to recover or reinvent those pieces upon arrival. Immigration is so much more than an act or a moment. It is an experience shared by many but understood by few. It is a rite of passage, in every sense of those words. During a complex time like now, we are tempted to frame immigration as a simple matter. It isn’t. And the artists in Hurry Up and Wait offer glimpses into some of the many complex steps between and beyond getting from Point A to B. This body of work does not attempt to present immigration in a nutshell, nor does it seek to fan the flames of any heated debates. It is simply a body, and expression of nuances and complexities, as we are.

Hurry Up and Wait was on view at the Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia from September to December 2017.

Featuring:
Pritha Bhattacharyya
Sanjana Bijlani
Melissa Chen
Yujane Chen
Maria Dumlao
Monica Kane
Caroline Key
Ahree Lee
Hye Yeon Nam
JJ Lee and Mei Lee Ogden
Jermaine Ollivierre
Keven Quach
Yumi Janairo Roth
Rea Christina Sampilo
Catzie Vilayphonh

Glitch

Alexandria, VA

An art show for new ways of looking at media, new ways of looking at ourselves.

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Above image: Kaylah Waite, Mercedes (2017)

Ever since the invention of fire, humans have approached technology with intrigue, bewilderment and audacity – sometimes all at the same time. The work submitted for this exhibit presented a treasure trove of ways that artists attempt to tame this flame, and here I learned that technology and media-based art is not merely a genre or medium, but rather a layer of reality that will inevitably become present in all forms of creative expression. While artists demonstrated various levels of expertise in their chosen technologies, I didn’t select pieces based on how impressive the platforms were, or even how masterfully the artists used them. Instead, I chose works that showed the complex (and sometimes messy) relationship between emerging technologies and one of humanity’s oldest inventions, communication. Technology can be an obstacle, a distraction or a placeholder for storytelling, and I chose works that insisted on making their points in spite of these challenges. The works presented here may demonstrate new ways of looking at media, but more importantly, they are new ways of looking at ourselves.

Zach Nagle, Glamour #2

Exercises in Translation

Glitch featured work from an open submission that I selected as the exhibition’s juror. It showed at Target Gallery in Alexandria, Virginia, from May to July 2017.

Featured artists:
Jill Burks
Eric Corriel
Sasha de Koninck
Alex Gomez
Ed Grant
Maxim Leyzerovich
Tracy Miller-Robbins
John Mosher
Zach Nagle
Lyric Prince
Kaylah Waite

CTRL+ALT

New York City

A Culture Lab on the Imagined Future – from inner-self to outer space.

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Above image: Genevieve Erin O’Brien, More Than Love on the Horizon

CTRL+ALT is the result of a bold belief that we claim our destinies. The artists and scholars featured here insist that knowing what the future holds is not a question of speculation, but instead agency. Whether their concepts of the future are based on outer space or inner space, a distant era or the next brief moment, the tellers of these stories commonly claim them as their own. Representing a range of backgrounds and identities, they show that even those who have long been pushed to the margins are the center of someone’s universe. Is the future something that happens to you, or something you actively create? CTRL+ALT is a mere glimpse into a realm of infinite possibilities.

CTRL+ALT was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center (curated by Kālewa Correa, Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis & Adriel Luis) and took place at the former site of Pearl River Mart in SOHO, New York City in November 2016.

Charles Jean-Pierre, Black (w)Holes

Jaret Vadera, The Future is Behind Us

No Kings Collective, Things to Come, Again

Wiena Lin, Disassembly Line

Yumi Sakugawa, Intergalactic Interfaith Peace Community Meditation Space Center

Photos by Les Talusan and Manny Mones

Featuring
Adam Labuen
adrienne maree brown
Andrew Rebatta
Alexandra Chang
Betsy Huang
Bryan Thao Worra
Chad Shomura
Charles Jean-Pierre
Chinatown Art Brigade
Che Jen
Chris Mah
Christian A. Mendoza
Christine Sun Kim
Daniel del Pielago
DJ Rekha
Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez
Evan Keeling
Genevieve Erin O’Brien
Jaret Vadera
John “Prime” Hina
Keanu Sai
Keith Chow
Lisa Park
MariNaomi
Matt Huynh
Ming Fay
Museum of Impact
Naiʻa Lewis
Nia Keturah
No Kings Collective
Paul D. Miller
Samson Young
Saya Woolfalk
Saymoukda Duangphouxay Vongsay
Sheldon Scott
Secret Identities
Solomon Enos
Taeyoon Choi
Thomas Mader
Wiena Lin
Yumi Sakugawa

