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Saturday, October 28, 2023

Asia Society Honors Asia Game Changers at 10th Anniversary All-Star Awards - Asia Society

NEW YORK; October 28, 2023 – The Asia Society honored eight outstanding individuals and organizations for their extraordinary work strengthening bonds between Asia and the world, at the 10th anniversary Asia Game Changer All-Stars, marking the tenth iteration of its annual Asia Game Changer Awards

The awards ceremony and gala dinner was held at Cipriani in lower Manhattan on Thursday, October 26. The evening, held in partnership with Founding Partner Citi, was emceed by Ida Liu, Global Head of Citi Private Bank.

In addition to the awardees, notable in-person attendees included Asia Society Board Co-Chair Amb. Chan Heng Chee, Madam Aiping Zhang, Special Advisor to the NYC Mayor and Director of Asian Affairs Winne Greco, Charles and Emily Rockefeller, and a number of Asia Society Trustees, supporters, and friends.

Additionally, past Asia Game Changer awardees in attendance included Wang Shi, founder of China Vanke; Alibaba’s Joe Tsai and his partner Clara Tsai, Nanette Medved-Po, founder and chairperson of HOPE and PCX Groups; and Kikka Hanazawa, co-founder of Fashion Girls for Humanity.

Guests enjoyed musical interludes from The Children’s Orchestra Society, a non-profit organization founded in 1962 by Dr. Hiao-Tsiun Ma, father of cellist Yo-Yo Ma, a 2020 Asia Game Changer. Ma’s sister, Dr. Yeou-Cheng Ma, Executive Director of the Children’s Orchestra Society, was among the special guests in attendance.

The Asia Game Changer Awards are bestowed to individuals, organizations, and movements that have inspired, enlightened, and shown true leadership in areas that reflect Asia Society’s three core pillars: policy and business, arts and culture, and education. 

Celebrating the strength of Asia and Asians across the world and from all walks of life who have created transformational change, they are designed to fill a glaring gap: a lack of recognition of individuals and institutions that have the greatest impact across Asia and the Asian diaspora. 

Below is the list of honorees and key quotes from their acceptance speeches.  

Shabana Basij-Rasikh; Founder, School of Leadership, Afghanistan (SOLA) 
For her unswerving dedication to educating the world's most vulnerable children

“First, there are two things that cannot be contained by borders. One is the threat of terrorism - and we know that no borders can contain that. But there is also another thing that cannot be contained by borders, and that is the benefit of investment in girls education. My dream is for us girls and women of Afghanistan to be like everyone else.” 

Yayoi Kusama; avant-garde artist and novelist 
For her wild imagination that has spun worlds inspiring to so many 

James Kondo, Co-Chair of Asia Society Japan Center, read a message on behalf of Kusama, who could not attend in-person: “This fabulous prize encourages me as someone who has been fighting to create my art every day. It is my hope that life all over the world will hear my heartful message. Although the wars and conflicts continue to occur in the world, humanity wants to live with love. I continue to paint my wishes for peace.”  

Josie Natori; CEO and Founder, The Natori Company
For her leadership and bold vision that built a global brand bridging East and West 

“I came to this amazing country at the age of 17 to get an education. I never imagined or dreamed that I would one day at age 76 be bestowed with this incredible honor of being called an Asia Game Changer. It is a recognition that will surely be one of the highlights in my life.” 

The Philadelphia Orchestra 
On the 50th Anniversary of their game-changing trip to China

In 1973, the Philadelphia Orchestra was the first American orchestra to perform in the People’s Republic of China. 

On hand to introduce the orchestra were Ambassador Huang Ping, Consul General for China in New York, and Asia Society President Emeritus Ambassador Nicholas Platt, who accompanied President Nixon on his historic trip to China and served in the U.S. Liaison Office in Beijing at the time of the orchestra’s visit. Platt said: “The Philadelphia Orchestra was the first to establish a systemic series of exchanges in 2013, which emphasized a two-way street that would enable Chinese orchestras to travel to the United States and provide the opportunity to bring their music here. Although our government-to-government relationships are tense, this exchange continues to flourish thanks to the love of music on both sides of the Pacific Ocean.” 

Matthias Tunnell Polski, President and CEO of the Philadelphia Orchestra, who accepted the award on behalf of the organization, said: “Music is often the only language that persists in hard times and often the only language that tells the truth. To this day, we’re told frequently when we are there and when we meet with both American and Chinese diplomats, ‘Please keep doing what you’re doing!’” 

