Perpich News

Lunar New Year Arts Resources 2022

February 1, 2022

Lunar New Year 2022 is February 1 and this is the Year of the Tiger.

According to the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, “People born in the Year of the Tiger are born leaders, who walk and talk assertively and inspire respect. They are courageous and energetic, love a challenge or competition and are prepared to take risks. They are hungry for excitement and crave attention. They can also be rebellious, short-tempered and outspoken, preferring to give orders rather than take them, which often leads to conflict. Tiger people may appear calm but there is often a hidden aggressiveness, but they can also be sensitive, humorous and capable of great generosity and love. There is never a dull moment with a Tiger.”

Tiger Years: 1902, 1914, 1926, 1938, 1950, 1962, 1974, 1986, 1998, 2010, 2022

 

Featured Resources from the Perpich Library:
Celebrating Chinese New Year!

1. Chinese New Year by Lisa J. Amstutz, author
Out with the old and in with the new! It’s time to celebrate Chinese New Year! Clean the house. Have a feast with relatives. Watch fireworks and dragon dances. Make paper lanterns. Chinese New Year, or Spring Festival, is a celebration of new beginnings.

2. Max Celebrates Chinese New Year by Adria Fay Klein, author | Mernie Elizabeth Gallagher-Cole, illustrator
Max helps his friend Lily and her family celebrate the Chinese New Year. Flowers, oranges, and special candy are all part of the fun!

3. The Animals of Chinese New Year by Jen Sookfong Lee, author | Kileasa Che Wan Wong, illustrator
Drawing on the myth of the Chinese zodiac, The Animals of Chinese New Year follows twelve animals as they speed across a river, competing to represent the imminent new year in a race held by the Jade Emperor, the most powerful Chinese god. Each animal competes in its own unique way. The ox works hard, the tiger is brave, the god smiles kindly, but who will win? Bright photographs of babies demonstrating the same traits as the animals in the text, complemented by traditional Chinese graphic elements, accompany Sookfong Lee’s lively text.

4. Music in China: Experiencing Music, Expressing Culture by Frederick Lau, author
Music in China offers a unique exploration of the rich, dynamic, and multifaceted Chinese musical landscape. In contrast with previous scholarship – which focused almost exclusively on the role of music in elite culture – this volume takes a balanced look at a variety of traditional and modern genres, including those performed among local and regional folk musicians, in academia, in the media, and on concert stages both inside and outside of China. Using the interrelated themes of identity, modernization, and ideology as a narrative framework, Lau discusses the musical features of the selected genres, the processes through which they came into existence, and related socio-political issues.

All books are available at the Perpich Library.

Chinese and asian american theater

Asian American Plays for a New Generation
Edited by Josephine Lee, Don Eitel, and R. A. Shiomi
Published by Temple University Press
http://tupress.temple.edu/book/0768

Plays in the anthology that explore and illuminate Chinese and Chinese American history, culture, politics, identity, and stereotypes:
          • Happy Valley by Aurorae Khoo
          • Asiamnesia by Sun Mee Chomet
          • Bahala Na (Let it Go) by Clarence Coo
          • Ching Chong Chinaman by Lauren Yee

The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s
exhibition “Celebrating the Year of the Tiger”

May art bring you good fortune! Celebrate the Year of the Tiger, one of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac, with the Met’s exhibition items online.

Celebrating the Year of the Tiger presented by the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Cat and Rat: The Legend of Chinese Zodiac with Ed Young

Chinese New Year Music: Xi Yang Yang (Full of Joy), performed by the Chinese Traditional Orchestra at a 2015 New Year concert

Classical Chinese Dance: Leaps, Twirls, and Flips
performed by Shen Yun dancers

One of the world’s most comprehensive dance systems, classical Chinese dance boasts a wealth of techniques – roughly categorized into jumps, turns, fanshen, control, and tumbling techniques. Over the years, these techniques have been borrowed by other art forms, and are, surprisingly, more widely recognized by names given from gymnastics or martial arts. But in actuality, these movements all originate from classical Chinese dance.

In the video below, Shen Yun dancers demonstrate select movements that showcase their mastery as they meld technique with artistry.

For more about classical Chinese dance, please visit: https://sypa.us/ccd