Ongoing Exhibitions | Lectures, Conferences and Performances
Calendar Index | SEARCH the Asia Institute | Asia Institute HOME
Click on underlined names or phrases for additional information about an event. Most UCLA lectures are free and open to the public (on-campus parking costs $7). Click here to get directions to UCLA. For directions to events elsewhere in Southern California, go to Yahoo Maps.
*Click here to submit event, performance, or exhibition announcements.*
Through August 25, 2002
Asia's Woven Wonders: Treasures from Pacific Asia Museum's Textile Collection
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.
Admission: $5 adults, $3 students and seniorsAn exhibition of roughly 100 Asian textiles and costumes from the Museum's extraordinary collection from China, Japan, India, the Himalayas and Southeast Asia. These textiles are rarely exhibited because of their fragile nature and the harmful effects of exposure to light. The exhibition will feature Chinese textiles including Dragon Robes worn by China's emperors and imperial family during the Qing dynasty (1644-1911). Also included in the exhibition are magnificent Japanese kimono, some dating to the Edo period (1600-1868). One striking example, a kimono bearing a phoenix dyed in indigo blue will be on display. Several patchworked silk brocade robes, or kesa, used by Japanese Buddhist monks during prayer will also be exhibited. From Southeast Asia, Indonesian ikat-dyed cloth and batik woven textiles, and pineapple-fiber, or piña, cloth from the Philippines will be on display. Colorful silk sari and elegant silk robes made for the Moghul court, as well as richly decorated costumes from the kingdom of Bhutan in the Himalayas will also be exhibited.
Through August 26, 2002
Villains and Heroes: Japanese Kabuki Prints
Norton Simon Museum of Art
411 W. Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena, CA 91105
626-449-6840This exhibition explores the enchanting world of Japanese Kabuki theater. Kabuki is a highly stylized, serious form of drama that was developed in the seventeenth century and associated with the ukiyo-e art movement, which was devoted to the worldly pleasures of urban life in eighteenth-century Edo (modern-day Tokyo). The two primary subjects of ukiyo-e or "pictures of the floating world," were the male actors from the theater district and the pleasure quarters inhabited by geisha. This exhibition features more than twenty prints by the great master of this tradition, Katsukawa Shunsho (1726-1792), as well as prints by Ippitsusai Buncho, Kitao Shigemasa, and Katsukawa Shunei.
Through September 15, 2002
Korea through Westen Eyes: Prints and Paintings of Korea by Paul Jacoulet and Elizabeth Keith
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.
Admission: $5 adults, $3 students and seniorsThis exhibition highlights images of Korea created from the 1930s to 1960 by two European artists who were enchanted by the people and landscapes of Korea. Known in the West as the “Hermit Kingdom”, Korea was closed to the outside world until the early 20th century, when the peninsula was colonized by the Japanese, and artists from various nations arrived on its shores. These artists, though foreign observers of Korean life, were nonetheless meticulous illustrators of traditional Korean customs and habits.
Scottish-born artist Elizabeth Keith (1887-1956) lived for several years in Japan, where she learned the techniques of Japanese woodblock carving and printing. From there, she traveled to Korea and produced watercolors and print designs of Korea’s mountain landscapes, architecture and people. Her images of Korea, made from 1919 to 1960, show a warmth and sensitivity towards the people and their culture.
French artist Paul Jacoulet (c.1900-1960) spent most of his life in Japan, and around 1930 visited Korea, where his mother lived for several years. He adopted two Korean brothers, who remained his loyal companions until he died. Jacoulet was fascinated by Korean people, their costumes, mannerisms and daily habits, and created elaborate Japanese-style woodblock print designs of Korean characters that are full of color, humor and, on occasion, political satire.
Most of the prints and paintings in this exhibition are from the collection of Pacific Asia Museum. Catalogs about the two artists featured are available in the Museum Store.
