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- <text id=93TT0398>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1993: The Art Of Diversity
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 02, 1993 Special Issue:The New Face Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL ISSUE:THE NEW FACE OF AMERICA
- The Art Of Diversity, Page 20
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Hyphenated-Americans can be found along the cutting edge of
- all the arts
- </p>
- <p>By Christopher John Farley--With reporting by Greg Aunapu/Miami and Georgia Harbison/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Culture in America is likely to be spelled these days with a
- hyphen. Watch it on TV. There's Cuban-American singing star
- Gloria Estefan in a music video on MTV Latino. See it at the
- cinema. The film version of The Joy Luck Club, based on the
- popular novel by Chinese-American author Amy Tan, could be playing
- nearby. Theater? There's the modern-dance show Griot New York,
- directed by Jamaican-American choreographer Garth Fagan. Poetry?
- Buy a book of verse by St. Lucian-born, Nobel-prizewinning poet
- Derek Walcott, who teaches at Boston University. Painting? New
- York's Asia Society is holding a show that tours the country
- next year featuring Asian-American visual artists who emigrated
- from Vietnam, Thailand and elsewhere in Asia.
- </p>
- <p> And that's just the beginning. "All American art is a function
- of the hybrid culture that resulted from centuries of immigration
- to this nation," says David Ross, director of the Whitney Museum
- of American Art. "We're just more dramatically aware of it today."
- American culture used to be depicted as a Eurocentric melting
- pot into which other cultures were stirred and absorbed. The
- recent waves of newcomers have changed that. Today it seems
- more like a street fair, with various booths, foods and peoples,
- all mixing on common sidewalks.
- </p>
- <p> The new cultural carnival is most apparent in music. The New
- York-based, Irish-American group Black 47, which mixes rap,
- reggae and traditional Irish melodies, has appeared on both
- the Tonight Show and Late Night with Conan O'Brien. The Los
- Angeles rap trio Cypress Hill, which includes an Italian American,
- a Cuban American and a member who is of Cuban and Mexican descent,
- released a hit album this year that started out at No. 1 on
- Billboard magazine's album chart. Latin music has become such
- a significant force in pop music that MTV recently launched
- MTV Latino as a separate Spanish-language edition.
- </p>
- <p> Cuban-born Estefan, with her dance-floor blend of R. and B.
- and Cuban polyrhythms, has established herself as the queen
- of the new Latin sound. Arriving in Miami from Havana when she
- was two years old, she grew up in a household immersed in traditional
- Cuban ballads. By the first grade, she was also listening to
- British-invasion bands. "It was natural to blend both elements,"
- says Estefan. "When immigrants come to America they bring their
- culture, and that culture becomes part of a new country. It
- makes everyone stronger."
- </p>
- <p> Her success helped launch other Latin acts. Cuban-born singer
- Jon Secada, who co-wrote several of Estefan's best-selling songs,
- has since recorded his own hits, which combine elements of Cuban
- music, Top 40 and gospel. Says Secada: "Artists who want to
- experiment find a way of incorporating the things that are worthy
- from all types of music, like reggae, salsa and African sounds.
- And it finds a way onto the charts."
- </p>
- <p> The fashion industry has also felt the impact of newcomers.
- Immigrants from Asia have brought a clean, elegant new look
- to clothing design. Among them is Han Feng, who left Hangzhou,
- China, only eight years ago. Now head of her own design company,
- she sells easy-to-wear, simply shaped clothes to Bloomingdale's
- and Saks. "Designers have been looking for a style for the '90s,"
- says Kal Ruttenstein, senior vice president for fashion direction
- at Bloomingdale's. "The simplified Oriental-inspired look might
- be a major look."
- </p>
- <p> African clothing, filtered through rap culture, influences fashion
- as well. The L.A.-based firm Threads for Life (also known as
- Cross Colours) sells hip-hop fashion inspired by urban youth
- and African designers, such as overalls with colorful kente-cloth
- patches. "It becomes not just a pair of jeans, but something
- that means something," says firm co-owner Carl Jones. Company
- sales rose from $15 million in 1991 to $89 million in 1992.
