On the Road
A case study / Located on the ground level of Hamilton Library at the University of Hawaii hangs Juliette May Fraser’s print series, Ke Anuenue. In the midst of over-caffeinated students studying past midnight on a weeknight, a visual representation of history may as well be invisible. Lawyer and artist Sonny Ganaden says one print in particular, “Trip Around at 45 mph” (1952), inspired a case study of local art titled Trip Around the Island, now showing at Mark’s Garage.
“The show is about community,” says printmaker Ganaden. “Not just in the broad sense, but a community of artists interpreting where we live.” Over the course of two years, Ganaden solicited the talent of 12 local artists–AJ Feducia, Sergio Garzon, Gina Bacon Kerr, Barbara Okamoto, Harinani Orme, Roxanne Chasle Ortiz, Matthew Ortiz, Joseph Paahana, Carl Pao, Dana Paresa, Doug Pooloa Tolentino and Jasper Wong–to collaborate and reinterpret his prints of local life through various mediums.
“Each part of the island informs another part, there’s a sense of movement there,” adds Ganaden of the 30 prints, a number chosen for “roundness,” the approximate number of days in a month and his current age. The often surprising site-specific results culminate in “a subtle nod to history of community organizing and social activism here in Hawaii,” which display themselves in commentaries on the Aulani Disney Resort & Spa, Costco, Queen Theater, a John Kelly photo and more.
Island’s primary goal isn’t to intentionally invoke a political mood, but to instead show life as it is in Hawaii, which naturally involves complicated topics and themes, says Ganaden. “Living on an island is a beautiful and complex thing, and I just wanted to give a sense to that story.”







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