Through September 30, 2002
Afghan War Rugs: Transcendence
- Thurs.-Sat., 12-5pm
- Dirt Gallery
- 7906 Santa Monica Blvd., No. 218
- Hollywood, Los Angeles 90046
- 323-822-9359
- Christopher Knight writes: "The wool rugs were woven between 1979 and 1989 by women in refugee camps in Pakistan (and perhaps Iran) during the Russian invasion of Afghanistan. Rich, earthy colors, made from natural vegetable dyes, are arrayed in familiar ways. A wide border surrounds a contained field in the center. Images are flat, seen in silhouette and often edged in black. The patterns are symmetrical.
"What's distinctive is the subject matter. Kalashnikov rifles stand like sentinels, framing rows of tanks, helicopters and troop carriers. Fields of stylized hand grenades are bordered in bullets. Land mines are laid out in decorative rows. Like an X-ray, ammunition is glimpsed inside weaponry. The weapons seem almost cheerful, partly because of the cartoon-like simplifications and partly because expected patterns seem to have morphed. A floral blossom becomes a stylized explosion, a water pipe turns into a grenade." -Los Angeles Times, Aug. 8, 2002Through May 4, 2003
Symbols of Power: Masterpieces from the Nanjing Museum
Bowers Museum of Cultural Art
2002 North Main Street Santa Ana, CA 92706This exhibit features national treasures from one of China's premier museums, the Nanjing Museum, outside of the country for the first time during Symbols of Power: Masterpieces from the Nanjing Museum. On view during this exhibit are about 260 objects dating back 5,000 years, from the Neolithic Age to the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911 A.D.) to World War II. Objects include bronze, ancient currency, fine porcelain, religious objects, paintings and calligraphy, formal and informal attire, court objects, accessories and jewelry.
Symbolism is very important to the Chinese, particularly concerning their imperial rulers. Virtually all aspects of the imperial families' lives, from birth to death, from leisure to the formalities of the court, were surrounded by symbols of their power. A fascinating postscript to the exhibit is the cross-country journey taken by many of these objects during the 1930s and 1940s. More than half of the objects to be shown during Symbols of Power: Masterpieces from the Nanjing Museum were part of one of the great sagas of the 20th century - the 16-year journey undertaken by thousands of Chinese to save their imperial heritage from invading Japanese troops.
Advance Ticket Sales for this exhibit begin May 8, 2002. Prices: $14 adults; $10 seniors and students; $8 children. For ticket information, call (714) 567-3680.
August 1, 2002
Asian Lecture Series: History of China
10:30 am-12:30 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.This six-week slide series begins July 25. The topic for August 1 is Ancient China to 221BC [Prehistory, Shang & Zhou Dynasties]. Professor Milton Meyer will lead the series. Mr. Meyer, emeritus of California State University, Los Angeles, taught Asian History for 35 years and has been conducting summer Asian lecture series at Pacific Asia Museum for twelve years.
August 4, 2002
Festival of Chariots
11 am
Location: TBAThis festival has occurred yearly since 1977. It is a huge feast and festival that includes a parade, display of the temples deities, exhibits, bands, and dancers. Admission is free. Please call (310) 839-1572 for further information.
Sponsored by The International Society for Krishna Consciousness Rukmini Dwarakadish.
August 8, 2002
Asian Lecture Series: History of China
10:30 am-12:30 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.This six-week slide series begins July 25. The topic for August 8 is First Imperial Cycle 221BC-589AD [Qin & Han Dynasties]. Professor Milton Meyer will lead the series. Mr. Meyer, emeritus of California State University, Los Angeles, taught Asian History for 35 years and has been conducting summer Asian lecture series at Pacific Asia Museum for twelve years.
August 8-9, 2002
Japanese American Doll Enthusiasts Fourth Annual Convention
Sheraton Pasadena Hotel
303 East Cordova Street, Pasadena Ca 91101
Telephone: (626) 449-4000 Fax: (626) 584-1390Speakers include:
Michael Ayervais, "Ningyo at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NY"
Bill Buntin, "Japanese Armor and its Representation in Ningyo"
Isabella Gallaon-Aoki, "Japanese Miniatures"
Dr. Marvin Herring, "Stories That Ningyo Tell"
Byla Simon Kunis, "What Do Appraisers Look for When Appraising?"