Photos by Les Talusan

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Buenos Caos

Buenos Aires

A pop-up moving image exhibition featuring a global array of artists and curators.

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Above image: Paula Herrera, Fuego en el aire (2013)

Buenos Caos is a celebration of some superb artists’ film and video, collected together from across the globe, including artists’ work from Argentina, USA, China, Hong Kong and the UK. Combined with some expert DJ-ing provided by ATOM bar, Buenos Caos provides a unique moment to enjoy culture and have a drink or two following Chaos at the Museum in Buenos Aires.

Buenos Caos was curated by Karen Antorveza, Moritz Cheung, Jamie Wyld, and Adriel Luis, and presented at ATOM in Buenos Aires in November 2016.

Featuring
Fuego en el aire – Paula Herrera 5’14” (2013)
Locoemotive Lounge – Robert Fox 6’06” (2014)
King Fu Zombies VS Shaman Warrior 11’42” (2016)
A Corruption of Mass – Megan Broadmeadow 2’42” (2015)
Airy Me – Yoko Kuno 5’38” (2013)
also
Under the Lion Crotch – Wong Ping 4’45” (2011)
200 Nanowebbers – Semiconductor  2’40” (2005)
Memory Theatre – Tom Lock 4’44” (2012
Chew Chew – Tom Goddard 2’55” (2015)
Private Theatre – Liberty Antonia Sadler 3’56” (2015)
A Rat Biting Another Rat – Anita Delaney 4’16” (2015)
Offset – Shi Zheng 7’52” (2014)
Splashy Phasings – Heather Phillipson 2’39 (2013)
The Dark, Krystle – Michael Robinson 9’30” (2013)
Fireworks – Li Ming 5’07” (2008)
Cualidad de animales y pájaros – Violeta Gonzales 5’32” (2015)
Destruccion – Guadalupe Moreno Campos 1’46” (2015)
//blahjj´ – Tatiana Cuoco 8’24” (2016)

DETAILS

CrossLines

Washington, D.C.

A Culture Lab on Intersectionality, and the evolving sense of self in America.

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Above image: Anida Yoeu Ali & Studio Revolt, The Red Chador: Threshold

CrossLines imagines a new museum for the 21st Century, where contemporary artists and scholars actively explore intersections in today’s web of American identity. These stories reflect our distinct history of migration, wars, civil rights struggles and personal journeys. They layer concepts such as race, religion, gender and sexuality to show the complexity of the American experience today.

CrossLines was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center (curated by Kālewa Correa, Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis & Adriel Luis) and took place over Memorial Day Weekend 2016, at the Smithsonian Arts & Industries Building – the former site of the U.S. National Museum.

Tracy Keza & Studio Revolt, Hijabs and Hoodies (2016)