Yao Chen; award-winning actress, philanthropist and filmmaker
For using her enormous talent and platform to draw attention to refugee issues 

“Over the past two decades, I have endeavored in the film industry to show the resilience of women in facing challenges. In my performances, I also hope to give strength to women across the world. My sincere thanks to the Asia Society. This esteemed honor has reinforced my belief even the smallest positive change in our world can be game changing.”  

Dr. Stephen Riady; Executive Chairman and Group CEO, OUE
For his commitment to youth education and empowerment 

“My father always often reminded me to give back to the place you leave. The people of Papua, Indonesia deserve our attention and support to live a better life and not be left behind, to be part of growth in Southeast Asia. With this in mind, our family has spent more than 20 years in Papua and other remote areas of Indonesia to uplift them in education and healthcare. Our work in Papua is not a matter of money, but of commitment, passion and perseverance.” 

Jerry Yang & Akiko Yamazaki; philanthropists
For their unflagging support for the promotion of Asian culture

Joe Tsai, Co-Founder and Chairman of Alibaba Group, introduced the couple along with his wife Clara Wu Tsai by saying: “I've been friends with Jerry for 25 years. As the founder of Yahoo!, Jerry inspired an entire generation of technology entrepreneurs in school, including what was back then a wide-eyed Jack Ma and the rest of us at Alibaba. But Jerry did not stop at his successful business career. He and Akiko have made a huge impact on the love on the lives of others through their philanthropy in higher education, arts and culture, and conservation.”

Akiko Yamazaki said: “The Asian Art Museum in San Francisco was my labor of love for six years as chairman....and it's really been an amazing journey for me to see its transformation. I'm really here to accept this honor on behalf of everybody that has worked so hard on the campaign, because, as you all know, nothing gets done without a team.”

Jerry Yang said: “Giving back was something that Akiko and I talked about doing when we were just getting married, and it’s been an extremely rewarding journey. People talk about giving as something altruistic, but for us it's actually really just selfish, because we really have gotten more out of being associated with great people and part of institutions that have existed before us and will exist after us, and we have learned so much. I've learned so much from working with Joe on the Asian-American Foundation and with Clara at Stanford University that every day feels like I am being rewarded. We can all do more by giving, but we also can give more by doing.”

To request video or still images from the evening, please email pr@asiasociety.org.

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Novelist John Le Carré reflects on his own 'Legacy' of spying - GPB News

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Art Collaboration Kyoto Aims to Create a New Model for Art Fairs, Where Dealers Are Friends Not Foes - ARTnews

Contemporary art fairs have been proliferating across Asia lately, as they did a decade or so ago in the United States and Europe. Frieze Seoul arrived in 2022, Art SG in Singapore in January, and Tokyo Gendai in July. Art Basel Hong Kong is still the dominant player in the Asian art market, but it is gaining competitors fast. Remember complaints about “fairtigue” prior to the pandemic? That seems like long ago. The argument put forward by fair organizers has been that these economic hubs, with their own distinct art scenes, merit fairs of their own. No arguing with that. But strolling the aisles (or just perusing Instagram), there is a creeping sense of monotony to it all: Well-capitalized dealers carting their wares from one white-walled trade-show booth to the next.

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But at least one art fair has set out to do things differently. Behold Art Collaboration Kyoto, a young public-private entity that asks each selected Japanese gallery to partner with one or two galleries from abroad on a single display. That intriguing conceit has “a synergistic effect on the quality of the booth,” Yukako Yamashita, ACK’s program director, argued in an interview with ARTnews ahead of the event, which opens this weekend. (Typically, the Japanese gallerist invites the foreign colleague, but the fair also sometimes assists.)

“It’s just such a nice way of doing something with colleagues from the other side of the world, sharing resources,” Paris-based dealer Robbie Fitzpatrick said. His eponymous gallery will be in a booth with Anomaly (of Tokyo) and ROH (of Jakarta); each is bringing work by three of their artists, including Hannah Weinberger, Kei Imazu, and Dusadee Huntrakul, respectively.

ACK debuted in 2021, when Japan’s borders were still closed amid the pandemic; they reopened fully last October, weeks before its second edition. And so the latest outing, which runs October 28 to 30 at Sachio Otani’s 1960s sci-fi Kyoto International Conference Center, has the feel of being a major event, with exhibitors coming from around the globe.

New York’s 47 Canal, for one, has linked up with Tokyo’s Misako & Rosen to show some of the beguiling impressionist landscapes that Trevor Shimizu, who is represented by both galleries, has been making in recent years. This will be dealer Jeffrey Rosen’s third time doing ACK, having collaborated with São Paulo’s Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel in 2021 and London’s Herald Street in 2022. “It was fun, and because it was fun, it generated business,” Rosen said of that second fair, adding that he “met Japanese collectors that we did not otherwise know.”

