Asia/America
This seminar examined art and design produced by people of Asian descent in the Americas, broadly defined, from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day through a transnational lens. Class participants foregrounded labor, capitalism, American imperialism, and war as defining characteristics of their lived experiences and artistic production. Previous histories of Asian-American art have focused either on narratives of exclusion due to the immigration bans of the late nineteenth to early twentieth centuries, or on the cultural identity of the Asian diaspora. Instead, the class insisted upon the primacy of the contributions made by artists, designers, and architects of Asian descent to American art and culture, acknowledging that the history of American art and design cannot be told without a full accounting of the work of Ruth Asawa, Manuel Ocampo, Tseng Kwong Chi, Maya Lin, and many others. This course (ARTH-469) was taught by Michelle Wang as a Doyle Seminar in spring 2021. Please refer to the current course catalog for an up-to-date description of the course.
Project:
Leader
Department of Art and Art History