No Kings Collective, Carnival of Life

Roger Shimomura, Portraits of Infamy and SUPERWAXX, ! AM AN AMERICAN

Desirée Venn Frederic & Tony Walker, white%

CHELOVE & MASPAZ, MOUNTAINS + MONUMENTS

Monica Ramos, Kama

Photos by Les Talusan

Featuring
Anida Yoeu Ali / Studio Revolt
Roger Shimomura & SUPERWAXX
No Kings Collective
Monica Ramos
Desirée Venn Frederic w/ Tony Walker
CHELOVE + MasPaz
Tracy Keza / Studio Revolt
Matty Huynh
also
Anjal Chande & Nico Slate
Annu Palakunnathu Matthew
Antoinette Brock
Avi Gupta
Brandon Som
Chinese American Museum, Los Angeles
Clement Hanami
Frank Chi
Gregg Deal
Jason Lujan
Jennifer Cendaña Armas
Makers Lab w/ Ayes Cold, Kerim the DJ, Asha “BOOMCLAK” Santee, S P A C E Lab & Patience Sings
Adrianne Russell & Aleia Brown
National Museum of American
History & Hirshhorn ArtLab+
The Nerds of Color
PJ Gubatina Policarpio & Ida Noelle Calumpang
The People’s Kitchen Collective w/ Sita Bhaumik, Jocelyn Jackson & Saqib Keval
Quota with Dawne Langford &
Alejandro Pintado
Rano Singh
Robert Karimi & ThePeoplesCook Project
Shizu Saldamando
Sons & Brothers
Soul & Ink
Steve Alfaro
Tarfia Faizullah & Jamaal May
Vaimoana Niumeitolu
Kyle Goen
Louis Cabrera
Jason Guzman
Kunal Sharma
Gabriella Callender
Lorena Ambrosio
Mahina Movement
Wooden Wave
Yumi Sakugawa
Zohra Saed & Kai Krienke

Photos by Les Talusan

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A Day in the Life

Online

A photo exhibition based on an open call for snapshots of Asian Pacific America.

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Above photo by astrobuddha

On May 10, 2014 more than 500 people captured over 2,000 photos and videos throughout the course of a single day. The Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center issued a call to populate the online world with Asian Pacific American representations of life. Works were submitted from everywhere – throughout the United States and from around the world. This exhibit features a small selection of the work and remains an experiment in envisioning the Asian Pacific American experience as a vast and complex identity, with a history that grows richer and more complicated with each new day.

Photo by An Rong Xu

Photo by Catzie Vilayphonh

Photo by Dr. WTPho

Photo by Frances Kai Hwa Wang

Photo by J. Shimizu

Photo by Kin Man Hui

Photo by Kristin Kouke

A Day in the Life of Asian Pacific America was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, curated by Eddie Wong and Adriel Luis, and juried by Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis, Masum Momaya, Melissa Bisgani & Amber McClure. It debuted online on July 4, 2014.

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Art Intersections

Silver Spring, MD

Exhibiting themes that bridge the experiences of Asian and Latinx communities in the U.S.

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Above image: Monica Ramos, Carne (2013)

Art Intersections opens conversations about the place of art and the visual stories we can tell together. Whether through coalition or conflict, solidarity or strife, our communities are shaped by the ways we interpret and negotiate our histories in intersection with each other. Here, over twenty celebrated artists explore how their identities, issues and interests – while often deeply personal – exist as an intersection of multiple frames of meaning and reference, often serving as provocative calls for social change or recognizing that change has arrived.

Art Intersections was produced by the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center and the Smithsonian Latino Center, and curated by Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis, Eric Nakamura, Shizu Saldamando, and Adriel Luis. It debuted in July 2013 at Veteran’s Plaza in Silver Spring, MD.

Featuring

Monica Ramos

Sadie Barnett

Pablo Cristi

Steve Alfaro

Mia Nakano

Favianna Rodriguez

Lola Alcaraz

Studio Revolt

Gary Garay

Fidencio Martinez

Culture Strike

Audrey Chan

Arnoldo Vargas

Anna Serrano

Clement Hanami

Albert Reyes

Ako Castuera

Kozyndan

OneBeat

Worldwide

A residency and tour featuring master musicians from throughout the world.

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OneBeat brings musicians from around the world to the U.S. for one month each fall to collaboratively write, produce, and perform original music, and develop strategies for arts-based social engagement. OneBeat begins with an opening residency, when Fellows collaborate to create original material, record new musical ideas, and incubate their projects. OneBeat fellows then go on tour, performing for a wide array of American audiences, collaborating with local musicians, and leading workshops with youth. During the month, each OneBeat musician also sets out their plans for the future, developing projects in their home countries linked to a mutually-reinforcing network of music-driven social enterprises.

