The Freer and Sackler Galleries Introduce Two Innovative Summer Programs: "Asia After Dark" and "Asia Trash"
This summer the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M.
Sackler Gallery launch two new series, "Asia After Dark" and
"Asia Trash," in addition to their exciting repertoire of public
programs. On June 4, the Sackler opens its doors for the debut of "Asia
After Dark," an after-hours series held on the first Thursdays in June and
September. "Asia After Dark" offers guests an evening
of art, dance and creative fun, filled with spotlight
tours in the galleries, performances by the Silk Road Dance Company, food
tastings from local Asian restaurants and Persian electronic music by DJ Delbar
of RadioJavan.com. "Asia After Dark" is a ticketed event for
individuals over 21. ������� Tickets
can be purchased for $15 in advance at http://store.freersacklershop.com/asiaafterdark.html
and a limited number of tickets will be sold at the door for $18; cash only.
"Asia Trash" is the newest and grossest summertime film series held
at the Freer on Thursdays from July 30 - Aug. 20 at 7 p.m. The series will
celebrate some of Asia's finest cult movies including "Versus" about
Yakuza gangsters, zombies and an escaped convict still shackled to a severed
hand. This film is a must see for connoisseurs of good, trashy fun.
Fun-filled summer evenings
at the Freer and Sackler will also include a June 6 performance by "Music
from China Youth Orchestra," a 20 piece ensemble of musicians ages 8 to
18, performing on traditional Chinese instruments. Conductor Wang Guowei has
performed with renowned artists such as Yo-Yo Ma and the Shanghai Quartet. On
June 13 and 20, the galleries will present "The Sensual S: Form and
Movement," a workshop led by Daniel Phoenix Singh and members of the
Dakshina Dance Company. Participants will interact with Anish Kapoor's steel
sculpture, "S-Curve" to explore how scale, shape and form reflect and
distort perceptions.
The Freer and Sackler
Galleries offer a summer-long celebration of Asian music, dance, films, and
special tours and talks. See a complete listing of events, dates, and times
below:
June 2009
Films
The Riches of Early Soviet Cinema
Soviet filmmakers created a host
of innovative and influential works during the silent era and the early years
of sound. In conjunction with the Sackler exhibition "The Tsars and The
East," the Freer presents four films from three of Soviet cinema's most
renowned masters.This series organized with the assistance of Seagull Films.
Battleship Potemkin
Friday, June 5; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Live musical accompaniment by Burnett Thompson
Sergei Eisenstein's masterpiece was a pioneering work
for its time, and it remains gripping today. The story of a naval mutiny that
preceded the Soviet Revolution comes to life thanks to Eisenstein's bold,
clashing images and energetic editing technique. 1925 / 69 min. / b&w /
silent
Dziga Vertov Double Feature
Kino-Eye
Sunday, June 7; 2 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Live musical accompaniment by Burnett Thompson
Director Dziga Vertov creates a portrait of Soviet
life by following the activities of the Young Pioneers, a band of youthful
Communists devoted to improving Soviet society. At once avant-garde, playful,
and thought-provoking, it is ultimately Vertov's celebration of his country and
the possibilities of cinema. 1924 / 78 min. / b&w / silent
Enthusiasm
Sunday, June 7; 3:30 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Here, Vertov experiments with sound with the same
aplomb he always applied to images. Ostensibly a documentary about coal
workers, it is a dizzying display of the director's joy in mixing and
juxtaposing sounds and images in surprising ways. 1931 / 67 min. / b&w /
Russian with English subtitles
Extraordinary Adventures of Mr. West in the Land
of the Bolsheviks
Friday, June 12; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Live musical accompaniment by Burnett Thompson
This comedic propaganda film by Lev Kuleshov follows
the eponymous Mr. West, an American who travels to Moscow to see the evils of
the Soviet empire for himself. His hosts are all too eager to oblige-before
they turn the tables and show him the real Soviet Union. 1924 / 77 min. /
b&w / silent
Salute to Le Festival des 3 Continents
Since 1979, Le Festival des
3 Continents in Nantes, France, has offered an adventurous annual program of
drama and documentary films made in Africa, Latin America, and Asia. To celebrate
the festival's thirtieth anniversary, the Freer, in conjunction with the
Embassy of France and the National Gallery of Art, presents a selection of
significant films that made their debuts or won awards at the 3 Continents
Festival.
