Lecture

Panel Discussion: DISPLACEMENT. ART OF SURVIVING

Saturday, September 13, 2025 - 2:00pm to 4:00pm
DISPLACEMENT. ART OF SURVIVING: Panel Discussion
September 13th 2–4 PM, free & open to the public
 
As part of our current exhibition, Displacement: Art of Surviving, this panel discussion brings together local service providers and members of the houseless community, Pu‘uhonua o Wai‘anae, for a shared conversation on houselessness, community resilience, and collaboration.

Artist Talk & Gallery Walkthrough with Scott Groeniger

Saturday, October 19, 2024 - 10:00am
Join us here at the EHCC gallery on October 19th at 10 a.m. for a free artist talk and walkthrough with Scott Groeniger on "Now Here We Are". Exhibition on view until November 27th, 2024.
 
Now Here We Are is an installation of prints, video, and sound that fabricates a layered visual and sonic space, referencing notions of social and environmental collapse, animal perception and coloration, space travel, artificial intelligence, and decolonization.

EHCC Lecture Series Online Presents: Roots and Routes Along Keaukaha's Seashore

Friday, April 21, 2023 - 5:00pm
Roots and Routes Along Keaukaha’s Seashore
A presentation by Halena Kapuni-Reynolds
Friday April 21, 2023, at 5PM HST
 
In this lecture, Halena Kapuni-Reynolds illuminates the concept of “huaka’i hele” [a sightseeing tour in which a knowledgeable guide takes others along a route to reveal the stories surrounding a particular land area] through the huaka’i hele shared with amateur ethnographer and Hawaiʻi photographer Theodore Kelsey by Henry Nālimu (1835-1934) and his niece Mary Ka‘ōulionālani Ka‘ai (1

EHCC Lecture Series Online Presents: Who owns the past? Cultural Heritage and International Law

Related People: 
Thursday, March 9, 2023 - 3:00pm
EHCC Lecture Series Online Presents: Who owns the past? Cultural Heritage and International Law with Larry Butler
Zoom Lecture on Thursday, March 9th, 2023 at 3PM HST
 
Who owns the past? This has become the hottest question in museum and cultural studies around the globe. Should Britain send the Parthenon sculptures back to Greece? Should Benin bronzes be returned to Nigeria? Will that spark a wholesale transfer of museum antiquities? Are there laws, standards or conventions that might govern these questions?

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