06/15/2023

Benign Neglect: Historical Japanese American Bonsai

June 2023, English, 9 x 12 in, 72 pages, softcover, full color, spiral bound with metal rod, rope, and pin
Edition of 300
Design: Sming Sming Books

With texts by Kenny Murakami and Takeshi Moro

In Benign Neglect: Historic Japanese American Bonsai, artist and photographer Takeshi Moro documents sixty bonsai grown by seed by the Issei (first-generation Japanese Americans) post-WWII. These bonsai were left in the care of renowned aesthetic pruner Dennis Makishima, who described the collection as being one of “benign neglect” as the Issei became too busy rebuilding their lives after the war, and gave minimal attention to the bonsai. Over time, the bonsai started to form odd visual features, and their aesthetic characteristics are not typical of, or even desired by, traditional or contemporary Japanese bonsai practices. Kenny Murakami, former owner of Moraga Garden Center, writes in the foreword, “The story of these pines is a story of a journey, not a journey of distance, but a journey of time . . . They represent a period of transition for Japanese Americans, from a time of great personal and institutional racism, to a time of greater yet not quite full acceptance by American society.” Takeshi Moro’s photographs in Benign Neglect are the last time the bonsai are represented together, as Dennis donated his entire collection upon his retirement in 2021.

10/15/2021

Moraga Garden Center Monograph

200 limited-edition monographs are available at Moraga Garden Center. Designed and printed in San Francisco by Colpa Press.

01/31/2018

UC Berkeley Art Museum Exhibition

BREAKING ICE
A Community Response to a Citizenship Test
January 31–May 20, 2018

Based loosely on the 100 questions the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) use to test aspiring citizens, Breaking ICE, according to the artists, “encourage[s] participants to engage in critical dialogue around political, personal, fun, philosophical, and hypothetical questions. Our ultimate goal is to explore a brand of citizenship rooted less in documentation and fear and more in the cultivation of communities of belonging.”

Lukas Brekke-Miesner, Yueqi Chen, Chris Hamamoto, and Takeshi Moro: Breaking ICE: A Community Response to a Citizenship Test, 2017; mixed media; dimensions variable; courtesy of the artists and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.