Water, Wind, Dust
Friday, June 19; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
In Person: Amir Naderi
After returning to his drought-stricken hometown, a
young boy searches for his missing family. Barely a word of dialogue is spoken
in this powerful drama by Amir Naderi, but nature is seen at its most cruel,
with howling winds, blinding sandstorms, and blazing desert sunlight. Iran /
1989 / 75 min. / Persian with English subtitles
Devarim
Sunday, June 21; 1 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
His first film after living in Europe for several years,
Amos Gitai's portrait of Israel's "lost generation" is the story of
three friends from Tel Aviv. Their disenchantment and disconnection from the
spiritual and political commitment of their nation's older generations are
challenged during a trip to the funeral of one of their fathers. Israel / 1997
/ 110 min. / Hebrew with English subtitles
Chronicle of a Disappearance
Sunday, June 21; 3 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Like Gitai, Palestinian filmmaker Elia Suleiman made
this film upon returning from a self-imposed exile, in his case a twelve-year
stay in New York. Using mostly nonprofessional actors, he weaves a tapestry of
vignettes that provides an often-humorous view of the paradoxes middle-class
Palestinians encounter while living under Israeli rule. Palestine / 1996 / 88
min. / Arabic with English subtitles
A Summer at Grandpa's
Friday, June 26; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
This rarely screened early gem from Hou Hsiao-hsien,
now one of the reigning auteurs in world cinema, is a bittersweet story of two
young siblings who are sent to the countryside to live with their grandparents
while their mother lies ill in the hospital. Though traumatized by her
sickness, they learn to adapt to the ways of the adult world. 1984 / 93 min. /
Hokkein, Taiwanese, and Mandarin with English subtitles. This screening made
possible by the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the U.S.
Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks-Part One: Rust
Saturday, June 27; 1 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
China / 2003 / 244 min. / video / Mandarin with
English subtitles
Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks-Part Two: Remnants
Sunday, June 28; 11 a.m., Meyer Auditorium*
China / 2003 / 178 min. / video / Mandarin with
English subtitles
Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks-Part Three: Rails
Sunday, June 28; 3 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
China / 2003 / 132 min. / video / Mandarin with
English subtitles
Jeannette Catsoulis of the "New York Times"
calls Wang Bing's nine-hour, three-part documentary about the dying Tie Xi
industrial complex in northeast China "an astonishingly intimate record of
China's painful transition from state-run industry to a free market."
"Rust" follows workers at a foundry that is slated to close, taking
with it a whole way of life. "Remnants" looks at a factory workers'
shantytown that is to be demolished and replaced by a private housing
development. And "Rails" presents four seasons in the lives of those
railway workers responsible for transporting goods in and out of Tie Xi.
Concerts and Performances
Asia After Dark
Thursdays, June 4 & Sept. 3; 6:30 p.m.,
Sackler Gallery
A new after-hours series will be held on first
Thursdays this June and September at the Freer and Sackler Galleries. Indulge
your senses in Asia and embark on a post-work evening to get the weekend
started in style.
On June 4, the Sackler opens its doors for an evening
of art, dance, and creative fun-from spotlight tours in the galleries and
performances by the Silk Road Dance Company, to food tastings provided by Mie N
Yu in Georgetown and Jonny Kabob in Germantown. Mix and mingle to Persian
electronic and drum-and-bass music by DJ Delbar from RadioJavan.com.
Bring out your creative side by making a business card holder with hand printed
paper from Nepal, or get lucky by winning a raffle prize from area merchants,
restaurants, hotels, spas and yoga studios.
Purchase advance tickets ($15 per person) online at http://store.freersacklershop.com/asiaafterdark.html
or in person during the week at the Freer and Sackler Gallery shops. A limited
number of tickets ($18) are sold at the door; cash only. Each admission ticket
includes one free drink ticket. A cash bar will be available for wine, beer,
spirits, and non-alcoholic beverages throughout the evening. You must be at
least 21 years old with a valid ID to attend this event.
For more information and to purchase tickets online,
visit http://store.freersacklershop.com/asiaafterdark.html. This event
has received support from RadioJavan.com and Mie N Yu.
