Thursday, January 19, 2017

Chinese Calligraphy at Carnegie Library in Squirrel Hill, January 28.

The Carnegie Library in Squirrel Hill will host Chinese Calligraphy on January 28.
Stop in on January 28 to celebrate Lunar New Year’s Day with Chinese Calligraphy! Join us to rub ink sticks, learn to write “lucky” Chinese characters with a brush and carry the luck with you into the New Year.

新年好!
The library is located at 5801 Forbes Ave. (map) and is accessible by buses 61A, 61B, 61C, 61D, 64, and 74.

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Nomadic Perspectives on Multivocality in the Altai Mountains, January 19 at Pitt.



The University of Pittsburgh's Center for Russian and East European Studies will host Robert O. Beahrs and his talk "Nomadic Perspectives on Multivocality in the Altai Mountains" on January 19.
Over the past forty years, nomadic vocal practices from Inner Asia known as "throat-singing" or "overtone singing have been commonly misunderstood. Drawing on twelve years of fieldwork in Tuva and Altai, this presentation explores how localized cosmologies and indigenous philosophies of voice and music suggest new ways of conceiving of xöömei beyond ethnic identity and vocal technique. This project joins a number of recent anthropological studies of Central Eurasia that reexamine how indigenous peoples were inscribed into the ethnographic archive and offers new ways of conceiving of the poetics and politics of life in less human-centered ecologies.
The talk starts at 3:30 pm in 4217 Posvar Hall (map) and is free and open to the public.

1993 movie Sailor Moon R: The Movie (劇場版 美少女戦士セーラームーンR) at Hollywood Theater January 21 - 25, part of US theatrical premiere.



The 1993 movie Sailor Moon R: The Movie (劇場版 美少女戦士セーラームーンR) will play in US theaters for the first time in January 2017, and will be in Pittsburgh on January 21, 22, 24, and 25 at the Hollywood Theater in Dormont. The distributor provides a plot summary:
Long before Mamoru found his destiny with Usagi, he gave a single rose in thanks to a lonely boy who helped him recover from the crash that claimed his parents. This long-forgotten friend, Fiore, has been searching the galaxy for a flower worthy of that sweet gesture long ago. The mysterious flower he finds is beautiful, but has a dark side- it has the power to take over planets. To make matters worse, the strange plant is tied to an ominous new asteroid near Earth! Faced with an enemy blooming out of control, It’s up to Sailor Moon and the Sailor Guardians to band together, stop the impending destruction and save Mamoru!
The theatrical premiere will also include the short "Make Up! Sailor Guardians", and giveaways are available on a first-come first-served basis.

Tickets are currently available online. The screenings on January 21, 22, and 24 will be dubbed in English and the January 25 showing will be in Japanese with English subtitles. The theater is located at 1449 Potomac Ave. in Dormont (map), and is accessible by Pittsburgh's subway/LRT at a block south of Potomac Station.

Saturday, January 14, 2017

Nicky's Thai Kitchen to open North Hills location.



Construction is underway at 1026 Mt. Nebo Rd (map) on Nicky's Thai Kitchen, in what was formerly Recipe's Remembered and, most recently, a Chinese restaurant. Nicky's Thai Kitchen has two locations in Pittsburgh---downtown and North Shore---and is routinely in the conversation for best Thai food in the city. The North Hills location is scheduled for a February opening.

1993 Studio Ghibli film Ocean Waves (海がきこえる) in Pittsburgh for the first time, January 20 - 26 (sneak preview January 17).



The 1993 Studio Ghibli movie Ocean Waves (海がきこえる) made its US premiere in December, and will play at the Row House Cinema from January 20 through 26. The theater has planned a sneak preview on January 17; tickets go on sale to the general public on December 22. The distributor provides a summary of the film that premiered in New York City on December 28 and nationwide in January:
Rarely seen outside of Japan, Ocean Waves is a subtle, poignant and wonderfully detailed story of adolescence and teenage isolation. Taku and his best friend Yutaka are headed back to school for what looks like another uneventful year. But they soon find their friendship tested by the arrival of Rikako, a beautiful new transfer student from Tokyo whose attitude vacillates wildly from flirty and flippant to melancholic. When Taku joins Rikako on a trip to Tokyo, the school erupts with rumors, and the three friends are forced to come to terms with their changing relationships.

Ocean Waves was the first Studio Ghibli film directed by someone other than studio founders Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata, as director Tomomi Mochizuki led a talented staff of younger employees in an adaptation of Saeko Himuro’s best-selling novel. Full of shots bathed in a palette of pleasingly soft pastel colors and rich in the unexpected visual details typical of Studio Ghibli’s most revered works, Ocean Waves is an accomplished teenage drama and a true discovery.
Tickets for the sneak preview are still available online, and tickets and showtimes are available at the Row House Cinema's website. The single-screen theater is located at 4115 Butler Street in Lawrenceville (map).