John McMullen, "Kimonos"
Tim Mertel, "Ningyo in Kyoto's Gion Matsuri"
Gary Myers, "Hina Matsuri"
Alan Pate, "Unraveling the Mysteries of Takeda Ningyo"
Laurel Sheppard, "Kokeshi: Folk Art of Japan"
Judy Shoaf, "The Japanese Doll on the Western Toyshelf"
Rosie Skiles, "Friendship Dolls - Then and Now"
Yoko Kawashima Watkins, "The Toys I Left Behind"
In addition to the lectures, on Saturday the group will tour the Japanese American National Museum especially to see their Passports to Friendship Exhibit with torei ningyo and blue-eyed dolls sent seventy-five years ago. That afternoon, there will be a panel discussion about Friendship Dolls by Dr. Sidney Gulick III, grandson of the founder of the Friendship Doll Program; Michiko Takaoka, Director of the Japanese Cultural Center at Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute in Spokane, WA; and Rosie Skiles, Japanese American Doll Enthusiasts' member.Advance registration is required. For more information, please contact Rosie Skiles, Convention Coordinator via email at RSkiles718@aol.com or phone/FAX her at 303-665-9767.
Japanese American Doll Enthusiasts is an international group of collectors of Asian dolls whose goal is to preserve, protect and provide information about Asian dolls. They publish "Ningyo Journal" three times yearly and have a website at www.jadejapandolls.com.
August 8-25, 2002
The Third Annual Festival of Fantasy, Horror, and Science Fiction
Egyptian Theatre
6712 Hollywood Blvd. (between McCadden Pl. and Las Palmas Ave.)
Call 323-466 FILM for further information.Princess Blade (shurayuki-hime)
August 9, 2002
9:45 pm
L.A. Premiere
2002. Director: Shinsuke Sato. Remake of the film Lady Snowblood, this film combines spectacular sword-fighting with a mournful meditation on the fleeting nature of happiness. The story revolves around a 20 year old assassin named Yuki who wages a one-woman war against her own clan when she learns they were responsible for her mother's death. In Japanese with English subtitles.Cowboy Bebop: the Movie (Cowboy Bebop: Tengoku No Tobira)
August 11, 2002
5 pm
Sneak Preview of New Japanese Anime
2001. Director: Shinichiro Watanabe. This film follows the adventures of hardluck bounty hunters as they cruise the cosnos looking for one big score. In Japanese with English subtitles.Ghost in the Shell (Kokaku Kidotai)
August 16, 2002
9:45 pm
Double Header
1995 and 1996: Director: Mamoru Oshii (first feature). In the near future, a sentient computer program named Project 2501 tries to control the cyber and human worlds--standing in its way is cyborg-cop Major Motoko Kusanagi. Director: Taro Rin (second feature). About a young swordsman named Kamui who finds himself thrust into a cosmic battle between the Dragons of Earth and the Dragons of Heaven. Both films have English dubbing.August 10, 2002
Taste of India
- 1-10 pm
- Pioneer Boulevard between 183rd and 187th Streets
- Artesia, CA
- The festival includes a cultural show, kiddie rides, regional food and music, and special sales. Sponsored by the Artesia Chamber of Commerce and the City of Artesia. Call (562) 924-6397 for more information.
August 10-11, 2002
Los Angeles Tofu Festival
11 am-6 pm
Little Tokyo, Downtown Los Angeles, San Pedro Street
Admission: $1 per person and scripts used to purchase
prepared tofu dishes.A food event with over 40 restaurants participating using Tofu (soy bean) as the main ingredient. Free entertainment and health related information booths. For more information call Joyce Shimazu at 213.471.1602. Website: www.tofufest.org.
