Saturday, October 25, 2025

Brooklyn Children's Museum's Halloween event, the Kawaii Kreature Festival

I'm participating in the Brooklyn Children's Museum's Halloween event, the Kawaii Kreature Festival.

Last year I was Marisa from Touhou Project, but this year I'll be Princess Peach♪

And guess what? Mario and Luigi are coming to help out too!

 

@anitomo 
@bcmkids


👺 AniTOMO is thrilled to return to Brooklyn Children's Museum for the second edition of Kawaii Kreature Festival! We're transforming BCM into a cultural crossroads-reimaging Halloween, Japan's largest holiday, in a spirited world of mysterious yokai! Children will embark on a whimsical adventure through the playful world of folklore, cosplay, anime, and Halloween traditions! From cute to scary, everyone is welcome...or should I say kawaii to kowa!

 

📍Location: Brooklyn Children's Museum (BCM) 145 Brooklyn Avenue

Brooklyn, NY 11213

 

🕐 This Sunday October 26, 2025 | Museum Doors Open at 10am | Kawaii Kreature Festival 10:30am-6:30pm

 

🚨 Adults must be accompanied by a child in order to enter the museum.

 

💸 Admission Fee is $15 



 
 


Friday, October 24, 2025

Hello from Rica

Hi!
Thanks for visiting my blog.
Please visit these links below for more information!

Thank you very much,
Rica Takashima


Covid related project

Fabric with a Big Drawing from the Big Apple


Participatory art project
Aliens in New York art project
https://aliensnewyork.wixsite.com/mysite


Wikipedia


Instagram

Twitter

Old website (1980s-2015ish)

*****

Rica Takashima’s profile

 

Rica's themes are discomfort and empathy towards pre-existing concepts and lifestyles, such as gender, age and race.

 

Something that is ordinary to one person can be a strange practice to others. At the same time, that strange practice can be exciting to yet another. Rica wants to express the differences between cultures as something fun and exciting, rather than as creating conflict and friction.


In 1995, Rica started drawing the semi-autobiographical Manga portraying everyday lives of lesbians, in Japan’s premier lesbian magazine at that time. She struggled with her sexuality since her young age, but there were no movies/novels with themed positive lesbian stories even in 1980s. Her questions towards traditional Japanese patriarchal family values and discrimination against LGBT motivated her to start to draw conceptual Manga to public. Her project Manga book was published in 2003 and 2012 in English and Japanese, and Italian version in 2011. After she immigrated to the US with her family in 2008, she collaborates her work with Pride March, NewFEST LGBT film festival, and other diverse organizations.

She also created manga illustrations of We Can Do It! series, which encourages women in diversity. 
Manga sculpture, El Barrio Comes All Colors, Shapes and Sizes was funded by Flow15, Randall’s Island park alliance, The Bronx Museum of the Arts, and Made Event 2015
Rica, Miho and Meechan Cat was awarded as Demystifying NFTs by Technology Gap and New York Foundation for the Arts, 2022

Her interactive public installation Aliens in New York has been supported by New York Foundation for the Arts since 2013 which Rica started in Tokyo Harajuku open street since 1994.(The name at the time was Aozora Art/Blue Sky Art)


*****

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

New York Love manga project won the Queens Arts Fund award♪

 Hello!

 

Rica Takashima celebrates per 30th anniversary as a manga artist this year.

A commemorative solo exhibition will be held in November at @hetLab_Brooklyn 

This exhibition will feature original manga manuscripts created in 1995. 

This is a rare opportunity, so please come see it.

 

Also, my new work New York Love won the Queens Arts Fund award.

In December, you can read the manga for free online. Additionally, free copies will be distributed at several locations in Queens, and free manga workshops are planned.

 

More details will be posted soon.

Stay tuned!

 



@nyfacurrent and DCLA @nyculture

#QAF2025

#LGBTQ

#NYCarts

#comingoutmonth