OneBeat is a musical journey like no other. It is a chance for adventurous musicians from an incredible diversity of traditions to seek common ground, create new musical combinations, push the boundaries of music technology, and find ways to involve all members of society in the process of musical creativity. OneBeat endeavors to be the nexus of a new way of thinking about how music can help us collectively build healthy communities, prosperous societies, and a more peaceful world.  An initiative of the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs in collaboration with the groundbreaking New York-based music organization Bang on a Can’s Found Sound Nation, OneBeat employs collaborative original music as a potent new form of cultural diplomacy.

As a part of OneBeat’s pilot crew in 2012, I curated social media and the Washington, D.C. concert lineups at Busboys & Poets and Atlas Center for the Performing Arts.

Photos by Hannah Devereux

VISIT SITE

Fields of Fungus and Sunflowers

An art book that asks, “How does something begin to grow after nuclear war?”

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Recent events have pushed people to see the brink. Sometimes, we see what is beyond that brink which has ranged from glory to devastation. Nuclear threat might be one of the least comprehensible threats on the global stage. What does it mean? What happens? Could it happen? How is it possible? And then what? Do we stop?

Fields of Fungus and Sunflowers is a book that unfolds by investigating various ways in which world affairs and acts of nature intertwine through a nuclear lens. Featuring an essay and poem by Bombshelltoe’s Lovely Umayam and Adriel Luis, respectively, and edited and printed by artist Tammy Nguyen, the book draws connections between the 2016 Winter Olympics, U.S. diplomacy with North Korea, and lifeforms that thrive by consuming radiation. This publication was the Winter 2017 issue of Martha’s Quarterly published by Passenger Pigeon Press.

Customs & Declarations

A suite of remixed found sounds and images collected throughout Asia.

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Customs & Declarations is a collection of songs and visual media created by remixing found sounds and sights I captured during time spent in different parts of Asia. Originally commissioned as a complement to the 2014 performance of Yo-Yo Ma’s Silk Road Ensemble at the John F. Kennedy Center, Customs & Declarations is my attempt to actively resist the orientalist aesthetics that typically encompass Western-derived sonic and visual representations of the region, while coming to terms with the awkward and inevitable foreignness I embody and project as an Asian American in Asia. This project  expands with my growing relationship with Asia, and moments captured include my short-lived residence in Beijing, my first curatorial exchange which toured me throughout Japan, my eyewitness account of the Umbrella Revolution in Hong Kong, my first international art fair in Singapore, and my introductions to Vietnam and Cambodia.

Customs & Declaration was commissioned by Washington Performing Arts and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, and debuted as a part of Slick Road, a double-feature with DJ Lightbolt at the Kennedy Center in March 2015. Since then, excerpts have been performed at the University of Maryland, NYU, Atom in Buenos Aires, and Yale University.

 

iLL-Literacy: iB4the1

A neverending musical story about an epic quest for the present moment.

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iB4the1 is a dream come true. It is as much of an exploration of music and myth as it is a journey of the friendships I share within my band iLL-Literacy. This project was born of our late-2000’s discoveries of funk, surrealism, and open technology.

iB4the1.1 was released in 2009, and since then the story has unfolded through releases of music, short films, and live performances.

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Ai Weiwei: The Seed

A media and performance piece that traces the New York upbringing of an influential artist.

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Although Ai Weiwei is known as the dissident artist with a journeyed relationship with China, less is spoken of his life as a New Yorker or the city’s role in the shaping of his creativity and activism. In celebration of its epic exhibition, Ai Wewei: According to What? the Brooklyn museum commissioned a collective of five Chinese American artists to retrace his steps. The result was a collage of Ai’s journal entries, photographs, and influences that paints a portrait of a cultural icon at the precipice of changing the face of arts activism.

Ai Weiwei: The Seed was commissioned and produced by the Brooklyn Museum in July 2014. Kelly Zen-Yie Tsai led the production along with fellow poet Kit Yan, dancer Jessica Chen, musician Jason Kao Hwang, and Adriel Luis as sound artist.

USBUiLLD

A psychedelic spoken word performance.