August 11, 2002
Authors on Asia
2-4 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.Nguyen Cao Ky, Buddha’s Child: My Flight To Save Vietnam. In this revealing biography, Nguyen Cao Ky recounts the remarkable story of his tumultuous tenure as Premier of South Vietnam, and offers unprecedented insight into the war’s beginning, escalation and heartbreaking end.
Books will be available for purchase and signing. Authors on Asia programs are presented free of charge but reservations are recommended. For information and reservations, please call 626.449.2742 ext. 20.
August 11, 2002
Oceanea Family Festival at Kidseum
12-4 pm
Bowers Kidseum
1802 N. Main St.
Santa Ana, CA 92706See young dancers perform traditional dances; make a real flower lei; learn the art of tapa design, gourd decorating, fiber art and more during this fun event. Admission is $5 per person over 5 years old or free with Bowers membership or admission. Call 714.480.1520 for more information.
August 15, 2002
Asian Lecture Series: History of China
10:30 pm-12:30 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.This six-week slide series begins July 25. The topic for August 15 is Second Imperial Cycle 589-960 [Sui & Tang Dynasties]. Professor Milton Meyer will lead the series. Mr. Meyer, emeritus of California State University, Los Angeles, taught Asian History for 35 years and has been conducting summer Asian lecture series at Pacific Asia Museum for twelve years.
August 17, 2002
Flavors of India Family Festival
1-4 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.Guests may participate in a henna body decoration workshop. Children are invited to bring their own percussion instruments to join in an Indian musical instrument performance featuring the tabla. Adults will enjoy a lecture discussing Ayurveda health principles and food applications. Also featured will be an Indian cooking demonstration and a demonstration illustrating the complicated art of wearing a sari (the traditional Indian woman’s clothing). Indian tea and snacks will be available for tasting.
August 17, 2002
Ying Zhang's Los Angeles Debut
7:30 pm
Kodak Theatre
6801 Hollywood (Hollywood and Highland), Los Angeles 90028
Chinese pianist Ying Zhang makes her Los Angeles debut in this concert with Boris Brott and the New West Symphony. She will perform: Ravel: Jeux d'eau, Chopin,etude Op. 10 No.12, Chopin: Andante Spianato et Grande, Polomaise Brilliante Op.22, Saint-Saens: 2nd Piano Concerto in G Minor Op.22. Tickets cost $47-102. Call (213) 480-3232 to book tickets.August 17, 2002
Central Asian Music Festival
6-10 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.The sounds of Qawwali will be at Grand Performances’ Central Asian Music Festival at the California Plaza, Watercourt. Pakistani, Qawwali and contemporary musicians Shabaz, featuring the singing talents of Sukhawat Ali Khan and his sister Riffat Salamat, children of renowned Pakistani singer Ustad Salamat Ali Khan. The rich synthesis of qawwali, jazz fusion, rap and bangara is augmented by traditional Pakistani instruments including the harmonium, the dhol and tabla. For further information, please contact Rosa Zee at 626.449.2742 ext. 39.
August 18, 2002
Yatra: A Journey to India
8 pm
Watercourt, California Plaza
350 South Grand Avenue, Downtown Los Angeles
(213) 687-2159
This free performance features South Indian style dancing and North Indian style music. Choreographer Ramaa Bharadvaj and her Angahara ensemble will perform along with Mala Ganguly and her Ragamala Music Ensemble. The conclusion features a joint performance of the two groups.August 19, 2002
"Why We Care": A New Generation Looks at U.S. - Japan Relations
- 2-4 pm
- Japan American National Museum
- 369 East First Street
- Los Angeles, CA 90012
- (213) 625-0414
Panelists:- -Taro Kono, Member of Parliament
- -Toshiaki Miura, Washington Correspondent, Asahi Shimbun
- -Teresa Watanabe, Former Tokyo Correspondent, Los Angeles Times
- -Mitchell Maki, Dean, College of Health and Human Services, CSU Los Angeles (former UCLA professor)
- -Eric Akira Tate, President, Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern California
Moderator:- Irene Hirano, Executive Director, Japanese American National Museum
Presented by the Consulate General of Japan in Los Angeles, the Japanese American National Museum, and the California Japanese American Community Leadership Council.August 22, 2002
Asian Lecture Series: History of China
10:30 am-12:30 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.This six-week slide series begins July 25. The topic for August 22 is Native and Alien Dynasties 960-1644 [The Song, Yuan and Ming]. Professor Milton Meyer will lead the series. Mr. Meyer, emeritus of California State University, Los Angeles, taught Asian History for 35 years and has been conducting summer Asian lecture series at Pacific Asia Museum for twelve years.
