BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
PRODID:iCalendar-Ruby
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240909T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240908T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875326214
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240912T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240911T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875332361
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240913T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240912T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875334410
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240914T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240913T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875337483
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240915T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240914T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875339532
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240916T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240915T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875341581
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240919T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240918T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875347728
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240920T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240919T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464943308114
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240921T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240920T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875351826
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240922T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240921T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875353875
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240923T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240922T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875355924
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240926T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240925T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875363095
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240927T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240926T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875364120
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240928T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240927T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875366169
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240929T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240928T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875368218
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20240930T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20240929T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875370267
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241003T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241002T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875375390
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241004T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241003T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875377439
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241005T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241004T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875379488
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241006T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241005T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875380513
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241007T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241006T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875382562
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241010T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241009T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875387685
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241011T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241010T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875389734
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241012T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241011T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875390759
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241013T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241012T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875392808
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241014T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241013T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875394857
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241017T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241016T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875399980
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241018T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241017T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875401005
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241019T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241018T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875403054
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241020T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241019T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875405103
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241021T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241020T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875407152
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241024T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241023T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875411251
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241025T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241024T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875413300
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241026T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241025T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875415349
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241027T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241026T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875417398
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241028T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241027T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875419447
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241031T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241030T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875424570
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241101T030000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241031T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875426619
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241102T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241101T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875428668
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241103T000000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241102T170000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875429693
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241104T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241103T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875431742
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241107T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241106T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875438913
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241108T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094339Z
DTSTART:20241107T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875440962
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241109T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241108T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875443011
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241110T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241109T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875445060
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241111T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241110T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875447109
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241114T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241113T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875453256
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241115T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241114T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875455305
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241116T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241115T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875457354
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241117T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241116T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875459403
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241118T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241117T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875460428
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241121T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241120T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875466575
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241122T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241121T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875468624
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241123T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241122T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875470673
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241124T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241123T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875471698
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241125T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241124T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875473747
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241128T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241127T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875478870
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241130T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241129T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875482968
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241201T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241130T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875483993
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241202T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241201T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875486042
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241205T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241204T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875491165
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241206T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241205T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875492190
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241207T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241206T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875494239
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241208T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241207T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875496288
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241209T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241208T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875498337
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241212T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241211T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875503460
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241213T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241212T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875505509
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241214T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241213T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875507558
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241215T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241214T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875508583
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241216T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241215T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875510632
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241219T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241218T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875515755
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241220T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241219T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875517804
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241221T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241220T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875519853
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241222T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241221T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875521902
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241223T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241222T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875523951
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241227T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241226T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875532147
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241228T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241227T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875534196
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241229T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241228T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875537269
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20241230T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20241229T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875539318
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250102T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250101T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875544441
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250103T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250102T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875546490
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250104T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250103T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875548539
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250105T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250104T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875551612
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250106T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250105T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875553661
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250109T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250108T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875560832
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250110T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250109T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875563905
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250111T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250110T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875569026
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250112T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250111T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875571075
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250113T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250112T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875573124
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250116T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250115T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875579271
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250117T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250116T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875581320
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250118T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094340Z
DTSTART:20250117T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875583369
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250119T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250118T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875585418
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250120T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250119T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875587467
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250123T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250122T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875593614
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250124T040000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250123T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875595663
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250125T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250124T190000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875598736
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250126T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250125T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875600785
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Spirit House is a significant exhibition related to the museum’
 s Asian American Art Initiative (AAAI) that investigates how contemporary a
 rtists of Asian descent challenge the boundary between life and death throu
 gh art. A thematic exploration of the work of thirty-three Asian American a
 nd Asian diasporic artists\, Spirit House asks the question\, what does it 
 mean to speak to ghosts\, inhabit haunted spaces\, be reincarnated\, or ent
 er different dimensions? Inspired by spirit houses\, small devotional struc
 tures found throughout Thailand that provide shelter for the supernatural\,
  this exhibition considers how art can bridge the gap between this world an
 d the next.\n\nHere\, contemporary artists reckon with the spiritual and sp
 ectral in our visual culture and question the many forms that ghosts can ta
 ke. In foregrounding intuitive and inherited forms of knowledge\, these art
 ists challenge the primacy of data-driven\, scientific methods of understan
 ding the world around us.\n\nParticipating artists include: Kelly Akashi\, 
 Korakrit Arunanondchai\, James Clar\, Maia Cruz Palileo\, Binh Danh\, Domin
 ique Fung\, Pao Houa Her\, Greg Ito\, Tommy Kha\, Heesoo Kwon\, Timothy Lai
 \, An-My Lê\, Dinh Q. Lê\, Kang Seung Lee\, Tidawhitney Lek\, Jarod Lew\, R
 eagan Louie\, Cathy Lu\, Nina Molloy\, Tammy Nguyen\, Tuan Andrew Nguyen\, 
 Catalina Ouyang\, Namita Paul\, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya\, Kour Pour\, Jiab
  Prachakul\, Stephanie H. Shih\, Do Ho Suh\, Masami Teraoka\, Salman Toor\,
  Lien Truong\, Apichatpong Weerasethakul\, and Wanxin Zhang.\n\nSpirit Hous
 e is curated by Aleesa Pitchamarn Alexander\, Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperi
 n Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art and Co-director of the A
 sian American Art Initiative at the Cantor Arts Center\, with Kathryn Cua\,
  curatorial assistant for the Asian American Art Initiative.We gratefully a
 cknowledge lead support for Spirit House provided by Pamela and David Horni
 k\; and Aey Phanachet and Roger Evans. Generous support provided by Nelson 
 Chu\; and Brook Hartzell and Tad Freese. Additional support provided by Mel
 issa and Trevor Fetter\; Lisa Young and Steven Abraham\; and anonymous.Sust
 ained support generously provided by the Constance Corcoran Miller Fund for
  Academic Initiatives\, the Robert M. and Ruth L. Halperin Curatorship Fund
 \, the Darle and Patrick Maveety Fund for Asian Art\, the Robert Mondavi Fa
 mily Fund at the Cantor Arts Center\, and the Khoan and Michael Sullivan Fu
 nd.\n\nIMAGE: Korakrit Arunanondchai\, Shore of Security\, 2022. Repurposed
  wooden doll house made by the artist's mother\, wood\, house paint\, polyu
 rethane\, fabric sculpture\, ceramics\, snake skeleton\, LED lights. Courte
 sy the artist and C L E A R I N G\, New York / Brussels / Los Angeles. Phot
 o: JSP Art Photography\n\nMUSEUM HOURS\nWed & Fri: 11 AM–6 PM\nThurs: 11 AM
 –8 PM\nSat & Sun: 10 AM–5 PM\nCLOSED: Mon and Tues\nWe’re always free! Come
  visit us\, https://museum.stanford.edu/visit
DTEND:20250127T010000Z
DTSTAMP:20260414T094341Z
DTSTART:20250126T180000Z
GEO:37.432981;-122.170494
LOCATION:Cantor Arts Center\, Freidenrich Family Gallery
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Spirit House
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_47464875602834
URL:https://events.stanford.edu/event/spirit-house
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
