Kaya Press, in collaboration with USC’s Vision and Voices and One Archive, is bringing you a one-of-a-kind interactive experience this February: Club Kaya. RSVP now.
Club Kaya is tribute to and celebration of Kaya Press’ 30 years of unapologetically political publishing. Developed by artist-in-residence Alan Nakagawa and hosted by ONE Archives at the USC Libraries, Club Kaya will feature micro operas, vibratory sound experiments, book-inspired interactive music boxes, literary karaoke, and more!
Club Kaya was developed to answer the following: What happens when we think of the archive as a place of refuge? How can we engage with the histories of cultural production beyond what is expected? Guest collaborators including anti-colonial musician and artist Umi Hsu (Bitter Party), Emmy- and Peabody Award–winning filmmaker Elizabeth Ito (Adventure Time, City of Ghosts), and experimental video artist Nisa Karnsomport will join Nakagawa in engaging and instilling the publisher’s shared history and shared struggle: to make spaces to exist in the fullness of one’s own lived reality.
Artist bios:
Alan Nakagawa is an interdisciplinary artist with archiving tendencies. Primarily working with sound and often incorporating various media and working with communities and their histories, Nakagawa has been working on a series of semi-autobiographic sound-architecture/tactile sound experiences utilizing multi-point audio field recordings of historic interiors: Peace Resonance: Hiroshima/Wendover combines recordings of the interiors of the Hiroshima Atomic Dome (Hiroshima, Japan) and Wendover Hangar (Utah); Conical Sound: Antoni Gaudi/Simon Rodia combines recordings of the interiors of the Watts Towers (Los Angeles) and the Sagrada Familia (Barcelona, Spain). Premiered in 2023, Point of Turn is his first vibratory sound work, involving the human voice and the seminal 1970s British rock band 10cc’s hit “I’m Not in Love.” Nakagawa was the first artist-in-residence for the Los Angeles Department of Transportation and the Los Angeles County Library and is currently the artist-in-residence at the CSU Dominguez Hills Gerth Archives & Special Collections.
Umi Hsu (they/them) was born in Taipei and moved to Virginia at age twelve. Hsu is a trans nonbinary sound artist, musician, and writer whose practice is driven by inquiries about sound and migratory communities. Working to create social change through sound, Hsu leads LA Listens, a community engagement project on the city’s changing sonic and social ecology, and mobile placemaking collective Movable Parts. They also perform and write songs about the melancholic postcolony in their L.A.–based ghost pop band Bitter Party.
Elizabeth Ito has been working as a creator, writer, director, and storyboard artist in the animation industry since 2004. She has worked on TV, feature, and commercial projects. Elizabeth is also the creator of the award-winning short Welcome to My Life, the second-most-viewed short in Cartoon Network history, and received an Emmy for her directing work on Adventure Time. Her first series for Netflix, City of Ghosts, premiered in 2021 and won a Peabody Award, and two Emmys for directing and best animated children’s show in 2022. She also directed a music video for The Linda Lindas.
Nisa Karnsomport is a Los Angeles–based video artist, interdisciplinary designer, and software developer. Her work explores real-time and interactive processes between audio and video, often overlapping experimental media practices with new technology.
Presented by USC Visions and Voices. Organized by Edwin Hill (French, Italian, American Studies and Ethnicity), Sunyoung Lee (Kaya Press, American Studies and Ethnicity), and Ana Iwataki (Comparative Studies in Literature and Culture). Co-sponsored by the Creativity, Theory, and Politics Research Cluster (American Studies and Ethnicity); the ONE Archives at the USC Libraries; and Asian Pacific American Student Services.
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