April 20: Notes From the Field
Quaranzine is a weekly collection of creative works from the Arlington community that documents how we responded to this strange time we find ourselves in. Submit your own work.
Quaranzine is a weekly collection of creative works from the Arlington community that documents how we responded to this strange time we find ourselves in. Submit your own work.
The next deadline for submissions to Quaranzine is Thursday, April 23
Quaranzine is a weekly collection of creative works from the Arlington community that documents how we responded to this strange time we find ourselves in. Submit your own work.
The next deadline for submissions to Quaranzine is Thursday, April 16
Quaranzine is a weekly collection of creative works from the Arlington community that documents how we responded to this strange time we find ourselves in. Submit your own work.
The next deadline for submissions to Quaranzine is Thursday, April 9.
The Library is accepting submissions to Quaranzine, a collection of creative works from our community that document how we responded to this strange time we find ourselves in.
All ages are welcome and encouraged to submit work; content should be appropriate for a wide audience.
Quaranzine will be a small online publication of local art and writing by the Arlington community, distributed through the Library website. It is based on the DIY aesthetic of Zines.
Submissions may include, but are not limited to:
We are unable to accept audio or video formats.
Submission
Notification
All entries must be submitted online using the form below.
Visual work:
Written work:
On May 9, 2015, artist Khánh H. Lê’s temporary public installation will be on display in the fountain of Clarendon Central Park for “Echoes of Saigon,” a multimedia celebration honoring the journey of Clarendon’s Vietnamese community during the late 1970’s and 1980’s.
In addition to the public art installation, Echoes of Saigon will include hands on art activities, music, a walking tour led by former community members, a County Board proclamation, special guest speakers, other displays, and the Lemongrass Food Truck.
Following the May 9 event, the artwork will move to the Center for Local History at Central Library.
This artwork draws on primary sources to highlight the history of Little Saigon – the thriving hub of Vietnamese commerce and social activity that existed in Clarendon in the late 1970s and ‘80s. Similar to his work for the mobile gallery Art on the ART Bus, Lê has created a mixed media townscape, embedded with memories of an ethnic enclave that no longer exists.
Lê has reproduced photographs by Michael Horsley, who documented Little Saigon during its heyday, to create structures that resemble individual businesses that existed. The buildings further tell the stories of Little Saigon through the inclusion of audio components that play excerpts of recent oral history interviews with former Little Saigon community members. The interviews were conducted by graduate students from Urban Affairs & Planning in Virginia Tech’s School of Public & International Affairs.
Commissioned by Arlington Public Art, the installation also includes a sculptural apricot blossom tree and folded paper boats that come together to form flowers, symbolizing the journeys of Vietnamese immigrants who left their homeland to create a new community in Clarendon and a new life in America.
In the fall of 2014, Arlington County’s Historic Preservation Program and the Center for Local History collaborated with graduate students from Virginia Tech’s Department of Urban Affairs & Planning to explore ways to document, preserve, and celebrate the cultural heritage and diversity of Arlington. One of the resulting projects focused on the enclave in Clarendon once known as Little Saigon. The students conducted oral histories with members of the Vietnamese community who immigrated to Arlington during the 1970s and ‘80s, and those who shopped at or owned the many Vietnamese restaurants and businesses that existed in Clarendon during that time. The students also provided recommendations for increasing awareness about Little Saigon and recognizing the contributions of the Vietnamese community to Arlington.
Inspired by the students’ work, County staff and volunteers have continued to collaborate with community members, Virginia Tech professor Dr. Elizabeth Morton, and her students Judd Ullom and Carlin Tacey to organize today’s event honoring Clarendon’s Vietnamese heritage and to launch a Little Saigon Smartphone tour created by Judd Ullom.
County staff, local artists, students, and members of the region’s Vietnamese American community are continuing to explore other ways to commemorate and raise awareness about the contributions of Little Saigon to Arlington’s cultural heritage. Future goals include creating a permanent historic marker to honor this history.
For additional information, and to access the Little Saigon Smartphone tour, visit www.littlesaigonclarendon.com.
On exhibit at Central Library, April 2015.
Don’t miss this month’s historic postcard display at Central in honor of National Library Week.
It includes images of dozens of beautiful library buildings, many of them Carnegie Libraries, which were built between 1890 and 1920.
The postcards are part of a collection that belongs to Library Director Diane Kresh.
On exhibit at the Cherrydale Branch Library, Oct. 8, 2014 – Jan. 5, 2015
Public reception: Wednesday, Oct. 8, 7:00 p.m.
Images from Bill Hamrock’s new book, “We are Arlington,” describe Arlington’s “political, economic and social history.”
Want to know how many fans attended the annual “Old Oaken Bucket” football showdown between Washington-Lee High School and Alexandria’s George Washington High School back in the day? The book answers it. (10,000 some years.)
Eager to find out the cost of a ham sandwich and coffee at the iconic Little Tea House restaurant before it closed in the 1960s? That answer is in the book, too. (40 cents, with a side salad an extra 20 cents if desired.)
Stumped by who the other president buried at Arlington National Cemetery might be? It’s answered here. (William Howard Taft, the only man to serve both as president and chief justice of the United States.)
Not quite sure where the “Three Sisters Bridge” was supposed to go before the idea was scrapped under public pressure? There’s an answer to that, as well. Read more in InsideNoVA.com.
Hamrock manages and co-owns Pasha Café, which he and Kostas Kapasouris opened in 2005 at its present site, quickly making the restaurant an enduring and beloved neighborhood institution. He graduated from Bishop O’Connell High School in Arlington in 1989, and two years later completed training at the Culinary Institute of America.
In 2001 he bought Pasha Café at its previous location. A few months later he opened Portabellos: An American Café, where he was chef and owner for six years. Bill also owns Billy’s Cheesesteaks and Allison’s Restaurant in Crofton, MD, which is in its ninth year.
Bill Hamrock and his wife Susie have three kids: Kyle (14), Kelly (13), and Katie (9), plus their black lab Jessie. He also coaches basketball for the boys 14U Fairfax Stars (last year the team ended its season at AAU Nationals in Orlando).
Copies of “We are Arlington” can be purchased in person at Casual Adventurer and Pasha Cafe, or on the “We are Arlington” website.
Installed: 2006
Materials: Ceramic, glass and stone mosaic fountain.
Permanently installed in front of the Shirlington Branch Library.
Learn more about this piece from Arlington Public Art.
Installed: 2007
Materials: Light-emitting diode (LED) installation: four panels.
Permanently installed in front of and behind the Shirlington Branch Library.
Learn more about this piece from Arlington Public Art.
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