The W.O.W. Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020

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The W.O.W. Project

Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020

About the Annual Report and The W.O.W. Project

The W.O.W. Project is a women, non-binary, queer, trans led, communitybased initiative that works to sustain ownership over Chinatown’s future by growing, protecting and preserving Chinatown’s creative culture through arts, culture and activism. With the future of Chinatown threatened by displacement, it will take community solidarity and resistance to mitigate the powerful forces of gentrification. Our core mission is to create space for conversations that cross generational gaps to seed intergenerational understanding. The W.O.W. Project envisions the future of Chinatown that centers young women and nonbinary youth in building intergenerational bridges of understanding, collective empowerment, and solidarity.

This annual report documents the W.O.W. Project’s fourth program year, which ran from July 2019 – July 2020. It contains insights and highlights from programs organized and held by the team over the past year, including our year-round and summer internship programs, youth program Resist Recycle Regenerate, 店面 Storefront and Makers Residencies, and public programs. This report also shares notable figures and statistics from the W.O.W. Project’s fourth year, as well as the project’s vision moving forward.

© 2021 The W.O.W. Project All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or used in any manner without written permission of the copyright owner.

wowprojectnyc.org

wowproject@wingonwoand.co

Table
Contents Message from the Founder and Director . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 The W O W Project Organization Chart 3 About The W .O .W . Project’s Board of Directors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 The W .O .W . Project’s 4th Year by the Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 店面 Storefront Residency 10 Internship Program 22 Maker’s Residency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Resist Recycle Regenerate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Grassroots Fundraising 48 Special Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Looking Forward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 Special Thanks and How to Get Involved 79
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Message from the Founder and Director

Our 2019-2020 program year ended our in-person programming during Chinatown’s most festive time of the year. For the rest of 2020, I looked back at our Lunar New Year photos as a reminder of what community care and joy looked like. This year was the toughest for our Chinatown community. When it felt like we were all just trying to make ends meet, and stay safe and healthy with our loved ones in the thick of the pandemic, The W.O.W. Project team went into deep reflection about the role that art can play in a time of crises.

We found strength in waging love. In response, we launched our Love Letters to Chinatown Project, collecting over 100 letters for our neighborhood and its mainstays and institutions. We posted the letters around the neighborhood on shuttered gates, lampposts and doors, reminding each other of the care, joy, and resilience our Chinatown community embodies. We acknowledged our interconnected struggles as a local place based initiative in Chinatown with the national Black Lives Matter uprisings. Our 4 year anniversary marked the first time we grassroots fundraised over $30K (a new record!) some of which was donated to Chinatown Youth Initiatives and Communities United For Police Reform in support of Chinatown’s resiliency in the wake of COVID-19 and the fight for community safety and police accountability. This year has taught us more than ever that care and healing, especially in community, is key to a pathway to our collective liberation.

I am so inspired and excited to see where year 5 will take us. The W.O.W. Project team continually shows me that as long as we’re moving at the speed of love, trust, and community building we will build a future where we are all free.

W.O.W. Project Organizational Chart

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
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ABOUT THE W.O.W. PROJECT’S BOARD OF DIRECTORS

This year we established our Board of Directors as part of The W.O.W. Project’s process of formalizing as a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We were thrilled to welcome back two of W.O.W.’s previous youth leaders, Emily (Em) He and Jade Levine, as well as Dr. Diane Wong, who was so central to The W.O.W. Project’s founding, to be part of our founding board of directors. The Board is working with a team of pro bono lawyers as part of a Fordham Law School Clinic to fulfill our IRS 1023 Long Form registration as well as building an onboarding process for our first board recruitment cycle in 2021. Em, Jade, Diane, and Mei are committed to creating a board culture that is true to our grassroots spirit, ensuring that the Board of Directors are directly involved with WOW’s work on the ground in the heart of Chinatown.

Em He is a trans/non-binary Cantonese community organizer and former W.O.W. Project Managing Intern. Their roots are in intergenerational diasporic communities organizing against displacement and have found home with trans/ queer people of color on the journey of decolonization and transformative healing. They grew up on unceded Coast Salish lands and now live on occupied Lenape/Canarsie land and organize with public housing residents as CAAAV’s Asian Tenants Union Chinese Membership Organizer.