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Fusing live hip-hop and electronic music with fantastical costumes and brain-melting imagery, USBUiLLD is something like Sesame Street for disenchanted liberal arts students. On its campaign to conjure the spirit of shared musical experience, iLL-Literacy has brought USBUiLLD to the Brooklyn Academy of Fine Arts, SXSW, and universities throughout the United States.

USBUiLLD was conceived by iLL-Literacy and directed by Kamilah Forbes in 2010.

Beastreality

Love is inhuman.

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BeastReality reaches far into the realms of fantasy to question the truth about modern concepts of love. Merging live music, spoken word poetry, installation art, and film, the piece is a collection of stories that each revolve around the protagonist’s romantic encounters with mythical and science fiction creatures. From mermaids to android robots to demigods, each relationship is explored by juxtaposing our primal need for affection with the sociological guidelines for love.

Through the use of modern myth, BeastReality touches on the themes of interracial relationships, sexuality, marriage and religion, and human loneliness ­ – ultimately asking the audience to confront if our contemporary expectations of an “ideal partner” are as fictitious and far-fetched as the creatures presented onstage.

I began working on BeastReality in 2011 as a pet project to teach myself music production and film editing. I debuted excerpts from the production in 2013 at Busboys & Poets and the John F. Kennedy Center’s Millennium Stage in Washington, D.C. as a part of the Asian American Performance Poetry Festival.

Pretty Buoyant Society

A soundtrack for your internet wormhole.

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Pretty Buoyant Society was a musical experiment by Adriel Luis and DJ Phatrick, born out of their 2007 forays into music-making. These tracks represent Phatrick’s first productions, and my first stabs at songwriting and vocal recording. An exercise in not taking ourselves too seriously, PBS is a timestamp for us at the starting line of our lives of musical creation

How To Make Juice

My first published collection of poems. This is where it all started.

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How To Make Juice is a collection of my earliest poems as a budding artist. Like you would expect from a poet coming into adulthood, it captures the curiosity, angst, and assumed knowledgeability of someone who thought he had found his voice, when really he was just beginning the search. This book features some of the poems that I performed regularly, as well as journal entries and experiments with word visualizations. It was published in 2006 by First Word Press.

Slip of the Tongue

A poetic short film about a young man’s run-in with his own misogyny.

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Slip of the Tongue (2004) is a short film directed by Karen Lum and produced by the Bay Area Video Coalition and Adobe Youth Voices. The film takes its soundtrack from Adriel Luis’ performance of a poem of the same name at age 19 at the 2003 Bay Area Teen Poetry Championships. Written after his first encounters with feminist theory, the poem is about a fictitious encounter between a young man and a woman who is quick to expose his flirtations as byproducts of historic patriarchy. At age 15, Lum adapted the poem’s lines into a collage of film clips that confronted her own struggles with beauty standards at the time. The result is a piece that was screened at over 75 film festivals, has become a part of ethnic and gender studies curricula worldwide, and garnered acclaim including a Golden Gate Award from the San Francisco International Film Festival, Jury Award from Media That Matters, and a Regional Emmy for Best Youth Segment (Directing).

Slip of the Tongue is not only one of my earliest works of art, it’s one of my first experiences with the immortality of online presence. I’m proud of this poem for what it represents in my journey as an artist and a person, and at the same time and glad that over 20 years later, I and the rest of society have evolved to discuss men’s roles in women’s rights with more nuance than the poem. I feel that it’s necessary for me to point this out, because while I spent the first few years after this film’s release cringing over how fast I was slurring my words, more recently I have found myself wishing I was also more polished, politically as well. Every once in awhile this piece will resurface and be debated in popular conversation, and I consider it a blessing and a curse (mostly a blessing) that it continues to be what I’m best known for in some circles.


 

Public Knowledge

I write, speak and present about community-centered creative practice and the necessity of reexamining our histories.

