This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

UB to host Asian Studies conference

By PATRICIA DONOVAN
Published: September 15, 2011

Asia scholars from New York, neighboring states, Canadian provinces and beyond will gather in Buffalo this weekend for the 2011 New York Conference on Asian Studies (NYCAS) organized by UB’s Asian Studies Program.

College and university faculty members, graduate students, pre-K through 12 teachers and other Asia scholars and Asiaphiles are invited to explore the conference theme, “Asia at Work and Play,” and discuss a wide range of topics in the humanities, social sciences and professional fields relative to all regions of Asia.

Visit the conference website for more information and to register for the conference. UB students and faculty can attend all conference events at no charge, although pre-registration is required for the teacher workshop and Saturday luncheon by emailing nycas2011@buffalo.edu.

The theme “Asia at Work and Play” calls attention to the ways in which the labor and creativity of people in and from Asia have transformed the world. Conference panels will examine the automobile industry in Asia and its connections to Western New York, Asian labor markets, media and rule of law in China, sports and society, popular music and the entertainment industry in Asia.

Academic panels, open only to conference registrants, will take place from 12:30-4 p.m. Sept. 16 and from 8:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. Sept. 17 in the Ramada Hotel and Conference Center, 2402 North Forest Road., near the Audubon Parkway, Amherst. Evening events on both days are free of charge and open to the public.

On both days, part of the Ramada Inn’s exhibition space will feature photographs from China’s Sacred Sites,” an acclaimed book project by Buffalo architect Beverly Foit-Albert and Nan Shunxun of the Beijing Institute for Civil Engineering and Architecture.

The conference’s keynote events will begin at 5 p.m. Sept. 16 in the Screening Room, 112 Center for the Arts, North Campus, with a talk by Melissa Chiu, vice president for global arts programs at the Asia Society in New York, titled “What is Asian Contemporary Art: The Challenges of a New Field of Enquiry.”

At 6 p.m. the Department of Visual Studies, UB Art Galleries and the Asian Studies Program will celebrate the opening of a collaborative exhibition, “Beijing Buffalo: Translation,” by students from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing and the UB Department of Visual Studies. The free public exhibition will take place on the second floor of the UB Art Gallery and a public reception will be held in the Center for the Arts atrium.

Chiu’s talk, along with the exhibition opening and reception, are made possible through sponsorships by the UB Confucius Institute, Department of Visual Studies, the Beijing Central Academy of Fine Arts and the UB Art Gallery.

The Sept. 17 program at the Ramada will include a plenary luncheon, with a welcome by Stephen C. Dunnett, UB vice provost for international education, and a keynote address by Gail Hershatter, president of the Association for Asian Studies and a noted expert on gender and labor in China. The title of Hershatter’s presentation is “The Girl Who Burned the Banknotes: A Child Daughter-in-Law’s Story and the Shape of Social Change in Early Socialist China.”

As part of its ongoing commitment to teacher professional education, the Asian Studies Program will present “The Arts in Asia: A Workshop for Teachers” in conjunction with NYCAS 2011.

The workshop will be held from 9 a.m. to noon in 120 Clemens Hall, North Campus, and feature a presentation by Dinh Q. Le on art and contemporary society in Vietnam, as well as presentations on music and art in Japan and India.

Also on Sept. 17, the world premiere of the exhibition “Dinh Q. Le: Saigon Diary” will open in the UB Anderson Gallery, One Martha Jackson Place, Buffalo.

In this exhibition, the renowned Vietnamese-American artist documents the activities of 12 “recycling women” who travel throughout Saigon collecting waste to sell or reuse. In the process, he creates a vivid documentary portrait of their lives, which he weaves into the story of this rapidly changing society. This event, including a reception for the artist from 6-8 p.m., is free and open to the public. The exhibition will continue through Dec. 31.

Catalog support for the LĂȘ exhibition was provided by the Robert Lehman Foundation. Exhibition sponsorship was provided by Norman and Thuy Murray and by three area Southeast Asian restaurants: Papaya, Saigon Bangkok and Saigon Cafe.

In addition to the gallery exhibition sponsors, NYCAS 2011 is made possible with funding from the UB College of Arts and Sciences, East View Information Services, the Association for Asian Studies and the New York Conference on Asian Studies.