Jade Levine is a writer, zine-maker, and former W.O.W. Project intern. Her undergraduate studies in urban sociology and her experience working around issues of arts and activism through zine-making and the Girls Rock Camp movement brought her to the W.O.W. Project while she was in college. By day, she works in higher education.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
The W.O.W.
About
Project’s Board of Directors
Em He (they/them/theirs)
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Jade Levine (she/they)

Diane Wong is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Rutgers University, Newark. She writes and teaches at the intersection of Asian American politics, critical urban studies, race and ethnicity, cultural and media studies, and community rooted research. As a first-generation Chinese American born and raised in Flushing, Queens, her research is intimately tied to the Asian diaspora and urban immigrant experience. Her work has appeared in Women’s Studies Quarterly, Amerasia Journal, Urban Affairs Review and a variety of book volumes, journals, anthologies, podcasts, and exhibitions. Her current book project, You Can’t Evict A Movement: Housing Justice and Intergenerational Activism in New York City, documents intergenerational resistance to gentrification in Manhattan Chinatown.

Mei is the 5th generation owner of Wing on Wo and the founder and director of The W.O.W. Project. Mei has grown as a cultural worker and community leader alongside the W.O.W. Project since its beginnings in 2016, receiving recognition as a 2017 emerging voice in the APA community by NBC Asian America, the 2019 Community Builder Award from OCA Asian Pacific American Advocates, and was recently awarded the 2020 Rubinger Fellowship from the Local Initiatives Support Corporation.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 About The W.O.W. Project’s Board of Directors
Diane Wong (she/her/hers)
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Mei Lum (she/her/hers)

THE W.O.W. PROJECT’S 4TH YEAR BY THE NUMBERS

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The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 Fiscal Year 2020

Total Fundraising Growth (2017–2020)

Fundraising by Type (2017–2020)

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 8
Year 4: Fiscal Year 2020 Year 3: Fiscal Year 2019 Year 2: Fiscal Year 2018 Year 1: Fiscal Year 2017 $2,710 $17,665 $66,356 $141,057 Year 4: Fiscal Year 2020 Year 3: Fiscal Year 2019 Year 2: Fiscal Year 2018 Year 1: Fiscal Year 2017 Donations Ticket Sales Grants 113% increase 276% increase 552% increase 63% 37% 32% 21% 47% 74% 72% 24% 2% 25% 3% The W.O.W. Project’s 4th Year by the Numbers

“We are inspired to rethink the ways we fundraise with and for the community and how to align our fundraising strategies with our ideals of sustainability, people power, and social justice. We hope to create a model for future fundraisers, deepen our relationship to our community, and build our own skills as a team.

9 The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
The W.O.W. Project Programs Team
The W.O.W. Project’s 4th Year by the Numbers
RRR fellows perform during the W.O.W. the Crowd Street battle (Photo by Marion Aguas)
店面 Storefront Residency

About the 店面 Storefront Residency

The W.O.W. Project provides a 6-month artist residency opportunity for an emerging Asian American artist at the oldest operating store in Manhattan’s Chinatown. The artist-in-residence is invited to create a final storefront window installation by and for the community in celebration of the Lunar New Year.

During The W.O.W.’s Project fourth 店面 Residency, artist-in-residence Singha Hon held a series of workshops called Changing Faces, centered around self-portraiture and making images that allow participants to ask the following questions: who are you and who am I? How am I seen and how would I like to be seen? What does it mean to change faces to survive? What does it mean to change faces to thrive and find peace?

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 店面 Storefront Residency
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店面Storefront Residency Team

About Singha Hon

Singha Hon (韩星霞) is a mixed-race artist and illustrator born and raised in New York City, with roots in Pennsylvania and NYC’s Chinatown. Singha has studied painting, costuming, and theatre at Bates College in Lewiston and at Central Saint Martins in London. She is one of the founding illustrators for Womanly Magazine, an organization that provides accessible health information to women and nonbinary people through visual and literary art. As a painter and illustrator, she creates work aimed at exploring inner thoughts and private experiences, combining small details of everyday life with images inspired by mythology and animal archetypes, weaving together the universal and the personal.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
店面 Storefront Residency
Left to right: Clara Lu, Singha Hon, and Mei Lum at the Storefront Residency opening (photo by Marion Aguas)
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2019-2020