McKnight Visual Artist Discussion

From 2023-2025 I was a visiting curator for the Minneapolis College of Art and Design's McKnight Visual Artist Fellowship. Through several visits to the Twin Cities where I selected and sustained relationships with the artist fellows, I learned about the complexities of a region that has repeatedly been a flashpoint for racial reckoning and social upheaval in America. This video is from the capstone discussion with McKnight fellows Kaamil A. Haider, Keren Kroul and Mark Ostapchuk at the Minneapolis Institute of Art.

AI and the Colonial Gaze

This research examines how Western colonial biases – specifically the romanticized depictions by artists like Paul Gauguin – poison modern text-to-image AI. I argue that when institutions recycle these historical distortions, AI models disseminate misinformation that actively threatens the cultural sovereignty and future of the Pacific Islands. This appears as a chapter in the forthcoming anthology, Reimagining Art History with Artificial Intelligence (2026, Palgrave MacMillan)

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The Promise of a Nation

When I was asked to contribute to the Smithsonian's book commemorating the 250th anniversary of the United States, I was conflicted, to say the least. But in a political climate where the stakes are so high, I knew that opting out meant surrendering the historical narrative to someone else. I ended up writing chapters about two decades: the 1870s, where the Gilded Age's widened wealth gap dismantled the American Dream; and the 2000s, where the War on Terror collided with the Age of Hope in ways that reverberate today.

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Keeping Ourselves Collected: Culture Labs Confront the Smithsonian's Imperial Legacy

In this research paper published in the Journal of Museum Education, I investigate the colonial history of the Smithsonian's founding collections beginning with the United States Exploring Expedition. I connect this timeline to the establishment of the Smithsonian's rollout of identity-based museums, and ultimately why critical curation is a necessary method of questioning the institution's self-proclaimed role as a leader in race discourse.

📖 READ THE RESEARCH

Interview: Adriel's Winding Path

I've had the joy of knowing Russ Finkelstein for over a decade. As a thoughtful social entrepreneur, he has a talent for leading discussions that constantly inspire me to reflect on and reimagine how my work impacts those around me. For his column on The Washington Post, Russ asked me to share how the various creative endeavors I've followed are interconnected.

📖 READ AT WASHINGTONPOST.COM

Smithsonian Asian Pacific American History, Art, and Culture in 101 Objects

I was pleased to contribute to this book, which invites readers to experience both well-known and untold stories through influential, controversial, and meaningful objects in the Smithsonian's collections that relate to Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

📖 LEARN MORE AT SMITHSONIANBOOKS.COM

Interview: The Truth in this Art

Hosted by Rob Lee, "The Truth In This Art" is a captivating podcast that delves deep into the vibrant intersections of arts, culture, and community, both in Baltimore and beyond. In this episode, Rob interviews me about how growing up as a poet led me to become a curator.

🔊 LISTEN ON THETRUTHINTHISART.COM

Bigger Than the Internet: Museums and the Digital Colonization of the Web

In this research paper presented at the 2021 COLLECTIVE LIBERATION museums and equity convening, I trace my personal history with the early internet to my observations of how museum practices of social media usage and data collection mirror extractive colonial practices.

📖 READ AT THE PAPER

Conversation with Shirin Neshat & Saisha Grayson

During the 2022 Virtual Women's Filmmakers Festival hosted by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, I had the pleasure of joining curator Saisha Grayson in a conversation with artist Shirin Neshat to discuss her film Land of Dreams.

👁️ WATCH ON YOUTUBE: SAAM

Artists Reflect: Conversation with sāgar kāmath

sāgar kāmath is an artist whose work addresses the roles that coexistence and multiplicity play in shaping identity. During his 2023 residency for the Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art's 100th anniversary, I had the joy of being in conversation with him to discuss his installation, Lifecycle of Myth.

👁️ WATCH ON YOUTUBE: NMAA

On Being Honest [w/ Beau Sia]

The poet Beau Sia is a poet who inspired me to become an artist in the first place, and I feel so fortunate to have shared friendship and creative exchange with him for many years. In 2022 Beau invited me to join him in writing poems based on random prompts each day throughout the month of May. One of our poems, "On Being Honest," was published in an issue of The Brooklyn Rail later that year.