Music From China Youth Orchestra
Saturday, June 6; 2 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Pre-concert gallery tour, Arts of China, 1:15 p.m.
Hear the Washington debut of this twenty-piece
ensemble performing on traditional Chinese instruments. Based in New York with
musicians aged eight to eighteen, the orchestra recently made its second
appearance at Carnegie Hall's Weill Recital Hall. The orchestra's conductor
Wang Guowei was concert master with the Shanghai Traditional Orchestra and has
since performed with Yo-Yo Ma and the Shanghai Quartet as well as with jazz
innovators Ornette Coleman and Kenny Garrett. The program includes folk and
classical Chinese music as well as traditional music from China's diverse
minority ethnic groups.
Composer Between Worlds: Dimitrie Cantemir
Thursday, June 11; 7:30 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Travel to eighteenth-century Istanbul and Moscow
through the music of composer, scholar, and diplomat Dimitrie Cantemir, a
flamboyant and brilliant figure who served both the Ottoman sultans and the
Russian tsar s. Turkish instrumentalists Neva Őzgen, Murat Aydemir, and
Mesut Őzgen join the Lux Musica ensemble to recreate the music of
Cantemir's Moldavian homeland, his prolific composing career in Istanbul, and
the music of his later life in Moscow, where he organized lavish musical events
with his daughter, a harpsichordist trained in the Italian style. Presented in
conjunction with "The Tsars and the East."
Dimitrie Cantemir: A Life in Music
Friday, June 12; 1 p,m., Sackler sublevel 1
Saturday, June 13; 2:30 p.m.
Explore the life and works of Dimitrie Cantemir, the
Moldavian polymath whose massive history of the Ottomans inspired Gibbon's
"Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire," and whose treatise on Turkish
classical music included more than 350 original compositions. His ill-fated
rebellion against the Ottomans in Moldavia led to his exile to Moscow, where he
was in the employ of the Tsar. Specialists in Turkish classical music, direct
from Istanbul, join the California-based Lux Musica ensemble to perform samples
of music from Cantemir's life in Moldavia, Istanbul, and Moscow. Presented in
conjunction with "The Tsars and the East."
Music and Dance from Sumatra: Rumah Gadang
Saturday, June 20; 3:00 p.m., Freer steps (rain
location: Meyer Auditorium)
On the Indonesian island of Sumatra, trade and
migration have long mixed musical influences from India, China, Malaysia, the
Middle East, and Europe. Rumah Gadang, based in Arlington, features former
members of Sumatra's globe-trotting Syofyani ensemble, which over the last
forty years has appeared at festivals and cultural exchanges throughout Europe
and Asia. Today, the ten members of Rumah Gadang perform the traditional dances
of West Sumatra's matriarchal Minang society, accompanied by music on
gong-chime (talempong), bamboo flute (bansi), double-reed (pupuik batang padi),
and percussion (rabena).
Lectures, Talks, and Workshops
The Sensual S: Form and Movement
Saturday, June 13 & 20; 1 p.m., Sackler
pavilion
Experience the intersections of sculpture, body, and
environment with Daniel Phoenix Singh and members of the Dakshina Dance
Company. Interact with the shiny surfaces of Anish Kapoor's steel sculpture
S-Curve as well as with the Indian sculpture in the Sackler Gallery to explore
how scale, shape, and form reflect and distort perceptions.
Cambodia Past, Present, Future
Tuesday June 16; 2 p.m., Meyer Auditorium
Producing Angkor: The Material, Spatial, and
Cultural Generation of the Khmer Empire
Mitch Hendrickson, University of Sydney
Keeping Watch: The Role of Heritage Watch in
Protecting Cambodia's Cultural Legacy
Dougald O'Reilly, Yale University
Archaeologists Mitch Hendrickson and Dougald O'Reilly
share new research on Cambodia's past and the latest efforts to protect and
preserve the record of the past. Production of objects (ceramics, iron),
landscapes (roads and settlements), and identity (both cultural and
archaeological) offer critical new insight into how and why the Khmer Empire
developed, expanded, and ultimately collapsed. In response to a crisis of
looting at historic and prehistoric sites, the international non-profit
Heritage Watch was founded to slow the destruction in Cambodia.