Yamashita, who started out as a dealer (she showed at the first ACK), said that she has heard collectors lament at big fairs that “there are too many things to see.” In Kyoto, just 64 dealers will be on hand—which “should be a comfortable size for visitors to go through the fair and fully digest the artworks on view,” she said.

An art fair booth with two large paintings on the left and right walls and small works on the center wall.
Misako & Rosen and Herald St’s joint booth at ACK 2022. Photo Nobutada Omote/Courtesy of ACK

Thanks to the shared format, that means the fair has only about three-dozen booths. (Art SG, by contrast, had over 150, and even the fairly compact Tokyo Gendai had more than 70.) Eleven of those are in a section called Kyoto Meetings, where solo dealers can display art with a special connection to the city. Neugerriemschneider, of Berlin, will be presenting Olafur Eliasson pieces informed by its Zen gardens, and New York–based Karma will have a group display that includes paintings of food and drink that Dike Blair made based on photos he took during a 2009 trip.

ACK is part of a small group of niche fairs that have been sprouting up in recent years that you could see as antidotes to the gargantuan behemoths. There’s Independent 20th Century (from the “consciously scaled” Independent art fair team), which convened around 30 exhibitors in New York for a second edition last month, and Paris Internationale, the outré-minded, dealer-founded fair that brought together 64 galleries earlier this month, timed to Art Basel’s Paris+ fair. On the more experimental end of things, you could also point to events like Basel Social Club, which was cofounded by Fitzpatrick and runs during Art Basel in Switzerland, and Our Week, which debuted to high acclaim during Frieze Seoul this year.

The model of ACK—whose backers include the Contemporary Art Dealers Association Nippon and Kyoto Prefecture—is indicative of the Japanese art world, which “has always distinguished itself from the art worlds of, let’s say, the US and Europe in being much more collaborative, mutually supportive, and cooperative,” Rosen said. “In order to take advantage of that, it makes sense that there would be a fair highlighting this element. And it makes sense that this fair would also be relatively small in keeping with the size of the art world, the size of the market.”

The fair’s location—in the treasure-filled city that was Japan’s capital for more than a millennium—is also a selling point. “Visiting an art fair is not just about spending time at the fair but also about visiting and experiencing the fair’s host city,” Yamashita said. Special exhibitions in association with ACK are being held at the Komyoin Temple, the Heian-jingu Shrine, and the conference center, and additional events around this town of 1.5 million are part of the festivities.

A long white wall shows various prints of an opening.
View of works by Olafur Eliasson in neugerriemschneider’s booth at ACK 2023. Photo Yuki Moriya/©neugerriemschneider, Berlin

“The city of Kyoto itself played a significant role in my decision to participate,” said Jaewoo Choi, of Johyun Gallery in Busan, South Korea, which is collaborating with Tokyo’s Tomio Gallery on a display that will include Lee Bae, Kim Chong Hak, Jo Jong Sung, and Kishio Suga. Their works “might not necessarily be characterized by strong colors, unique material properties, or striking imagery,” he said, but they will get at “the essence of Kyoto.”

Dealers have been known to bemoan their relentless travel schedules off the record, but the ACK’s dealers seemed ebullient in the lead up to the fair. For Choi, the chance to partner with foreign colleagues is “truly captivating.” It’s “very innovative and exciting,” said Yuka Watanabe, of Anomaly. Matthew Brown, of Los Angeles, noted that it will be his first time exhibiting in Japan, alongside Blum, the LA giant that has had a Tokyo branch for a decade. “I’ve always looked up to Tim,” Brown said, “and when he proposed we collaborate on a presentation for Art Collaboration Kyoto, I immediately said yes.”

Brown is showing paintings by Paris-based Julie Beaufils, who has an “affinity for Japanese aesthetics—the flattened perspective, simplicity of form, and asymmetry achieved through a reduced palette,” he said. Blum, for its part, is showing three artists, including paintings by the Tokyo-born Asuka Anastacia Ogawa—“in one of the most beautiful cities in the world,” its director in the Japanese capital, Marie Imai Kobayashi, noted.

After more than 20 years in the Japanese art world, Rosen sees ACK “as part of a curious apparent growth” in its market, “which has been developing slowly and steadily, and as a consequence of that, probably, arguably, more sustainably and positively than elsewhere. And I also see that as a nice complement and—maybe even to be a little cheeky—counterbalance to some of the hype surrounding developing art markets within Asia more generally.”

