ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE
Suheir Hammad
2010-2011
Byron Au Yong and Aaron Jafferis
2009-2010
Susana Lei'ataua
2008-2009
Susana Lei'ataua
2007-2008
DJ Rekha
2006-2007
Regie Cabico
2005-2006
Helen Zia
2004-2005
Fay Chiang
2003-2004
Corky Lee
2002-2003
Keng Sen Ong
2001-2002
David Henry Hwang
2000-2001
Ping Chong
1999-2000
Jessica Hagedorn
1998-1999
Tomie Arai
1997-1998
Annanya Bhattacharjee
1997-1998
Each year, New York University hosts an acclaimed artist to hold residency with its Asian/Pacific/American Institute. Artists-in-Residence are invited to bring their notoriety, artistic work, and history of involvement with the Asian/Pacific American community to NYU. The Artist-in-Residence uses his/her time at A/P/A to create important new work, artistic retrospectives, forums, or conferences. Scholars, fellow artists, and community members familiar or new to the artist's work, gain a unique opportunity to engage with the Artist-in-Residence within a university setting.
The A/P/A Studies Institute is delighted to have Tomie Arai as our first artist-in-residence. She is on of the premiere American activists merging from the political ferment of the 1960s.
Arai's philosophy and work engages the past to help illuminate the present. She has played a critical role in documenting and reclaiming a variety of people's unheralded histories while at the same moment brings the viewer in dialogue with contemporary social struggles. Besides pursuing her own personal artistic expression, she has collaborated in all parts of the United States and beyond. For her, the process of working collaboratively, as an act bringing people together to share a creative vision, has been a fundamental facet of making meaningful art which speaks directly to people's everyday lives.
Arai's art demonstrates the power of one person's potential in effecting community-building. Her elegant, evocative, and ever-challenging work along with her generosity of spirit has influenced generations of activists and helped her to foster the explosion of Asian American artistic work we now witness in New York City today.
Over the course of the spring semester at NYU, Ms. Arai will be installing the first show of our gallery, participating in our courses and curriculum development, and organizing public programs.
John Kuo Wei Tchen
Director & Historian
Tomie Arai (1997 - 1998)
The A/P/A Studies Institute is delighted to have Tomie Arai as our first artist-in-residence. She is on of the premiere American activists merging from the political ferment of the 1960s.
Arai's philosophy and work engages the past to help illuminate the present. She has played a critical role in documenting and reclaiming a variety of people's unheralded histories while at the same moment brings the viewer in dialogue with contemporary social struggles. Besides pursuing her own personal artistic expression, she has collaborated in all parts of the United States and beyond. For her, the process of working collaboratively, as an act bringing people together to share a creative vision, has been a fundamental facet of making meaningful art which speaks directly to people's everyday lives.
Arai's art demonstrates the power of one person's potential in effecting community-building. Her elegant, evocative, and ever-challenging work along with her generosity of spirit has influenced generations of activists and helped her to foster the explosion of Asian American artistic work we now witness in New York City today.
Over the course of the spring semester at NYU, Ms. Arai will be installing the first show of our gallery, participating in our courses and curriculum development, and organizing public programs.
John Kuo Wei Tchen
Director & Historian