August 22-28, 2002
Alternative Screen: Independent Film Showcase
Egyptian Theatre
6712 Hollywood Blvd. (between McCadden Pl. and Las Palmas Ave.)
Call 323-466 FILM for further information.Spriggan
August 23, 2002
10:15 pm
2000. Director: Hirotsuge Kawasaki. Adventure about the race to control Noah's Ark. The Spriggans are archaelogists/warriors sent to prevent the Ark from falling into the sinister hands of the U.S. military. In Japanese with English subtitles.Versus
August 24, 2002
7:15 pm
L.A. Premiere
2000. Director: Ryuhei Kitamura. A high voltage zombie/yakuza action fest that stars Tak Sakaguchi as a moody, pretty-boy convict who finds himself trapped with a nasty crew of gun-wielding hoodlums in an ancient evil-infested forest where the dead come back to life. In Japanese with English subtitles.August 23, 2002
China's Zhengzhou Qu Opera Company: "Old House Under the Elms"
- Noon
- Grand Performances
- California Plaza, 350 South Grand Avenue
- Downtown Los Angeles
- (213) 687-2159
This opera company is making its first visit to the U.S. This free performance will have English subtitles.August 23-24, 2002
Spotlight on Mizoguchi
7:30 pm (both days)
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90036
323-857-6000 (general information)This one-weekend presentation offers an opportunity to see two films by the renowned Japanese filmmaker Kenji Mizoguchi, director of Osaka Elegy, Ugetsu, Sansho the Bailiff, and The Life of Oharu. Mizoguchi, considered with Ozu and Kurosawa to be one of the three undisputed masters of Japanese cinema, is known for his graceful camera movements and use of shadow and light. Ugetsu and Life of Oharu, both Venice Film Festival winners, are considered by many to be among the best films ever made.
Friday August 23, 7:30 pm
Ugetsu (1954/b&w/94 min.)
Scr: Matsutaro Kawaguchi, Yoshikata Yoda; dir: Kenji Mizoguchi; w/ Masayuki Mori, Machiko Kyo.Amidst the ravages of a civil war, a ghost princess bewitches a country potter who has left his family to sell his wares in the city, and a farmer abandons his wife to become a samurai. Based on two short stories by the 18th-century writer Akinari Ueda (often described as the Japanese Maupassant), this landmark in cinema history is a moving fable about two men whose dreams destroy those around them, distinguished by exquisite cinematography and the subtle, flowing camera movements that epitomize the Mizoguchi style at its most sublime.
Saturday August 24, 7:30 pm
The Life of Oharu (1952/b&w/148 min.)
Scr: Saikaku Ihara, Kenji Mizoguchi, Yoshikata Yoda; dir: Kenji Mizoguchi; w/ Kinuyo Tanaka, Toshiro Mifune.In 17th-century Japan, an aging prostitute recalls her unfortunate life while she prays before a statue of Buddha. The story of her downward slide from service in the imperial court to streetwalking serves as an incisive critique of the role of women in Japanese society, a subject close to Mizoguchi, who had seen his own sister sold into prostitution at the age of 14. The film recreates feudal Japan in exacting detail and is highly praised for the elegance of its long, single-take scenes and for Kinuyo Tanake's portrayal of the proud Oharu, who achieves an inner peace that transcends her cruel and shameful fate.