July 2009
Films
14th Annual Made in Hong Kong Film Festival
This year's festival once
again features a selection of films that highlight Hong Kong's cinematic
achievements. This festival is cosponsored by the Hong Kong Economic and Trade
Office.
Sparrow
Friday, July 10; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Sunday, July 12; 2 p.m.
This breezy comedic caper from Johnnie To is about a
gang of debonair pickpockets who come undone when a beautiful stranger enters
their midst with a con of her own. Infused with a sense of nostalgia for old
Hong Kong and studded with breathtaking set pieces in which the boys gather
wallets and purses using nothing but sleight-of-hand and razorblades,
"Sparrow" is infectious fun. 2008 / 87 min. / Cantonese with English
subtitles
Ashes of Time Redux
Friday, July 17; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Sunday, July 19; 2 p.m.
Fourteen years after it was originally made, Wong
Kar-wai ("Chungking Express," In The Mood for Love") recut this
swordplay classic into a new, "definitive" version. A desert fantasia
of misty pastels, it stars the late Leslie Cheung as a disenchanted swordsman
for hire, but his clients are motivated by the same longings and desires as the
contemporary lovers in Wong's more well-known films. 2008 / 93 min. / Cantonese
and Mandarin with English subtitles
Mr. Cinema
Friday, July 24; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Sunday, July 26; 2 p.m.
Made in honor of the 10th anniversary of Hong Kong's
return to China, Samson Chiu's "moving tribute to the eternal adaptability
of the territory's folk," (Derek Elley, "Variety") covers 40
years of the island's history as seen through the eyes of a left-wing film
projectionist and his family. 2007, 117 min., Cantonese with English subtitles
All about Women
Friday, July 31; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Tsui Hark's screwball confection tells the
intertwined stories of three women: a clumsy nerd who invents a pheromone patch
to attract men, a beauty who attracts plenty of men but no real friends, and a
tomboyish rocker who takes out her romantic frustrations through boxing.
Think of it as a Beijing "Sex and the City." 2008, 119 min., Mandarin
and Uighur with English subtitles
Asia Trash!
Once upon a time, the Freer
held "Art Nights" during the summer. Not any more. This summer, we
present Trash Nights, a celebration of the campy, the gross, and the just plain
wrong! Spend your summer nights with some of Asia's best cult movies.
Versus
Thursday, July 30; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Pre-film tour, "The Tale of Shuten
Dōji," 4:30 p.m., Sackler information desk
All tour participants will receive up to two tickets
to the screening.
Yakuza gangsters, zombies, an escaped convict still
shackled to a severed hand: Ryuhei Kitamura's "nonstop action
gorefest" (Scott Tobias, "Onion AV Club") is a must-see for
connoisseurs of good trashy fun. Intended for mature audiences. Japan / 2000 /
119 min. / Japanese with English subtitles
August 2009
Films
14th Annual Made in Hong Kong Film Festival
This year's festival once
again features a selection of films that highlight Hong Kong's cinematic
achievements. This festival is cosponsored by the Hong Kong Economic and Trade
Office.
All about Women
Sunday, Aug. 2; 2 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Tsui Hark's screwball confection tells the
intertwined stories of three women: a clumsy nerd who invents a pheromone patch
to attract men, a beauty who attracts plenty of men but no real friends, and a
tomboyish rocker who takes out her romantic frustrations through boxing.
Think of it as a Beijing "Sex and the City." 2008, 119 min., Mandarin
and Uighur with English subtitles
One Nite in Mongkok
Friday, Aug. 7; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Sunday, Aug. 9; 2 p.m.
Derek Yee's fast-paced crime thriller makes the most
of its location in Hong Kong's Mongkok district - a bustling, densely-packed
urban jungle where everything from fake designer watches to sex is for sale.
Into this milieu steps a hit man from the mainland looking to gun down a
big-time gangster and, with the help of a prostitute he meets in a no-tell
motel, find his missing fianc�e. 2004, 110 min., Cantonese and Mandarin with
English subtitles
Eye in the Sky
Friday, Aug. 14; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Sunday, Aug. 16; 2 p.m.