店面 STOREFRONT RESIDENCY TIMELINE

SEPT 2019

Residency Begins: Changing Faces portrait workshops begin

OCT 2019

Mask and Portrait Workshops at Columbus Park

NOV 2019

Open Portrait Workshop Sessions

JAN 2020

Opera Mask Workshop with Bob Lee Storefront Residency Opening

DEC 2019

Chinese Opera Workshop with Mee Mee Chin

FEB 2020

Artist Talk with Alison Kuo

MARCH 2020

Storefront

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
店面
Pandemic shutdown + Residency Workshops Put on Pause 14
Residency
2019-20 店面 Storefront Residency Accomplishments

REFLECTION BY 店面 STOREFRONT RESIDENCY MANAGER

Working with Singha on her residency “Changing Faces” in the Year of the Rat was a great space for me to continue the exploration of how we perform our different identities in different environments. Singha brought so many opportunities for reflection and learning, and I’m so grateful to Singha for stewarding a safe space with such care and intention. A highlight for me was when we invited Chinese Opera

performer MeeMee Chin to share with workshop participants how identity–and gender in particular–is performed in the context of Chinese Opera. In helping Singha and MeeMee facilitate their workshops, I experienced how together, we can explore our different truths through a particular lens and theme. That’s what is so exciting to me about each residency and artistin-residence - they make space for collective exploration.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Bottom: Singha Hon, Mee Mee Chin, Alison Kuo, and Clara Lu during Singha’s Artist Talk (photo by Marion Aguas)
店面
Storefront Residency
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Clara Lu Residency Manager
店面 Storefront Residency 16

“My residency Changing Faces came about out of a desire to explore creative practices of self perception and engage with the following questions: How am I seen, and how would I like to be seen? What does it mean to change faces to survive?

Through a series of portraiture and mask making workshops in the W.O.W. space and Columbus Park, I aimed to explore these questions of identity both for myself and workshop participants. Physically creating masks allowed me to explore self-perception and gaze, understanding how physical and emotional masks can protect and project the things we wish to see in ourselves. Since then and in light of the pandemic, mask making and wearing has shifted into a direct practice

of safety and precaution, but the concept of identity and self perception remains prescient.

Throughout the residency I was able to have many precious experiences, including portrait drawing in Columbus Park on a warm sunny weekend as well as connecting with other artists within the W.O.W. community to collaborate on workshops exploring the living legacy of Nuo Opera, Tao Teh Masks, and Peking and Cantonese opera. I am so grateful for the residency, for the workshop participants and W.O.W. community who generously shared their time, feelings, and creations, and space.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
店面 Storefront
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Singha Hon 4th 店面 Storefront Artist-in-Residence Singha Hon hosts a portrait session
in
Columbus Park (photo by Marion Aguas) Em He sits with Singha Hon as she draws in Columbus Park surrounded by onlookers (photo by Marion Aguas)
Residency
The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
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Clockwise from top: Singha Hon and her family during her residency opening, Mei Lum holds a mask, Singha Hon performs as a part of her residency opening (Photos by Marion Aguas) 店面 Storefront Residency
The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
店面 Storefront Residency 19
Clockwise from top left: Close up of Singha Hon’s window installation, Close up of masks hanging in the W.O.W. storefront window installation, Bob Lee co-leads a mask-making workshop with Singha in the W.O.W. studio (Photos by Marion Aguas)

“Hearing Bob share his wisdom and knowledge around Tao Teh masks, their appearance in the Chinatown community (e.g. his wife’s dance performances), and the thriving arts movements like Basement Workshop

Collective led by Bob and other community leaders highlighted the importance of uplifting the work of our elders and their stories. I really appreciated the way Singha built on this historical knowledge to bring forth her own interpretation of mask-making and the roles different “masks” or identities play in the current times. It’s workshops like this one that repeatedly demonstrate the importance of W.O.W. as an intimate community and cultural space that welcomes all generations to gather in learning.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Participant paints a mask at during a
店面 Storefront Residency 20
Participants hold their final projects during a workshop (Photo by Marion Aguas) workshop (Photo by Marion Aguas)
店面 Storefront Residency The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Evan Louis Ryan Wong Juliet Phillips Lorraine Lum Gary Lum Tomie Arai Vincent Chong Clara Lu Eugenie Tsai Tomie Arai
Our jury Visiting Curators Special thanks to: 21
Lena Sze

Internship Program

About the Internship Program

W.O.W.’s internship program provides young people the opportunity to explore and learn about the link between arts and activism, Asian American identity and history, and community-based organizing. During the program, interns work with W.O.W.’s public programs team to gain first hand knowledge on grassroots cultural organizing. The year round interns started the year with weekly orientation meetings to ground themselves in the W.O.W. and Chinatown community before supporting W.O.W.’s second Lunar New Year Celebration and Fundraiser, as well as various public programs and artist talks throughout the fall. In 2019 and 2020, the summer internship brought on a remote cohort of three interns who helped spearhead W.O.W.’s transition from in-person programming to digital programming. They stewarded W.O.W.’s virtual anniversary programming and fundraiser, coordinated the Love Letters to Chinatown project, and contributed to internal work that allowed W.O.W. to adapt to an online audience and a rapidly changing context.