Admission is $8; $6 for museum and AFI members, seniors (62+), and students with valid ID. Tickets may be purchased at the museum ticket office or by calling toll free, 1–877–522–6225. Purchase of a film ticket includes entrance to the galleries. Info: 323–857–6010.
August 24, 2002
Lecture: Dale Carolyn Gluckman, "Gold in Asian Textiles"
11 am-12 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.Dale Gluckman, curator of costumes at LACMA, explores the many ways in which textiles in Asia were, and often still are, embellished with gold leaf, thread and metal strips through a variety of techniques, including sewing, printing, stenciling and weaving. Virtually all cultures in Asia used gold in at least one of these ways on special textiles to indicate wealth and status, demarcate ritual space, or signify ceremonial function. For those without the means or access to gold, clever methods were used to simulate the light—reflective qualities of gold—proving that all that glitters is not necessarily the real thing.
August 28-29, 2002
Movie Nights: Korean Film Series at the Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles
*Feature Film - I Wish I Had a Wife (2000)7 pm
Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles
5505 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90036
(Located at Wilshire and Dunsmuir)
Phone: 323-936-7141
Fax: 323-936-5712
Website: www.kccla.org
e-mail: info@kccla.org
The Korean Cultural Center holds screenings of selected Korean Films with English subtitles two days each month. This is a great opportunity for people who enjoy good films, not only those who are interested in Korean culture and Korean cinema. The films are shown usually on the last Wednesday and Thursday of each month in the second floor Auditorium. Dates are changed due to national holidays.I Wish I Had a Wife (2000); Directed by Park Heung-sik, PG, Romantic Drama, 104 min:
Lonely Bong-soo is a manager of a small branch office of a bank, which is located in an apartment complex. Little does he know that Won-ju, a teacher at the educational center across the street whom he runs into everyday, has been nourishing a crush on him for some time. Won-ju makes some moves but Bong-soo seems oblivious to the signals she is sending until he sees something on the banks silent surveillance tape...
August 29, 2002
Asian Lecture Series: History of China
10:30 am-12:30 pm
Pacific Asia Museum
46 North Los Robles Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91101
General Information: (626) 449-2742
Free parking is available at the Museum parking lot, corner of Los Robles and Union.This six-week slide series begins July 25. The topic for August 29 is Traditional China 1644-1912. Professor Milton Meyer will lead the series. Mr. Meyer, emeritus of California State University, Los Angeles, taught Asian History for 35 years and has been conducting summer Asian lecture series at Pacific Asia Museum for twelve years.
August 30-31, 2002
Metropolis (2002), directed by Rintaro
Midnight on both nights
University Village 3 (across from USC)
3323 S. Hoover Street, Los Angeles
(213) 748-6321
Tickets are $5.25-7.75This animé film has received terrific reviews in the Chicago Sun-Times, Newsday, the San Francisco Examiner, and other newspapers. It is based upon TEZUKA Osamu's 1949 manga which drew upon Fritz Lang's silent movie of the same name. Writing in the Toronto Star, Geoff Pevere argues Metroplis "is more than just a superb example of Japanese anime at its most eyepopping and thoughtful. It is a condensed primer of the form itself — a retro-futuristic, pencil-to-pixel encapsulation of an entire graphic tradition."
This is the first of the theater's "Cool Weekend Late Shows" for 2002-2003.
Please send information on East Asia-related events, performances, and exhibitions to:
Clayton Dube
UCLA Asia Institute
11288 Bunche Hall, UCLA
Los Angeles, California 90095-1487
email: <cdube@isop.ucla.edu>
Fax: (310) 206-3555
Ongoing Exhibitions | Lectures, Conferences and Performances
Calendar Index | SEARCH the Asia Institute | Asia Institute HOMEThe UCLA Asia Institute is part of UCLA International.