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Sakura Matsuri Saturday, April 29–Sunday, April 30, 2017 | 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

Sakura Matsuri

Saturday, April 29–Sunday, April 30 | 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

 

This weekend, enjoy over 60 events and performances that celebrate traditional and contemporary Japanese culture. 

Taiko Drumming • Cosplay Fashion Show • Tea Ceremonies • J-Pop • Samurai Sword Fighting • Manga • Vintage Kimonos • Origami Demonstrations and More!

 

Advance ticket purchase is required. Members and children under 12 are free.

Visit bbg.org/sakura for the complete schedule and helpful tips!

View web version

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BROOKLYN BOTANIC GARDEN

1000 Washington Ave

Brooklyn, NY 11225

718-623-7200

bbg.org

 

 

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Refer students interested in NYC teaching to the PAID Teaching Fellows opportunity

From: Wendy Heyman
Sent: Friday, April 07, 2017 3:42 PM
Subject: Refer students interested in NYC teaching to the PAID Teaching Fellows opportunity

 

Dear Baruch Arts & Sciences Faculty,

 

If you look at the below email you can see the websites for interested citizens to enter the teaching program in the NYC public schools.  I believe exceptional candidates are highly supported including paid graduate school.  Priority deadline is 4/12/17.  (which suggests to me that there are later deadlines too)

 

Regards,

Wendy Heyman, PhD
Arts and Sciences Coordinator
Starr Career Development Center
(646) 312-4681

Baruch College
1 Bernard Baruch Way
(24th Street, between Lexington & third)
Vertical Campus
Rm 2-150
Box B2-150
New York City, New York 10010

Did you know that because of referrals from professors like yourself, NYC Teaching Fellows has provided New York City’s public schools with over 17,000 effective educators committed to providing a quality education to the underserved students of NYC? With your support we can continue this mission while helping your students find fulfilling careers after they’ve graduated.

 

NYC Teaching Fellows recruits and trains individuals to teach the NYC public school students that need them most. You can learn more about our mission and training here. Do you know high-achieving students who thrive off challenges and want to make a difference? Refer them to the NYC Teaching Fellows program today by providing their contact information here or simply forwarding this factsheet. Our priority deadline is April 12, 2017.

 

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Mizumura Minae at Columbia Univ.

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Godzilla Legend—Music of Akira Ifukube Friday, April 28, 7:30 PM represented by Japan Society

Calling all monster movie enthusiasts for an evening filled with your favorite marches, melodies, vibes and reverbs from Godzilla and other monster movies! Performed by Japan’s forever-young techno-pop band Hikashu and special guest musicians including the spunky sister duo Charan-Po-Rantan, this concert showcases the remarkable range of music composed by Akira Ifukube (1914—2006), who was known for creating some of the most memorable aural moments in cinematic history. A not-to-be-missed event that brings these menacing monsters to life through music!

Cash bar opens at 6 pmCome early to check out our spring exhibition A Third GenderFree admission on Fridays from 6—9 PM.

Buy Tickets 

We are offering $18 student tickets by calling the Box Office at (212) 715-1258 and showing ID upon pick-up. For any questions please do not hesitate to be in touch.

Lara Mones/ララ・モネス

Performing Arts Senior Program Officer

Japan Society

(212) 715-1220 // [email protected]

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Conversation Cafe at Nippon Club (organized by Japan Foundation)

ConvCafe_flyer_Spring 2017

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TSUGARU SHAMISEN&KOTO SPRING CONCERT SUN Apr 16th, 2017

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KABUKI:KUMADORI-MAKEUP Apr 3, 17 Mon 11:30am-12:50pm

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BALLOON NINJA2 -Kawaii Invasion Mar 25, 17 PRESENTED BY MADE IN JAPAN Inc.

Made in Japan Inc. is back with Syan, a balloon artist, and Ace-K, a ninja style acrobat, and Japan’s fan favorite clown/juggler duo, Taratta Latta to showcase their talent in New York City at Baruch College Performing Art Center!

Time: Mar 25, 17 10:30am/2:00pm/5:30pm

Location: The Engelman Recital Hall at Baruch Performing Art Center

(Entrance on E. 25th St. bet. Lexington & 3rd Ave.)

For more details, please visit http://www.madeinjapanny.com

To apply and get a student discount, please visit

http://www.madeinjapanny.com/student.html

 

 

All rights are reserved by Made in Japan Inc.

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Oshima X Godard (Film Series) at BAM

http://www.bam.org/film/2017/oshima-godard
FILM SERIES

Oshima X Godard

Oshima/Godard

Mar 3—Mar 16, 2017

Commonly referred to as “the Japanese Godard,” Nagisa Oshima said he preferred that Jean-Luc Godard be called “the French Oshima.” However one chooses to regard these renegade auteurs, both were leaders of their respective countries’ New Wave movements, creating some of the most stylistically rule-breaking, politically incendiary films of the 1960s and 70s. BAMcinématek screens their explosive works side by side for a double dose of truly revolutionary cinema.

