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Nearly 60,000 Korean Americans live in the San Francisco Bay Area.
In celebration of the 100th anniversary of Korean immigration to
the United States, the Oakland Museum of California presents the
exhibit In Our Own Voice: The Making
of A Korean
Community, a unique first-person exploration of the Korean American
experience. The exhibit, created in collaboration with the East Bay Korean Centennial
Committee, will be on display in the 20th-century section of the history main
gallery from
January 23 through November 28, 2004.
The installation will include photographs, historical artifacts,
a video presentation, an illustrated time line and a mural incorporating
images of the East Bay Korean American community. One rare artifact
to be included is a flag from the Korean Independence Movement,
circa 1920.
The content of the exhibit is informed by a series of oral history
interviews conducted by nationally acclaimed filmmaker Deann
Borshay Liem, whose award-winning autobiographical documentary, First
Person Plural, has been featured in film festivals nationwide.
The meetings and interviews--with recent immigrants, religious
leaders of the community, Korean Americans born in California,
Korean adoptees, and those of mixed-race backgrounds residing primarily
in the East Bay--have yielded poignant artifacts for display and
provided audio commentary for visitors to listen to as they go
through the exhibit.
Since the first group of Koreans reached the shores of Hawaii
to work in the sugar plantations, Korean Americans have played
a key role in the economic, geographic, political, and cultural
development of America. Koreans have come to the United States
in three waves: in the early 1900s as agricultural workers and
picture brides; in the 1950s and '60s as postwar immigrants; and
in the last three decades as adoptees, low-wage workers, small-business
owners and professionals.
In Our Own Voice: The Making of A Korean Community is
part of the museum's innovative work to preserve and celebrate
unique cultural traditions and to develop exhibits that focus
on current issues and promote discussion in the community. The
exhibit
is curated by Aimee Klask, history researcher at the Oakland
Museum of California.
An opening reception for the exhibition will be held January
23, 2004, from 7 to 9 p.m.
In Our Own Voice: The Making of A Korean Community is
made possible by the generous support of the California Story Fund
of the California Council for the Humanities, and the Oakland Museum
History Guild.
For
press information see www.museumca.org/press/
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