“It’s a model that I think could be emulated in different places,” said Fitzpatrick, who grew up in Tokyo and hopped on a plane right after Paris+ to take part in ACK. It’s “a “direction,” he continued, “that more and more fairs and galleries should consider as we move forward—how to create more collaborative events that unify us.”

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Thursday, October 26, 2023

LE SSERAFIM's agency denies Kim Chaewon drug investigation rumors: 'Absolutely not true' - PINKVILLA

Trigger Warning: This article contains references to drug addiction

Recent allegations surrounding LE SSERAFIM member Kim Chaewon's alleged narcotics use have sparked controversy in South Korea, where drug laws are strict. Big Bang's G-Dragon and actor Lee Sun Kyun were also recently implicated in drug cases and are under police investigation. LE SSERAFIM, a new K-pop girl group, debuted in May last year with their first EP Fearless.

LE SSERAFIM member Kim Chaewon's label responded to drug investigation rumor

On October 26, Source Music made a statement on rumors of a drug investigation surrounding LE SSERAFIM's Kim Chaewon. The label said that the rumors were absolutely not true and that she was currently recuperating from the effects of the flu. They continued and added that Lee Chaewon would be joining back and making a return on November 1. 

According to reports, Kim Chaewon and many other high-profile celebrities have been rumored to be implicated in drug usage without any proof. 

BIGBANG's G-Dragon and actor Lee Sun Kyun booked for not following the narcotics laws

Kim Chaewon's rumor follows the recent reports of BIGBANG's G-Dragon and actor Lee Sun Kyun's narcotics usage case. On October 25, it was reported that G-Dragon had been booked for illegal drug usage and previously this month actor Lee Sun Kyun had seen the same fate. The police stated that both the cases are not related and G-Dragon is being investigated separately. They also added that not much information can be given out as the case is still being investigated. The rapper was also investigated in 2011 in Japan for cannabis use but his case was suspended as he was a first-time offender and consumption levels were not high. 

Disclaimer: If you know someone who is struggling with alcohol or substance abuse, please reach out to the authorities and report it. There are several helplines available for the same.

Stay updated with the latest Hallyu news on: Instagram, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and Snapchat

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Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Cigarette Girl, upcoming Indonesian Drama Series will stream on Netflix from 2nd November 2023 - The Tech Outlook

Cigarette Girl, the upcoming Indonesian Television Series, directed by Kamila Andini and Ifa Isfansyah will stream on Netflix in selected regions, from 2nd November 2023. The series is listed on Netflix India’s ‘New Upcoming’ section, which suggests its availability in India too. A ‘Remind Me’ button is also live, which you can activate to be notified when the show is available for streaming. The series recently premiered at the 28th Busan International Film Festival on October 5, 2023, and 3 episodes were screened.

The series has a total of 8 episodes in its first season as per Wikipedia, however as per IMDB there will be 5 episodes.

The trailer of the series was released by Netflix on YouTube on October 19, 2023, which you can check here.

Premise: The series explores the journey of an artisan, who navigates love and self-discovery through the traditions within Indonesia’s clove cigarette industry in the 1960s. The series is based on the book Clove Girl by Ratih Kumala. The series is set in the backdrop of Indonesia’s tobacco industry. The story spans two time periods, and an estranged son Lebas, searches for a girl, Dasiyah, from his father’s past to fulfill the cigarette mogul’s dying wish.

Cast: The film features Dian Sastrowardoyo, Ario Bayu, Putri Marino, Arya Saloka, Sheila Dara, Ibnu Jamil, Tissa Biani, Sha Ine Febriyanti, Rukman Rosadi, Verdi Solaiman, Tutie Kirana, Pritt Timothy, Winky Wiryawan and Dimas Aditya.

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Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Richard Roundtree, ‘Shaft’ Star, Dies at 81 - Variety

Richard Roundtree, an icon of Blaxploitation film who starred as detective John Shaft in Gordon Parks’ 1971 action thriller, died Tuesday afternoon after a short battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 81 years old.

His death was confirmed by Patrick McMinn, his manager since 1987.

“Richard’s work and career served as a turning point for African American leading men in film,” McMinn said in his statement. “The impact he had on the industry cannot be overstated.”

Roundtree was a leading man from the very start of his lifetime in screen acting. After beginning his career in modeling, he secured “Shaft” at the age of 28, marking his feature debut. A smash hit in theaters, the MGM release earned $12 million in ticket sales off of a $500,000 production budget, helping to save the studio from bankruptcy. A breakthrough hit, “Shaft” set the tone for a prolific decade of Blaxploitation filmmaking and demonstrated Hollywood’s historical failure to consider Black talent and the moviegoing audiences that they could reach.

