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Posts Tagged ‘Tucson Origami Club’

Origami LAFF (Lyric Arts Folding Fest)

Saturday, December 18th, 2010

Origami LAFF (Lyric Arts Folding Fest) usually meets on the third Saturday each month at the Nanini Branch public library, from 1 to 4 PM. The next meeting is today, December 18 in their small meeting room. The library is 7400 N Shannon Road (north of Ina Rd.), phone 520-594-5365.

origami coyote

We have an informal meeting where ideas are shared and models are taught. This meeting is free and open to the public. We encourage you to bring models you might like to teach, or just share with others.

You can see pictures of Origami LAFF meetings on their web page:www.lyric-arts.com/origamilaff.html

Today’s host is paper artist Mary Ellen Palmeri. Click on her name to see her other beautiful paper creations, including the one below. Origami can even be made featuring Southwest themes, not just Japanese ones. She can be reached at maryellen@lyric-arts.com.

I am a member of the Tucson Japanese Culture & Origami Meetup Group which meets over on the eastside in Tucson at Dao’s Tai Pan Restaurant (446 N. Wilmot Rd.), so this NW location is terrific for the folks who live over there.

Enjoy origami!

origami & mixed media desert scene by artist Mary Ellen Palmeri

Japanese Speech Contest on April 24

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

contest poster

Coming up on Saturday April 24, 12 to 5 p.m. at PCC Northwest Campus (7600 N. Shannon Rd.), the 8th Annual Japanese Speech Contest for students enrolled in a Japanese language class. Besides the speech competition, this free event features Japanese cultural exhibitions, taiko performances, prizes, refreshments. The public is invited to participate, to learn more about Japanese language and culture.

Any student may enter as long as that student is currently enrolled in a Japanese class in Tucson. He or she can be taking Japanese in a public or private school, and the school can be elementary, secondary, high school, college, university.

According to Yosei Sugawara, Lead Instructor at PCC Languages Dept. & Chair of the event: “The speeches are written by the students on whatever topic they’d like. Again, we’ve had a wide range. There are personal reminiscences, political essays, jokes, songs … once, even a small puppet show. We don’t screen for content although the committee sees both the Japanese and English versions before the actual event. We provide the English version of each student’s speech to the audience so that friends, families and members of the general public know what’s being said.”

Sponsored by the Southern Arizona Assn. for Japanese Education (SAAJE), this event started in April, 2003 and has grown over the years, to include demonstrations of kendo, judo, karate, aikido, ninjutsu, and iaido by Tucson’s martial arts schools.

The exhibitions will again include Japanese swords, origami by the Tucson Origami Club, ikebana flower arranging, calligraphy, anime, and Urasenke Chado (Japanese tea ceremony) demonstrations, as well as participation by the Southern Arizona Koi Association, and the Tucson Go Club. My brothers and I used to play go with my maternal grandmother. Go is a Japanese board game of strategy played with black and white circular stones (playing pieces).

Tucson based Odaiko Sonora will be performing taiko drumming again for their 8th year.

Judges for the contest in the past have been provided by IBM Japan, the University of Arizona, PCC, The Rotary Club, and Japan-America Society of Tucson, with prizes from local businesses and other sponsors such as the Japanese Consulate General in Los Angeles. This year’s judges are Tom Johnston (Sahuarita Police Dept./FBI & Homeland Security), Fukumi Zapp (Japanese Association of Tucson), Takahiro Masumura (Canon U.S.A.), Hiroko Coates (MUSO/Hiro International).

“SAAJE, a non profit association, was founded to promote Japanese language and culture education in Southern Arizona. Its membership includes professionals and nonprofessionals involved in the Japanese language, in traditional Japanese arts and crafts, and in historical and contemporary Japanese culture.” (from their website)

Being 3rd generation Japanese American, this event sounds attractive to me to re-connect with my culture, though I don’t speak Japanese. I grew up playing go and hanafuda (Japanese flower cards) in Hawaii, and also doing some ikebana, owning koi fish, and drinking green tea. I haven’t had the opportunity to attend in the past, but am looking forward to it this year.

This cultural event is open to all of you interested in “All Things Japanese”, especially the beautiful sounding language.

4/25 article on update of contest winners: http://tucsoncitizen.com/community/2010/04/25/winners-of-the-8th-annual-japanese-speech-contest/

Got origami?

Thursday, February 4th, 2010
origami club meeting, courtesy of M Craig

origami club meeting, courtesy of M Craig

M Craig teaches origami to all ages on the 1st Saturdays of the month at Dao’s Tai Pan restaurant, 446 N. Wilmot Rd. from 10 to 11:30 a.m. She is a lovely Black/Japanese American artist who has a passion for the paper folding art, being the co-founder of the Tucson Origami Club.

M has conducted origami lectures and workshops throughout the Southern Arizona community, including: the Tucson Children’s Museum, Canyon Ranch Resort & Spa, Tucson Botanical Gardens, The Oasis Institute of Adult Education for Tucson Medical Center, Green Valley Recreational Centers, and the Pima County public library.

According to M: “Origami has applications in art, mathematics, language arts, social skills and science. Students, teachers, engineers, scientists & artists love the the process of exploring the secrets hidden within the depths of a single square of paper.”

As an artist she also does portraits of people and dogs, some on Mexican ceramic tiles, so check out her website at http://mcraigart.net/default.aspx.

The next meeting of the Tucson Origami Club (and a newly formed Tucson Japanese Culture and Origami Meetup Group) is on Saturday February 6th. Contact info: 520-331-0602, email: morigami2@yahoo.com. Learning to fold valentines will be the highlight for Saturday!

origami craneBeing Japanese American I too grew up learning origami, and a few years ago folded 100 gold paper cranes for my aunt Kinuyo (“Kay”) Sugiyama when she turned 100 years old. But her children and grandchildren folded 1000 for her birthday celebration!

M Craig folding origami, courtesy of M

M Craig folding origami, courtesy of M