Episode 55: Ruth Asawa: Inside Out

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Oh boy, dear listener. Silence is violence, and the patterns of racial violence that predicate the notion of Asian Americans as "not belonging" directly ties to US history. Look no further than today's artist, Ruth Asawa, who was forcibly detained in a WWII Japanese Internment camp on US soil. This American sculptor took her lifelong passion for art and her outstanding resilience, and radically transformed wire-crocheting baskets into something extraordinary and bizarre. After all, it was Ruth herself who said, "I would not be who I am today had it not been for the internment, and I like who I am."

Join us as we discuss the atrocities of racism, gush about the Black Mountain College, celebrate the concept of true love, and make a ton of noise around the fact that her arts education space inspires both of your BYWAP hosts to start a school together. 


Things have changed, but we're changing with it.

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Donate to Black Lives Matter LA, the Action Bail FundBlack Visions Collective. Please be sure you've signed petitions. If you like what we do, you can support BYWAP over on our Patreon!

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Our music was written and recorded by Elene Kadagidze.

Our cover art was designed by Lindsey Anton-Wood.

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Episode 56: Motherhood in West African Art

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Episode 54: Thin Lines: An Introduction to Printmaking