📖 READ THE POEMS ON BROOKLYNRAIL.ORG

By Nature of Our Togetherness [w/ Kimberly Drew]

In the midst of the pandemic lockdown and rise in violence against Black and Asian people worldwide, UK collective Asia-Art-Activism invited me to contribute to their special publication, Experiments in Care and Collective Disobedience. I invited writer and curator Kimberly Drew to reflect with me on our friendship, our influences, and what it means to care with integrity.

📖 READ THE CONVERSATION

Isamu Noguchi

Noguchi: Resonances [w/ Annie Jael Kwan & Alexandra Chang]

I enjoyed this writing project with my friends and fellow curators Annie Jael Kwan and Alexandra Chang. In it, we reflect on how life has shifted amidst the pandemic, while meditating on our shared love for the sculptor Isamu Noguchi. Annie's digital residency at the Barbican, Noguchi: Resonances is an ongoing collaborative exploration in response to the exhibition, Noguchi.

📖 READ AT BARBICAN.ORG.UK

Memory Transplant

In Memory Transplant, I was invited by DiverseWorks and Asia Society Texas to form a virtual relationship with Houston amidst the pandemic, through a series of virtual studio visits with artists, video chats with community, and research online. Through this process, he reflects on the obstacles and opportunities of building community in an age of social distance.

👁️ WATCH ON YOUTUBE: ASIA SOCIETY TEXAS

We Are Resilient: A National Conversation Across Chinatowns

The W.O.W. Project is one of my favorite Asian American arts organizations, and for their 4 year anniversary I was pleased to host a discussion with Chinatown communities across North America. From New York to Boston to Toronto to San Francisco's Chinatowns — we came together to address urgent concerns in our various communities amidst the urgencies of 2020, coming together for unity, solidarity, and community care.

👁️ WATCH ON YOUTUBE

Serving Versus Observing Communities as Part of Preservation Practice

As one of the National Trust for Historic Preservation's "People #SavingPlaces," I write about working and communicating with underrepresented communities as part of preservation practice. In this article, I describe how I approach communities, as an outsider, in ways that promote mutual thriving.

📖 READ AT SAVINGPLACES.ORG

The Digital Future of Museums

In this chapter of The Digital Future of Museums (Routledge, 2020) Curator Sarah Brin and I discuss agency, expertise, play, trust and institutional change – both inside the traditional museum context and beyond.

📖 READ AN EXCERPT ON GOOGLE BOOKS

Extract: Locating Indigeneity in Immigrant Experiences

This article is a reflection of my early experiences in Diné Bikéyah (Navajoland) which shifted how I think about my ancestral lineage of immigration. I consider how contextualizing my Asian American identity in indigeneity has deepened my understanding of who I am on this land.

📖 READ IN OPEN RIVERS JOURNAL

Culture Lab Playbook

The Culture Lab Playbook is the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center’s guide to community-centered museums practice, developed in collaboration with Education Specialist Andrea Kim Neighbors and a host of Culture Lab artists. It was released in Spring 2018 and has been used by museums, organizations, and schools throughout the world.

📖 READ THE PLAYBOOK

Foreign National

In this podcast interview, I talk with D.C. power-couple Seda Nak and Erik Bruner-Yang about what it means to experience food, art, and culture from a transnational perspective. I also talk about Culture Labs, and shout out my favorite Asian snacks!

 🔊 Listen on Apple Podcasts

Grounded Pasts + Elevated Futures

In this talk, I challenge the current popularity of the term futurism by investigating the word’s troubled history, and how communities of color can resist conceptualizing time as a linear concept. Presented as a part of Curating Radical Futures Colloquium in November 2017 at the Tate Modern in London, presented by Outset and Arts Council England.