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After the Storm, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Latest Masterwork, Is Indispensable

After the Storm, Hirokazu Kore-eda’s Latest Masterwork, Is Indispensable

After the Storm, Hirokazu Kore-eda's Latest Masterwork, Is Indispensable

Courtesy of Film Movement

If civilization were to end tomorrow — and who the hell knows, it just might — we could learn a lot about building the next one from the films of Hirokazu Kore-eda. Back in 1998, the Japanese director had his U.S. breakthrough with the wildly acclaimed After Life. Since then, he’s been a regular on the international festival circuit, building an impressively humanistic body of work. 2004’s Nobody Knows may have been his first true masterpiece, but there have been other standouts: Last year’s Our Little Sister, 2013’s Like Father, Like Son and 2008’s Still Walking were all critically adored. Even so, Kore-eda deserves to be better known — his name shouted from rooftops and his films made required viewing.

That may sound like an odd claim to make about a writer-director whose work is never insistent but rather understated, almost demure. Still, these gentle, observational dramas hide deep reserves of passion and pain; they sneak up on you and then refuse to let go. And After the Storm might be his most devastating work yet. The film follows divorced dad Ryota (played by a movingly mopey Hiroshi Abe), a failed novelist and gambling addict looking to put his life back together.

When we first meet him, he’s raiding his mom’s apartment and searching the possessions of his recently deceased father for anything he might be able to sell. (The mother, by the way, is played by the great Japanese actress Kirin Kiki, who has worked with Kore-eda several times before.) Unfortunately, dad too was a gambling addict and had already pawned just about everything. And the family is wise to Ryota; his mom has sold off everything dad left behind, and his sister has taken anything else of value that could be hocked.

Ryota wants to clean up his life, but he is somehow both too proud and too defeatist to do so. That might seem like a contradiction, but Kore-eda, who draws from life and not from simplistic loglines, understands that those impulses often go hand-in-hand. Ryota spends part of his time on buses and trains with a notepad, presumably gathering ideas for a new book, and the rest working for a private-investigation firm to make ends meet.

Sometimes, he confronts the people he’s investigating, shows them what he’s found, then takes their money in exchange for covering up their misdeeds and infidelities. He also can’t stop gambling, nor can he resist using his job to spy on his ex-wife and his son, who are moving on to a better life with a wealthy alpha male who cheers the boy on at his baseball games and takes the pair out to fancy dinners. Meanwhile, Ryota turns down more lucrative writing opportunities, using as his excuse the novel he may never actually write.

It would be easy to shape such material into a tragedy, a judgmental look at a man’s agonizing downfall. It could also be turned into a simplistic tale of redemption. But for Kore-eda, it’s just a glimpse of ordinary people living their ordinary lives. Ryota’s setbacks aren’t all that different from the infidelities and failures he documents at his private-eye job. “For better or worse, it’s all part of my life,” says one woman who’s just discovered her husband is cheating on her. That respect for human fallibility shines throughout After the Storm, as Kore-eda patiently charts the process by which his protagonist comes to understand that he might never become the man he wants to be — and starts to reconcile aspiration and acceptance.

In an early scene, Ryota’s mother points to a small tangerine tree on her balcony, one he had planted as a young boy. “It doesn’t flower or bear fruit, but I water it every day like it’s you,” she tells him. Then she notes that this fruitless fruit tree has become a home for caterpillars, one of which she recently saw turn into a butterfly. “So it’s useful for something,” she declares. Ryota repeats her words — “I’m useful for something” — not with relief or obstinacy but with a hushed desperation. It may as well be a question, asked by a downcast young child to his mother.

Ryota asks many questions over the course of After the Storm. The most prominent, perhaps, is “Why did my life turn out like this?” He writes it on a small piece of paper and pins it to a wall filled with other notes — maybe a plan for his novel, and a sign that he’s finally starting to look at his own life? Who knows? Kore-eda isn’t in the business of providing answers. He prefers to explore the paradoxes of human behavior. Ryota, we learn, wasn’t a particularly attentive father or husband before his marriage fell apart, and only now, after the fall, does he realize the value of what he’s lost.

“I wonder why it is that men can’t love the present,” his mom observes. “Either they just keep chasing whatever it is they’ve lost or they keep dreaming beyond their reach.” His father, she says, was just like him. And Ryota’s son may well be on his way, too; we see Ryota buy the boy his first lottery ticket, and we wonder if the child will one day inherit his father’s and grandfather’s gambling compulsions.

Kore-eda’s stories, such as they are, unfold in unlikely ways. He doesn’t play so much with structure but with focus: He’ll allow a scene to go on and on before slipping in a crucial bit of narrative information that sends the story off in a new direction. That could result in chaos, but his absorption in these lives, his ability to imbue the slightest exchange or glance with warmth and humor, transfixes us. We can lose ourselves in these films — wondering what’s around every corner and what’s going on in the mind of even the most minor of characters. This love for people reflects back on the viewer. I walked out of After the Storm wanting to be a better person — and further convinced that Hirokazu Kore-eda isn’t just one of the world’s best filmmakers but one of its most indispensable artists.

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