New Asian hair salon coming to Squirrel Hill.

Renovations are underway at 5815 Forbes Ave. in Squirrel Hill (map), where Feng's Hair Salon will open in what was most recently a Kidz & Company children's clothing store. It will be the second Asian hair salon in the neighborhood, and the most recent in a line of Asian businesses to recently open in Squirrel Hill following Hair Lin's (名髮廊), two express mail services, an Asian clothing boutique, a Taiwanese restaurant, and Hi Sound KTV.

Friday, January 13, 2017

Josh Lindblom rejoins Pirates, by way of Lotte.


via 스포츠동아.

Major League Baseball's official site on the 12th profiled Josh Lindblom, a 29-year-old pitcher signed by Pittsburgh in December after two years with the Lotte Giants.
He learned some conversational Korean, came to appreciate the food, took part in team events and soaked in the unique baseball culture for two years. He pitched pretty well, too, starting 61 games with a 4.33 ERA in the hitter-friendly KBO. He became a fan favorite in a foreign country.

"We loved everything about it," he said. "I can't say enough about our experience over there. No words can describe the way they accepted us. It was unbelievable. … It was probably one of the best, if not the best experience of my career."
Lindblom was briefly in the organization in 2014. He returned to the US because of his infant daughter, who requires special medical attention.
On July 1, after one of those routine checkups, the top pediatric cardiologist in South Korea told the Lindbloms their daughter would be born with a rare congenital heart defect: Hypoplastic Right Heart Syndrome. The right side of her heart didn't develop properly.
. . .
Monroe was born on Oct. 20. She had her first open-heart surgery a week later, on Oct. 27. It won't be her last. She'll need another operation this summer, maybe one more after that.

You'd never know it by looking at her, Lindblom says. She's a beautiful, growing baby. But for now, he says, Monroe is "day to day." For her and her parents, some of those days are better than others.

"Essentially, she still has half a heart," Lindblom said. "Every day's a battle. You wake up and you're just thankful that she's alive."

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Dr. Haifeng Huang and "China's Development through Green Economic Policy" at Pitt, January 17.

Dr. Haifeng Huang of the Peking University HSBC Business School will speak on "China's Development through Green Economic Policy" at the University of Pittsburgh on January 17. The talk will run from 5:00 to 6:15 pm in 4130 Posvar Hall (map) and is free and open to the public.

"Aristotle Meets Sei Shonagon--Figures of Speech in Japanese Advertising" at Pitt, January 20.



The University of Pittsburgh's Asian Studies Center will host Dr. Patricia Wetzel of Portland State University and her talk "Aristotle Meets Sei Shonagon--Figures of Speech in Japanese Advertising" on January 20.
"It would not come as a surprise to the fields of marketing and consumer research that language—specifically rhetoric—is crucial to effective advertising. But just how might linguistics look at the same figures of speech that fascinate the world of commerce? A meeting of the minds between business and marketing on the one hand and linguistics on the other is taking place through their mutual interest in semiotics and classical rhetoric."

"The questions I wish to address here are: What are the common rhetorical devices of Japanese advertising? And how do they compare with their western counterparts? The umbrella of rhetoric has a broad scope which may have to be expanded even further to accommodate tropes and schemes that may not be present in western texts."
The event begins at 4:00 pm in 4130 Posvar Hall (map) and is free and open to the public.

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Colloquium "Transcendence and Return: Re-interpreting and Re-envisioning Urbanization in Contemporary Chinese Art" at Pitt, January 13.

The University of Pittsburgh's Department of East Asian Languages & Literatures will host MA candidate and her colloquium "Transcendence and Return: Re-interpreting and Re-envisioning Urbanization in Contemporary Chinese Art" on January 13.
From the perspective based on Chinese traditional aesthetics and philosophy, this paper discusses how the artistic representation of urban landscape, materials and performed bodies reflects on the contemporary context in China since the late 1990s. The artists include Zhang Dali, Chen Qiulin, Yang Yongliang, Xing Danwen and Chen Qingqing. On the one hand, the meditation, reflection and representation of urban transformation by these artists focus indicate not the urban conflicts but more importantly the cultural values, historical significance and spatial fluidity. Such specific time-space relation can be seen as the transcendence of universality and locality in terms of Chinese fast urban expansion and enter to the global market. On the other hand, the indigenous focus on the global issues of urbanization meanwhile entails the possibility to return on the tradition-based theoretical structures, such as Yi Pai, to rethink about the writing of Chinese art history and to reestablish the cultural identity in the temporal context.
The event begins at 12:00 pm in 4130 Posvar Hall (map) and is free and open to the public.

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