🔊 Listen on Soundcloud

Curating Radical Futures

In this interview, I speak with London-based curator Annie Jael Kwan about how current conceptualizations of the future are informed by race discourse, gentrification, and activism. Recorded in preparation of my above talk, “Grounded Pasts + Elevated Futures”

🔊 Listen on Soundcloud

Culture Lab Manifesto

The Culture Lab Manifesto is the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center’s professed set of guiding principles for community-centered museums practice. It was developed by the Center’s staff after reflecting upon its first two Culture Labs, and made public as a resource for other organizations and institutions who work within communities. The Culture Lab Manifesto was published in the July/August 2017 issue of Poetry and officially debuted at the Smithsonian Asian American Literature Festival.

📖 READ AT POETRYFOUNDATION.ORG

Imagine Otherwise: Radical Curation

In this podcast interview, I am joined by co-curators Kālewa Correa and Lawrence-Minh Bui Davis to talk about the process of developing the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center’s community-centered curatorial practice, and our vision for July 2017’s ʻAe Kai: A Culture Lab on Convergence in Honolulu.

🔊 Listen on Imagine Otherwise

Dismantling Diversity in Museums

In this talk, I challenge museums that view diversity as a topic that can be contained in a program or position. I advocate for an approach to diversity that embraces people from vast walks of life coming as their full, complex, and nuanced selves. Presented in March 2017 at the Rockwell Museum in Corning, NY.

📖 Read & Listen on Medium

Museopunks: The State of Love and Trust

In this podcast interview, I speak with Suse Andersen and Jeffrey Inscho about what it means for museums to cultivate trust in communities that have not historically viewed institutions as places made for them.

🔊 Listen on American Alliance of Museums

How Museums Can Better Serve Local Arts and DIY Venues

In this article, I describe the long and complex history between museums and DIY art spaces. Following the 2016 fatal disaster at Oakland’s Ghost Ship, I advocate for museums and institutions to share safety resources and information with DIY communities.

📖 READ IN SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE

Building Communities of Trust

In this talk, I’m joined by co-curator Kālewa Correa to present the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center’s model for Culture Labs for the first time on an international stage. We describe how Culture Labs prioritize cultivating a deep sense of trust among artists, curators, museums, and their greater communities. Presented in February 2017 at MuseumNext at the Australian Centre for the Moving Image in Melbourne.

👁️ Watch & Read at MuseumNext

Smithsonian Thought Leaders

I was profiled in the Smithsonian’s 2016 Annual Report, and I took the opportunity to highlight communities that are often underserved by major museums. I describe the intentionality behind curating shows that might seem “rough around the edges” compared to pristine aesthetics common to museums, and why local Washington, D.C. culture deserves a place at the Smithsonian.

📖 Read in the Smithsonian Annual Report

The Public Puts Great Trust in Museums, and Now It’s Time Museums Trust the Public

I wrote this article on the days leading up to CrossLines, the first Smithsonian Culture Lab, as a way to document the community-centered perspectives that went into the project's curatorial approach. I advocate for us to expand our imagination for how museums can steward information exchange and cultural preservation.

📖 READ IN SMITHSONIAN MAGAZINE

Likewise

In this podcast interview, I speak with fellow Bay Area native Matt Pana about how my path as a grassroots artist led to my position as a curator at the Smithsonian.

 🔊 Listen on Apple Podcasts

A Museum of the Future on the Streets of Hong Kong

In this written piece, I reflect on my October 2014 trip to Hong Kong to witness the Umbrella Movement. Through photos and prose, I describe how my encounters with the movement’s democratic approaches to art and education have influenced my understanding of what it means to curate in response to geopolitical moments. Originally published in the Fall/Winter issue of the Asian American Literary Review

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Redrawing Borders: Building Asia’s Museum Culture in the Digital Age

In my first published paper as a curator, I share my early research on the colonial history that introduced museums to Asia, and how emerging arts spaces in the region are using technology to carve new and unique methods for sharing art, history, and culture. Originally published and presented in October 2014 at Museums and the Web Asia in Daejeon, South Korea.

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Imagineering the HereNow

My belief in the power of collective imagination was born out of my work with iLL-Literacy. In this talk, I describe why creativity and activism share a vital relationship, and how the history of activism can be traced through a constant flow of new ideas. Presented in November 2010 as a part of iLL-Literacy’s CampusBUiLLD at Ithaca College.

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