Storytelling Builds Solidarity: Stop Anti-Asian Hate and Violence

Storytelling Builds Solidarity: Stop Anti-Asian Hate and Violence

In 2020, Visual Communications began renewing our programming and organizational values to encompass restorative practices that create systemic change. In our renewal journey, we have reflected on our role in building solidarity in response to anti-Asian violence. VC believes in the power of storytelling to develop cross-cultural connections necessary for dismantling white supremacy.

Read More

Welcome to the 39th Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival!

Welcome to the 39th Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival!

Visual Communications (VC) announced today the program for their 39th edition of the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival. The annual showcase for Asian American, Pacific Islander, diasporic and Asian international cinema returns May 4 to May 13 with in-person programming slated to take place in Little Tokyo, Gardena Cinemas, and Regal L.A. Live, along with online programming.

Read More

AWC Spotlight | So Young Shelly Yo

AWC Spotlight | So Young Shelly Yo

So Young Shelly Yo is a first-generation, Korean American filmmaker based in Los Angeles. Her short films have screened and received accolades at film festivals around the world, including LAAPFF. As an AWC fellow, she challenged herself with making a short documentary after a number of widely-screened and award-winning narrative shorts.

Read more about Shelly’s AWC fellowship experience, her first feature film, and what she has been up to!

Read More

AWC Spotlight | Kristina Wong

AWC Spotlight | Kristina Wong

Performance artist, comedian, writer, and Pulitzer Prize finalist in Drama, Kristina Wong describes her aesthetic as “subversive, humorous, and endearingly inappropriate”, Wong employs humor to address difficult subjects, social issues, and amplify marginalized experiences.

Read more about how AWC shaped the future of Kristina’s performance work and what projects she has been working on.

Read More

Visual Communications Receives 2023 NEA Grant for Arts Projects

Visual Communications Receives 2023 NEA Grant for Arts Projects

The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) announced the first round of recommended awards for fiscal year 2023, with more than $34 million in funding to support the arts nationwide. This is the first of the NEA’s two major grant announcements each fiscal year and includes grants to organizations through the NEA’s Grants for Arts Projects, Challenge America, and Research Awards categories. Visual Communications is grateful to be a recipient of the 2023 Grants for Arts Projects Award to support the Los Angeles Asian American Pacific Film Festival.

Read More

AWC Spotlight | Jeff Man

AWC Spotlight | Jeff Man

A Maryland-raised, Los Angeles-based filmmaker, Jeff Man attributes his success as an artist to the community and friends he made through VC and his 2012 AWC Fellowship. After writing and directing Santa Claus (2017), which received a Special Jury Mention at the San Diego Asian Film Festival, Jeff is excited to continue his career and direct his first feature-length film in 2023.

Read more about how participating in AWC, LAAPFF, and being a Digital Histories instructor shaped Jeff into the person and artist he is today.

Read More

We Went to Hawai'i!

We Went to Hawai'i!

As part of our growing practice to center wellness and joy, Visual Communications Staff and Armed With a Camera Fellows took a renewal trip to Hawai'i.

“I loved connecting with people in a relaxed and casual atmosphere. It was really important as I came away, not only feeling closer to everyone, but also really valuing the community we have and inspired to keep building community.

Read More

Franklin S. Odo (1939–2022)

Franklin S. Odo (1939–2022)

Franklin Odo, a prominent Asian American Studies scholar, activist and long-time friend and supporter of Visual Communications, passed away on September 28, 2022. A third-generation Japanese American born and raised in Honolulu, Hawaii, Franklin was a forebear in the Ethic Studies Movement. He was one of the 4 editors of the first anthology focusing on Asian Americans, Roots: An Asian American Reader, which became the nationwide standard textbook in Asian American Studies for many years, and the author of the first VC-published book, In Movement: A Pictorial History of Asian America.

Franklin’s legacy is imposing. We mourn the loss, commemorate and celebrate Franklin’s life and far-reaching contributions and impacts to the many individuals and communities he has touched and uplifted.

Read More

AWC Spotlight | Brandon Soun

AWC Spotlight | Brandon Soun

As a second-generation Cambodian American raised in Cambodia Town, Brandon attributed his passion for filmmaking to its ability to empower communities. When Brandon Soun made his short documentary Cambodia Town: Not for Sale in 2019, he did not expect it to become the first of a trilogy.

Read more about Brandon, his love and ties to the community, his learnings during the making of these short films and what the community can achieve when people come together.

Read More

AWC Spotlight | Shaun Vivaris

AWC Spotlight | Shaun Vivaris

Shaun Vivaris, a New York-raised and Los Angeles-based filmmaker, has found his community after his 2016–2017 Armed With a Camera Fellowship. A natural storyteller and formerly aspiring novelist who makes genre-bending fantasies that have screened at multiple international film festivals, Shaun strives in his works for authentic Asian American characters and stories beyond mere representation.

In light of the release of his first feature film Lisa Mania on August 23, we checked in with Shaun and discussed his career since his AWC Fellowship, the making of Lisa Mania, his creative process and how he found a community through VC.

Read More

WE ARE LONG BEACH: OUR STORIES, OUR FUTURE

WE ARE LONG BEACH: OUR STORIES, OUR FUTURE

Visual Communications is grateful to have partnered with United Cambodian Community of Long Beach (UCC) and Cambodia Town Thrives (CTT) to present We Are Long Beach: Our Stories, Our Future, a community arts event created to engage and uplift the Long Beach community of Cambodia Town. The event featured screenings of three documentary short films, including the Long Beach premiere of Conversations at the Register (2022), Cambodia Town Thrives (2022) and Cambodia Town: Not For Sale (2019), followed by discussions and activities guided by local community leaders.

We Are Long Beach: Our Stories, Our Future seeks to amplify local voices and movement, and encouraging solidarity around multicultural issues impacting the local community through sharing and discussing personal stories. We are honored and heart-warmed by the presence and stories of the attendees, and to witness connections being made through the films and issues impacting our communities.

Read More