- </p>
- <p> The Joy Luck Club, born as a best-selling book, leads a recent
- surge in popular new movies written or directed by Asians. They
- include M. Butterfly, written by David Henry Hwang, the U.S.-born
- son of Chinese immigrants; the comedy Combination Platter, directed
- by Chinese-American filmmaker Tony Chan; and The Wedding Banquet,
- a comedy directed by Ang Lee, who moved to the U.S. from Taiwan.
- Asian-style kickboxing movies have found an eager audience in
- the U.S. Recently one of Hong Kong's best filmmakers, John Woo,
- relocated to Los Angeles to direct the action movie Hard Target
- (which stars Belgian-born martial-arts hero Jean-Claude Van
- Damme).
- </p>
- <p> These Asian films are already spawning would-be imitators. "When
- something becomes a commercial success," says novelist Tan,
- "it automatically opens the door, or at least the possibility,
- for other similar ventures. Already, in Hollywood, I'm hearing
- about people saying, `We think this will be another Joy Luck
- Club,' about films they want to get produced."
- </p>
- <p> Hispanics in Hollywood, despite barriers, have also met with
- recent success. Latino actors Andy Garcia and Rosie Perez have
- become sought-after talents; the movie La Bamba grossed more
- than $50 million and sent the signal that Latino movies can
- be moneymakers. "In American society, transmitting culture is
- done in the marketplace," says Gary Puckrein, editor in chief
- of American Visions, a magazine that covers culture in the U.S.
- "You see it in food, fashion, music and art."
- </p>
- <p> Other talented Latinos seek the big break. Actress Marga Gomez's
- one-woman show, Memory Tricks, which deals with her father,
- a Cuban comic, and her mother, a Puerto Rican dancer, has been
- praised for its humor and startling candor. Gomez helped found
- the Latino comedy group Culture Clash (the troupe has a new
- series airing on Fox TV, where Gomez has made guest appearances),
- and she is adapting her show into a screenplay. "I think the
- essence of my work is that I come from some very strong backgrounds--gay, Cuban, Puerto Rican," says Gomez, "and I don't feel
- like I don't fit into any one of them."
- </p>
- <p> In the visual arts, cultural outsiders often see what insiders
- miss. Japanese-born painter Masami Teraoka combines elements
- of European art and Japanese ukiyo-e wood-block imagery. From
- his unique perspective, he creates gothic halos around the heads
- of AIDS patients and condoms in the bedrooms of samurai. In
- his Harlem neighborhood, Jamaican-American artist Nari Wood
- collects discarded baby carriages and ties them together with
- fire hoses, making monuments to loss.
- </p>
- <p> Such outsider viewpoints--from new Americans and even Native
- Americans--can influence others to see the world in a different
- light. To dramatize how the forces that ravaged the buffalo
- still exist, Native American sculptor Bob Haozous constructed
- 100 steel buffalo, then videotaped art-gallery patrons fighting
- to buy the pieces before they were sold out. Korean-American
- Nam June Paik, whose influential multimedia artworks incorporate
- TVs and computers, says he was talking about the information
- superhighway in his own work long before it became a catchword.
- And architect Maya Ying Lin, the daughter of Chinese immigrants,
- designed the black wall of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, a
- stark monument that compels visitors not to revel in the glory
- of war, but to reflect on its sorrows.
- </p>
- <p> Other artists have turned their sights on the nature of the
- immigrant experience itself. Choreographer Fagan's touring show
- Griot New York features sets by noted sculptor Martin Puryear
- and music by trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis. Employing a multiethnic
- troupe, Griot seeks to capture the drama of immigration. Says
- Fagan: "It's a celebration of New York City, of West Indians,
- Indians and Africans, of big urban metropolises that are always
- being dumped on." Fagan also wrote a poem to illustrate the
- show's theme of diverse peoples traveling difficult routes to
- come together in one nation:
- </p>
- <p> Ships Hold/ No Class
- </p>
- <p> Reservations & plantations
- </p>
- <p> concentration...
- </p>
- <p> You/me/them/us/brethren/we/be
- </p>
- <p> Celebrate
- </p>
- <p> The celebration was a long time coming. To be an immigrant artist
- is to be a hyphen away from one's roots, and still a thousand
- miles away. But it is often that link to a foreign land--another
- way of seeing things--that allows such artists to contribute
- ideas to American culture that are fresh and new. That slim
- hyphen, that thin line that joins individual Americans to their
- past, is also what connects all America to its future.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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