China Daily

New York museum stages Windows for Chinatown show

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NEW YORK — The New York City- based Museum of Chinese in America launched its latest exhibition, Windows for Chinatown, and a temporary space for its MOCA Workshop on Saturday.

The event aims to engage visitors since the museum remains closed to the public, MOCA director for collection­s and research Yue Ma says.

MOCA has transforme­d its windows into exhibition spaces reflecting Chinatown history, anti- Asian racism during the COVID- 19 pandemic and recent uprisings for racial justice.

Windows for Chinatown “draws from MOCA’s storied national archive of Chinese American history, in addition to highlighti­ng new acquisitio­n projects, such as the OneWorld COVID- 19 Collection”, the museum says.

Visitors can also participat­e in MOCA Workshop, a replacemen­t of its Collection­s and Research Center that was damaged in a fire at another site in January.

The MOCA Workshop will not only house over 85,000 artifacts that document Chinese experience­s in the United States but also serve as a publicly accessible research space that invites hands- on engagement with collection­s there, MOCA says.

Artists, researcher­s, students and the public can participat­e in research at the workshop, where artifacts will be preserved, restored and digitized, Ma explains.

“As many people care about the status of the Collection­s and Research Center, MOCA Workshop would show … artifacts rescued from the fire,” Ma says.

Ma adds that the vast majority of the salvaged items require restoratio­n, for which costs assessment­s are underway.

Up to 5 percent of the center’s items were completely destroyed in the blaze, Ma says.

In addition to a companion website, MOCA also plans to launch an educationa­l campaign on social media as part of its 40th- anniversar­y celebratio­n.

MOCA was founded in 1980, and is dedicated to preserving and presenting the history, culture and diverse experience­s of people of Chinese descent in the US.

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