Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Hawaiian Dress: The Holoku in Cultural Context (38 min) now on YouTube

A video production of the Historic Clothing Museum which describes the historical context of the Hawaiian Holoku. 1996. Transferred by Michael B. Thomas from VHS to digital format in 2009 by the Museum Consortium, University of Hawaii. Producers: Dr. Linda B. Arthur, Textiles and Clothing Program, University of Hawaii, CTAHR Video Production Facility, Honolulu, HI.

Monday, April 5, 2010

2010 HMA Annual Meeting - May 21st at Ford Island Conference Center

2010 HMA Annual Meeting

The 2010 Hawaii Museum Assocaition meeting will be held at the Ford Island Conference Center, May 21st. Visit http://www.hawaiimuseums.org/HMAinfo_annualconf.htm to view Schedule and agenda information.

Smithsonian Online Conference: Problem Solving with Smithsonian Experts

LearningTimes is very pleased to invite you to another unique online conference sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution.

The "Smithsonian Online Conference: Problem Solving with Smithsonian Experts" is a free series of interactive workshops taking place throughout April 2010. Participants may register now at:
http://www.smithsonianconference.org/expert/

The live online events will be of special interest to educators, entire classrooms of engaged students, and to the general public. Throughout the month, Smithsonian historians, scientists, researchers and other experts share their questions, their methods, and their unique way of thinking in an interactive format that welcomes you to contribute your own ideas.

The sessions span the arts, history, science, and culture, and are organized around four key themes. All events take place live online you participate and interact directly from your computer in real time. Each session will be recorded and posted after it takes place for on-demand access.

Schedule and Themes
Day One: Understanding the American Experience
Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Day Two: Valuing World Cultures
Wednesday, 14 April 2010

Day Three: Unlocking the Mysteries of the Universe
Wednesday, 28 April 2010

Day Four: Understanding and Sustaining a Biodiverse Planet
Thursday, 29 April 2010

To review the complete program and to register please visit:
http://www.smithsonianconference.org/expert/program

Write to si@learningtimes.net with any questions.
LearningTimes,LLC

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Virtual Museum Debuts with Aloha

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Mar 11, 2010 By Nadine Kam

If you like to go snooping in other peoples' closets, the University of Hawaii Apparel Product Design and Merchandising Program has the show for you.

Closet voyeurs can now peek into the program's Historic Costume Collection from the privacy of their own home, thanks to the University of Hawaii Virtual Museum.

The costume collection is the museum's featured exhibition, marking the start of a move to digitize the university's vast holdings, with the aim of eventually making it easy for the general public to search out everything from the 250,000-specimen insect collection in the Department of Plant and Environmental Protection Sciences, to the 250-piece fish bone reference housed in the Anthropology Department Archaeology Program.

The pieces in the costume collection number 20,000, but the exhibition focuses on aloha shirts, with 52 examples tracing the shirts' evolution beginning in the mid-1930s. The shirts reflect the influence of design elements from native Hawaiian and Hawaii's many immigrant cultures, and their rise coincided with tourism and the need to bring home items representative of the islands. Included are examples of 1940s silky shirts, as well as the palaka that is a legacy of plantation days.

The UH aloha shirt collection is one of only two such collections in the western United States, and the only one in the Pacific, according to Dr. Michael Thomas, digital collections manager of the University of Hawaii Virtual Museum, who is trying to secure funding for further development of the museum.

The museum project was started in fall 2009 by Jennifer Halaszyn, a student in the Museum Studies Graduate Certificate Program. A collaborative internship project, it involved several faculty, staff and volunteers to photograph and upload images, while bringing the various campus museums and departments together through one Web site.

FOR CAROL D'Angelo, curator of the collection and a longtime professor in the APDM program, the extra help is a dream come true.

"I do as much as I can, but we have no budget and the collection keeps growing. It's huge, with 20,000 items, but few people get to see it," she said.

With no physical space for a museum, she has organized small exhibits on campus and off, with the largest held last fall when Ala Moana Center made a vacant store space available for the "Fifty Years of Fashion in Hawaii" exhibition that tied in with its own 50th anniversary celebration.

"It would be nice to have an aloha wear museum in Waikiki, where both visitors and residents would be able to see it," D'Angelo said. "We got a huge response at the 'Fifty Years' exhibit, from local people and tourists, although nobody has volunteered to give us $1 million to maintain the collection."

The collection has been in existence since the 1960s, when the APDM program started inheriting clothing from community members who understood the importance of preserving Hawaii's clothing legacy, from traditional apparel that arrived with immigrants, to family businesses that focused on aloha shirts and muumuu, to young designers of the 1960s who reinterpreted mainland pop culture trends to suit an island lifestyle.

D'Angelo said one of the treasures of the collection is a kimono dating to the 1850s, following Japan's opening to trade with the West. "It's gorgeous," she said, making a note to herself to include it in the next round of photographs for an exhibition of kimono.

In the early days, D'Angelo said the collection was kept in boxes on the ground floor of Miller Hall, and her introduction in the 1980s was memorable in her discovery of a centipede nestled in their midst. "I ran out the door screaming," she said.

Today, the collection is kept in a more spacious, climate-controlled environment, thanks to Linda Arthur, a former APDM professor and author of "Aloha Attire: Hawaiian Dress in the Twentieth Century," who pursued better facilities for the collection.

Even so, because of the size of the collection, D'Angelo said she often turns down donations when pieces are not in good shape, but it's a difficult task.

"People understand this is everybody's history, and sometimes they want to give us a wedding gown with pictures of their wedding. People expect us to take care of it. There are so many stories and memories tied to clothing. People always remember what they were wearing during the special occasions in their lives."


NADINE KAM / NKAM@STARBULLETIN.COM

IMLS Encourages Participation in America: The Story of Us Contests

Dear Colleague:

The Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), together with HISTORYTM and the President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, invites libraries and students across the United States to flex their creative muscles and share their passion for American history by participating in HISTORYTM’s America: The Story of Us contests. For libraries, the contest entails creating a special exhibit or media project about American history that will strengthen their communities’ interest in American history. Students are asked to create a short video based on any topic related to American history and are encouraged to use the resources of local libraries, historical societies, and archives for information on their own local history or on the American history topic that interests them most.

These contests are exciting opportunities to promote learning about American history and explore our nation’s diverse heritage. We are delighted that HISTORYTM is reaching out to the nation's libraries to encourage a community dialogue about America's past.

Please see the attached flyers about each contest and refer to HISTORYTM’s website for more information.

Marsha Semmel
Acting Director, IMLS