Showing posts with label NYFA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYFA. Show all posts

Monday, January 1, 2018

Happy New Year 2018!



Happy New Year 2018!

I hope your 2018 will be super happy, lucky, and awesome to you, your family and all your surrounding friends!

One thing I forgot to tell you last year is that I appeared in a video of New York Foundation for the Arts.
This video is for website marketing to introduce NYFA’s service for artists in all discipline.

During the shooting, I was very nervous because the other two artists had own studios, but I still didn’t have it. Also, I felt like I didn’t speak English well enough to such an official video. A director shot me at a pick nick table at a park where I always worked on pencil sketches of Manga comic work. I was really nervous even after finishing the shooting. I regret not exercising speech in English. When the video was released, I was surprised the whole work looked really cool. I hope you will enjoy the video!

Introduction to New York Foundation for the Arts  


Thanks!
Rica Takashima

Monday, July 24, 2017

New Project!

Up-Stand x Rica
Christine Serdjenian Yearwood and Rica Takashima


Purpose:
We are a group of mothers –We bring attention to the accommodations that pregnant women and families need in order to make New York City more family-friendly and accessible. Working together, we can draw attention to this cause, increase awareness about our movements, and provide practical follow-up information and materials to support pregnant women and families.

If you are interested in our project, please feel free to contact us!

Our activity has three parts:
Interactive art show,
Free workshop, and
Provision of practical follow-up information and materials.

A family-friendly interactive art show using a Peekaboo-sculpture and a wearable-sculpture.


 A free fun workshop of making a pin to show support for pregnant women and new moms lead by artists.


We provide practical follow-up information and materials including accessibility signs, pregnancy passes and pins at our information table/booth.

Schedule:
・Sunday, June 11th, 10am-12pm
Part of Mompreneurs’ Summer Show & Tell
Astoria Park, Queens

・Sunday, August 20th, 12-4pm
Part of Boogie On The Boulevard
165th Street and Grand Concourse, The Bronx.
Supported by BxArts Factory and Bronx Museum.



Rica’s story:
The reason I am doing this is because when I was pregnant years ago, I experienced many things that I had never imagined before. My sense of taste became sensitive and I could clearly differentiate between organic and non-organic vegetables and other produce. I cooked more at home.
My sense of smell had become sensitive as well. I was concerned about the smell of detergents and bleach. I started to use natural, safe detergents such as baking soda and soap. I was concerned about the bad smell of pollution in urban cities and got used to spending time in the park and the suburbs. After giving birth, I lost the this sensitivity and returned to the way my senses had been before pregnancy, but since that time I began to think about recycling, organic foods, and the environment more seriously. I started to tell my story t people, and wish people think about pregnant women, babies and our better communities.
Rica’s website: http://aliensnewyork.wixsite.com/mysite



Christine’s story:
Since giving birth and starting the UP-STAND movement, I have listened to countless pregnancy horror stories about a lack of accommodations and inaccessible spaces - Trying to find a store that would offer a restroom, health complications from being expected to perform dangerous work, standing too long with circulation issues, carrying something too heavy, fainting from exhaustion or motion sickness, and being shoved in line or onto crowded trains. 
Pregnancy can change a woman’s body in extreme ways: Fatigue, nausea, backaches and headaches, dizziness, a shifting center of gravity and imbalance, carpal tunnel syndrome and a poor grip, leg cramps and blurry vision. Many women experience these health complications starting before pregnancy is visible and lasting through labor and delivery.
Many people are also unaware of these typical changes, and are even less aware of the serious complications women can experience during pregnancy. New York treats pregnancy as something that may be accommodated as a courtesy, but has almost zero institutional, practical support to make public spaces and transportation accessible. Our movement encourages people and places to provide family-friendly accommodations as policy whenever possible.
Christine’s website: http://www.up-stand.com

Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Aliens in New York, art project


Thanks for visiting my blog!
To read the past posts of the art project, please use the search box on the top of the page 
and put “Aliens in New York”

The bst way to know more details, please visit here, the interview by NYFA Current August 2015.

I also have FLOW15. blog here. please enjoy!

Thanks,
Rica Takashima
takasimarica at hotmail dot com

Thursday, December 15, 2016

Borderless: In Perspective

My old photo piece is part in a group art show.
Borderless: In PerspectiveLiTE-HAUS Galerie+ Projecraum, Berlin, Germany 



This photograph is from the very first art project “Order Made Family” that I hold in 1995.


Here is a description about the photo.

Nikki’s Family: Order Made Family, Peekaboo art project
Photograph 1995

Due to my questions that many Japanese people still persist an idea of patriarchal stereotype family, I held Order Made Family, a participatory public art project, on the street in Tokyo. The project asked passersby to define the word family. Would it involve living together, or being related to each other by blood, financial ties, or emotional bonds? Each participant chose from a list of possible individuals of who would embody their ideal family picture. These individuals neither had to be parallel to their actual family make-up, nor did the artwork have to visually match the label or identity of that family member. Then they had to pick Peekaboo-sculptures to present each of the individuals they had selected. 

Now, numbering over 100, these life-sized Peekaboo-sculptures include various ages, races, and nationalities. The Peekaboo-sculpture selected didn’t have to reflect the actual age, sex, race, or nationality, or even animated creature state of that family member who, in turn, already may not mirror the participant’s actual family make-up. After each Peekaboo-sculpture had been picked, it was labeled to identify who that sculpture represents in the family. I asked other passersby to help sticking their faces through the Peekaboo-sculptures to take their virtual family pictures.  Commemorative photographs that match the numbers of participants were taken with instant camera, and the photograph was given to each participant as a souvenir.

Resulting family portraits included members who were multinational, same-sex, cohabitating friends, and even aliens in addition to more traditional combinations, all of were borderless and explored modern interpretations of the definition of family.  

This Nikki’s family photograph is one from about 800 family portraits that taken at Order Made Family during 1994-2000 in Harajuku, Shinjuku, and Kouenji in Tokyo, Japan.


Tuesday, November 29, 2016

Thank you for your support in 2016!

Thank you very much for supporting Aliens in New York, Peekaboo-art project.

With last year’s donation, we held projects themed LGBTQ, Recycle, and Cultural understanding to public in total five days at three locations in 2016.

Please help the art project by tax-deductible donation and get an original mini calendar!
This mini calendar is a perfect card/gift for holiday season.
It can be sent as a holiday card and they can use it as a calendar.
The three drawings are by Rica Takashima.
Since they are small, they can use it in the office, locker, or on a fridge.
(10 x 6.5 inch)
There are two pages to write messages to your receiver.
This is a perfect item to start the Year of the Rooster with.
One card for $10, and Two cards for $15.
(Your tax-deductible cost will be $7/one $11/two after deducting the transaction and postal expenses) 

Please visit the NYFA page to donation for Peekaboo-art project Aliens in New York.

Please write “Holiday” at Note section.
This special opportunity lasts until end of December.

Your kindness donation will be used to events like transportation, creating new Peekaboo-sculptures, etc. The theme for the next year will be “diversity and cultural heritage” to reduce discrimination.

Thank you very much,

Rica Takashima