Longtime Johnnie To collaborator Yau Na-hoi made his
directorial debut with this taut thriller, and he has clearly learned much from
his mentor. The plot pits a police surveillance unit headed by a world-weary,
retirement-bound cop against a ruthless gang boss and his crew. 2007, 90 min.,
Cantonese with English subtitles
My Mother is a Belly Dancer
Friday, Aug. 21; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Sunday, Aug. 23; 2 p.m.
A group of working-class housewives find liberation
when a new instructor takes over their traditional dance class and teaches them
belly dancing in this charming, surprisingly moving drama. Lee Kung-lok, 2006,
104 min., Cantonese with English subtitles
Asia Trash!
Once upon a time, the Freer
held "Art Nights" during the summer. Not any more. This summer, we
present Trash Nights, a celebration of the campy, the gross, and the just plain
wrong! Spend your summer nights with some of Asia's best cult movies.
The Host
Thursday, Aug. 6; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
"Bong Joon-ho's wildly entertaining saga,"
writes Lisa Schwarzbaum in "Entertainment Weekly," "should
become the hip, thinking-person's monster movie of choice." By turns
thrilling, terrifying, hilarious, and touching, this unholy marriage of
"Godzilla" and "Jaws" celebrates a slimy beast that emerges
from the Han River to terrorize the citizens of Seoul. Korea / 2006 / 119 min.
/ Korean with English subtitles
Tears of the Black Tiger
Thursday, Aug. 13; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Filmed in an eye-watering palette of neon turquoise,
chartreuse, hot pink, and other colors not found in nature, Wisit Sasanatieng's
deliriously campy send-up of classic Thai movies, Hollywood melodramas, and
believe it or not, cowboy movies "exuberantly combines pop and kitsch with
a wholesome belief in the thrills of bad art" (Wesley Morris, "Boston
Globe"). Thailand / 2000 / 110 min. / Thai with English subtitles
Tokyo Gore Police
Thursday, Aug. 20; 7 p.m., Meyer Auditorium*
Pre-film tour, "The Tale of Shuten
Dōji," 4:30 p.m., Sackler information desk
All tour participants will receive up to two tickets
to the screening.
The "New York Times" calls Yoshihiro
Nishimura's film a "splatterific social satire." Employing geysers of
blood, mountains of severed body parts, mutant go-go girls, and other delights,
it takes place in a Tokyo of the near future in which a privatized police force
wages hyper-violent war on a new breed of cyborg criminals who can transform
their wounds into weapons. Intended for mature audiences. Japan / 2008 / 109
min. / video / Japanese with English subtitles
Tours, Conversations, and Lectures
Articulations 2009: Time Passages
Discover the hidden stories
behind the Freer and Sackler art collections and exhibitions through
Articulations, a series of interdisciplinary performances, gallery talks,
interactive events, and discussions. The 2009 programs explore the
intersections of art and time.
Visual Action: The Tale of Shuten Dōji
Tuesday, Aug. 11; 12 p.m., Sackler sublevel 1
Join exhibition curator Ann Yonemura to learn how
Japanese artists of the Edo period interpreted the action-packed story of
Shuten Dōji on colorful screens, scrolls, fans, and printed books. Artists
depicted the rescues of young noblewomen from their monstrous captor and showed
how disguised samurai heroes traveled to the ogre's mountain fortress to join
him in a drinking party. Triumphantly, the brave warriors vanquished the
monster and his guardians, and returned the grateful women to Kyoto.
*Free tickets required for
films and performances. Two tickets per person are distributed at the Meyer
Auditorium one hour before the event on a first-come, first-served basis. For
performances only, up to four tickets per person are available through
Ticketmaster beginning at 10 a.m. two Mondays before the event.
The Freer Gallery of Art,
located at 12th Street and Independence Avenue S.W., and the adjacent Arthur M.
Sackler Gallery, located at 1050 Independence Avenue S.W., are on the National
Mall in Washington, D.C. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. every day, except Dec.
25, and admission is free. The galleries are located near the Smithsonian
Metrorail station on the Blue and Orange lines. For more information about the Freer
and Sackler galleries and their exhibitions, programs and other events, the
public is welcome to visit www.asia.si.edu. For general Smithsonian
information, the public may call (202) 633-1000.
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