Friday, October 4, 2019

Ian Condry and "Japanese Pop Music and the Curvature of Social Space-Time: From Underground Music to Pop Idols," October 10 at Pitt.


Akihabara (Creative Commons)

The University of Pittsburgh's Asian Studies Center will host Michael Condry and his talk "Japanese Pop Music and the Curvature of Social Space-Time: From Underground Music to Pop Idols" on October 10.
Dr. Ian Condry will lead the third lecture in our new Asia Pop series. Titled "Japanese Pop Music and the Curvature of Social Space-Time: From Underground Music to Pop Idols," he will compare the diverse range of pop music in Japan to understand how they all influence Japanese society.
The talk will be held in 4130 Posvar Hall (map) from 5:30 pm, and is free and open to the public.

Tickets now on sale for Amber Liu show in Pittsburgh, February 9.



Amber Liu will perform in Pittsburgh on February 9, 2020 as part of her North American "X" Tour, and general admission tickets went on sale at 10:00 am. The concert will also feature Meg & Dea and Justin Park and will be at Rex Theater in the Southside (map) from 7:00 pm.

2017 Xu Bing film Dragonfly Eyes at Pitt, October 8.



The University of Pittsburgh's Department of History of Art and Architecture will present the Xu Bing film Dragonfly Eyes on October 8. The Museum of Modern Art summarized the film thus:
Few images come closer to reality than those recorded by surveillance cameras. In China, a country with strict film censorship, an estimated 200 million such cameras have been installed to capture life unfiltered; mundane daily activities are mixed with dramatic events beyond the realm of imagination. Visual artist Xu Bing’s first feature film stitches together surveillance footage collected from the Internet to create a fictional tale about a young woman traversing life in modern China. The result is a provocative tale as mundane, surreal, and outlandish as reality itself. Known for works that consistently disrupt our understanding of what we see—from Book from the Sky, an installation of books and scrolls with printed “fake” Chinese characters, to Phoenix, giant phoenix sculptures made of salvaged materials—Xu persistently explores the relationship between vision and meaning.
The film will begin with a reception and will follow with remarks from Pitt's Gao Minglu and NYU's Zhen Zhang. The evening starts at 4:30 pm---film begins at 5:00---at the Frick Fine Arts Building in Oakland (map) and is free and open to the public.

Thursday, October 3, 2019

Amber Liu coming to Pittsburgh, with Meg & Dia and Justin Park, as part of North American "X" Tour in February.



A concert with Amber Liu, Meg & Dia, and Justin Park was recently announced for the Rex Theater on February 9, 2020.

Presale VIP ticket packages are available now, but general admission tickets will go on sale on Friday, October 4, from 10:00 am.

Tuvan throat singers Huun Huur Tu in Pittsburgh, October 10.



Tuvan throat singers Huun Huur Tu will perform in Shadyside on October 10.
Huun-Huur-Tus style could be best described as profoundly mysterious. This comes as a consequence of their traditional, ritual laryngeal chants descending from Central Asian land of Tuva. This unique song technique reside on developing an enthralling sound cosmos rich in undertones and overtones.

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

OCA Pittsburgh Free Medical and Dental Clinic, with free medical consultation and Chinese-language interpretation, October 14 in Oakland.



The Pittsburgh chapter of the Organization of Chinese Americans will presents its annual Free Medical and Dental Clinic on October 14.

Spirited Away (千と千尋の神隠し) in Pittsburgh, October 27, 28, and 30.



The 2001 Hayao Miyazaki film Spirited Away (千と千尋の神隠し) will play in Pittsburgh on October 27, 28, and 30 as part of this year's GKIDS Studio Ghibli Fest.
Winner of the Academy Award® for Best Animated Feature, Hayao Miyazaki’s wondrous fantasy adventure is a dazzling masterpiece from one of the most celebrated filmmakers in the history of animation.

Chihiro’s family is moving to a new house, but when they stop on the way to explore an abandoned village, her parents undergo a mysterious transformation and Chihiro is whisked into a world of fantastic spirits ruled over by the sorceress Yubaba. Put to work in a magical bathhouse for spirits and demons, Chihiro must use all her wits to survive in this strange new place, find a way to free her parents and return to the normal world. Overflowing with imaginative creatures and thrilling storytelling, Spirited Away became a worldwide smash hit, and is one of the most critically-acclaimed films of all time.
It plays locally at the AMC Loews Waterfront and the Cinemark theaters in McCandless, Monroeville, Robinson, and Pittsburgh Mills. Tickets are available online. The October 28 shows are in Japanese with English subtitles while the October 27 and 30 shows are dubbed in English.

Mr. Egg's Kitchen coming soon to Squirrel Hill.



Thirty months since work began at the former Sree's, Mr. Egg's Kitchen finally seems to be coming soon to Squirrel Hill. The window coverings are off and the restaurant's interior is slowly coming together. Mr. Egg's Noodle will be located at 2103 Murray Ave. (map). It will be one of several new Chinese restaurants to open in the last two years alone, a group that includes Diners 2+1, The Magic Noodle, and Northeastern Kitchen.


Taken April 2019.

Pittsburgh's Misdo.


From the October 18, 1986 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

One of the biggest doughnut chains in Asia this century, Mister Donut originated in the US and was ubiquitous around Pittsburgh in the 1970s and 1980s. This 1986 Halloween advertisement offers a free pumpkin with the purchase of a dozen donuts and a beverage. Mister Donut survives locally, somewhat, in the form of Donut Connection, which purchased a few of the locations.

Chinese Film Series announced for Maridon Museum, November and December.



The Maridon Museum will present three films as part of a Chinese Film Series in November and December: 2004's House of Flying Daggers (十面埋伏) on November 8, 2015's Kaili Blues on November 15, and 2013's Falling Flowers (萧红) on December 5. The films are free and open to the public, but telephone reservations are requested. The Maridon, an Asian art museum, is located at 322 North McKean St. in downtown Butler (map), roughly 40 miles north of Pittsburgh.

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