When asked about the “exploitation” label attached to “Shaft” by the New York Times in a 2019 interview, Roundtree expressed some ambiguity about the term.

“I had the privilege of working with the classiest gentleman possibly that I’ve ever known in the industry, Gordon Parks. So, that word, exploitation, I take offense to with any attachment to Gordon Parks… I’ve always viewed that as a negative. Exploitation. Who’s being exploited?” Roundtree said. “But it gave a lot of people work. It gave a lot of people entrée into the business, including a lot of our present-day producers and directors. So, in the big picture, I view it as a positive.”

Two sequels about the “bad mother (shut your mouth)” quickly followed within the span of two years: “Shaft’s Big Score” and “Shaft in Africa.” In 1973, CBS attempted a “Shaft” television series starring Roundtree — a run that only lasted a handful episodes.

“You can’t erase events, but that’s one I wish I could,” Roundtree told the Times in 2019. “I had just come back from ‘Shaft in Africa’ when they tried to convert the character to television. It wasn’t going to happen. That was an ugly point in my long, illustrious career.”

Long and illustrious, it was. Already a marquee name, Roundtree quickly grew beyond his star-making role, with roles in the ensemble disaster film “Earthquake,” a starring turn alongside Peter O’Toole in “Man Friday” and an ill-fated detective in Larry Cohen’s monster comedy “Q — The Winged Serpent.” He also frequently popped in for guest starring performances on TV, with credits including “Roots,” “Magnum P.I.” and “The Love Boat.”

Roundtree returned to the world of “Shaft” in director John Singleton’s 2000 revival of the franchise, starring Samuel L. Jackson. Although Jackson also played a detective named John Shaft, his character was written as the nephew to Roundtree’s original private eye. Both actors reprised their roles in 2019 for Tim Story’s comedic take on the series.

Born July 9, 1942 in Rochester, N.Y., Roundtree briefly attended Southern Illinois University before dropping out to pursue a modeling career. In the late ’60s, he joined the Negro Ensemble Company and began acting in New York stage productions.

Roundtree worked regularly for more than 50 years, with his iconic turn in “Shaft,” rich history in genre filmmaking and compelling screen presence adding color to the worlds of films like “Se7en,” “Brick” and “Speed Racer.” He played a supporting role in “Moving On,” a comedy starring Lily Tomlin and Jane Fonda that debuted at the Toronto Film Festival last year before releasing in theaters this past summer.

Roundtree was married twice, first to Mary Jane Grant from 1963 to 1973, then to Karen M. Cierna, from 1980 to 1998. He is survived by his four daughters, Nicole, Tayler, Morgan and Kelli Roundtree, and his son, James.

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Monday, October 23, 2023

The Top 75 Art Professionals – ARTnews.com - ARTnews

The art industry comprises an incredibly diverse tapestry of experts in all sorts of professions. There are artists who conceive the work, fabricators who help them execute it, dealers who sell it, advisers who guide collectors, lawyers who draw up contracts, shippers who cart artworks around the world, insurers who secure the work, conservators who repair the works when damaged, and many others.

Once a collector amasses holdings of a certain volume, say, more than they can display in their big-city town house or mansion and their second, idyllically located pied-à-terre—and often before they even reach that point—they require an expansive array of services. If they lend their precious pieces to museums, lawyers come into play to execute loan agreements. If they want to bid on a costly piece coming up at auction and find themselves in a cash crunch, they may rely on banks to front them money based on their art assets alone.

The ARTnews Top Art World Professionals list (alphabetical and not ranked) focuses on the United States, since it remains the largest single national market. The country accounted for about 45 percent of the global art market by value last year, according to The Art Market 2023: A report by Art Basel & UBS, authored by art economist Clare McAndrew, founder of Arts Economics.

To compile this list, ARTnews consulted an array of specialists in the field, including more than a dozen art advisers—many of them members of the Association of Professional Art Advisors—as they often deal with a distinctive assortment of professionals in building and managing clients’ collections. We also spoke with representatives of nearly as many of the country’s top art galleries, focusing on those that participate in Art Basel, which has one of the world’s most competitive selection processes, as well as a handful of other well-placed art world veterans.

“Working with the right professionals allows for consistent quality service, which makes owning art fun rather than a hassle,” New York adviser Wendy Cromwell said. “This means that my clients can focus on the excitement of art collecting and the joy it brings into their lives, not logistics.”

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APAC takes home 22 Gold Pencils at The One Show 2024: Japan and Australia lead the way - Campaign Brief Asia

May 16 2024, 8:00 pm | BY Kim Shaw | No Comments 11 countries and regions in Asia Pacific have collected 22 Gold Pencils, 19 Silver, 38...

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