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Lecture/Presentation/Talk

Evening Curator Talk | Spirit House with Kathryn Cua

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Join us for a tour with Kathryn Cua, who provided curatorial support for the exhibition Spirit House, in which ancestral spirits and ghostly narratives come to life through art.n which ancestral spirits and ghostly narratives come to life through art. Discover how the included artists materialize prayers, evoke spirits, and intertwine histories into tangible forms, creating a dialogue between the living and the dead.

Kathryn is the Curatorial Assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center. Spirit House is a feature show of the Asian American Art Initiative and will be accompanied by a major scholarly catalog, the first of a series of AAAI-related books the museum will produce to foster scholarship on Asian American artists and to introduce leading Asian American art to wider audiences.

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Parking

Free visitor parking is available along Lomita Drive as well as on the first floor of the Roth Way Garage Structure, located at the corner of Campus Drive West and Roth Way at 345 Campus Drive, Stanford, CA 94305. From the Palo Alto Caltrain station, the Cantor Arts Center is about a 20-minute walk or the free Marguerite shuttle will bring you to campus via the Y or X lines.

Disability parking is located along Lomita Drive near the main entrance of the Cantor Arts Center. Additional disability parking is located on Museum Way and in Parking Structure 1 (Roth Way & Campus Drive). Please click here to view the disability parking and access points.

Accessibility Information or Requests

Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University is committed to ensuring our programs are accessible to everyone. To request access information and/or accommodations for this event, please complete this form at least one week prior to the event: museum.stanford.edu/access. For questions, please contact disability.access@stanford.edu or Kwang-Mi Ro, kwangmi8@stanford.edu, (650) 723-3469.

Image: Korakrit Arunanondchai (b. 1986, Bangkok, Thailand; lives and works in Bangkok and Brooklyn, NY), Shore of Security, 2022. Repurposed wooden doll house made by the artist's mother, wood, house paint, polyurethane, fabric sculpture, ceramics, snake skeleton, LED lights. 60 in. x 29 ¼ in. x 29 ¼ in. (152.4 cm x 74.3 cm x 74.3 cm). Courtesy of the artist and C L E A R I N G, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Photo: JSP Art Photography

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