2019-20 Internship Program Accomplishments

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The time and space shared and created through this work was deeply nourishing, engaging, and was such a supportive site of community that made a world of difference in how I navigated this summer. Getting to spend time connecting with the WOW Team and WOW’s work was energizing in a way that keeps me falling in love with the places and people that constitute home, and building faith in the change that is being manifested.”

Growing up, I never really thought about Chinatown as a political or activist space. My experiences of Chinatown were mostly filtered through my parents’ and grandparents’ histories in the neighborhood. I still feel incredibly, ridiculously lucky to have had the opportunity to be a part of the W.O.W. Project, an initiative situated less than five minutes away from my home. I think that I’ve been looking for something like W.O.W. for a long time now without realizing it...The W.O.W. Project has taught me so much about the work that goes into place-based grassroots organizing and I am continually inspired by the dedication, creativity, and insight of everyone that I have been lucky enough to work alongside.”

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 25 “ “
Joy 2020 Summer Intern 2019
Internship Program

Year-Long Interns

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Connor Cai (they/them/theirs) Bonnie Chen (she/her/hers) 2020 Summer Intern Nisma Saadaoui (she/her/hers) 2020 Summer Intern Joy Freund (she/her/hers) 2020 Summer Intern Kristin Chang (she/her/hers) 2020 Program Manager Sony Rai (she/her/hers) Summer Interns Internship
Program
Yuki Haraguchi (she/her/hers) 2019 Managing Summer Intern Emma Tse (she/her/hers) 2019 Summer Intern Alicia Kwok (she/her/hers)
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2019 Summer Intern

“Seeing everyone uplift each other and give space for varying emotions was very touching and grounding...Every occasion where food was involved I am also grateful for. I know I was never alone in these moments.”

The W.O.W. Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Internship Program
Sony Rai, 2020 Year-Long Intern
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Clockwise from top left: Fanny Li, Em He, Yuki Haraguchi, Jade Levine, Alicia Kwok, and Emma Tse pose during W.O.W.’s 3 Year Anniversary celebration (Photo by Yellow Jacket Collective), Screenshot of zoom call with 2020 intern team, Yuki, and Kristin (Photo by Yuki Haraguchi), W.O.W. youth at W.O.W. the Crowd street battle (Photo by Marion Aguas)

Makers Residency

About the Makers Residency

The W.O.W. Makers Residency was a 3-month long opportunity from April 1, 2019 - June 30, 2019 for a maker to refurbish 50+ year old shipping crate wood into a functional object for Chinatown residents. The maker’s design was used to teach woodworking workshops to community members throughout the residency and concluded with a final showcase exhibiting works from both the maker-in-residence and the community, honoring the journey, the raw material made from Hong Kong to New York City and celebrating its new functionality.

Young people from Chinatown Youth Initiatives took part in a series of woodworking workshops as part of our Makers Residency with artist in residence Heidi Ratanavanich and Gary Lum. Participants learned basic woodworking skills and built a convertible shelf/table out of our 50 year old shipping crate wood. Together with Heidi, workshop participants unveiled their final projects during their showcase on October 26th.

This program was made possible by the generous support from:

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Makers Residency Team

About Heidi Ratanavanich

Heidi Ratanavanich is a visual artist and educator born in the Year of the Dog dog. Based in Philadelphia since 2013 with deep feels to Chicago and Thailand. Heidi’s work uses a range of digital and analog media— particularly woodworking, printed matter, broadcasting and public/private gatherings— to inquire upon the politics of place and space. Heidi is specifically interested in the intersection of food sovereignty, ecology and economy. You can find them these days collaborating on FORTUNE and showing up at community driven projects in Philadelphia.

About Gary Lum

Gary Lum has over 50 years of woodworking experience since he began learning in his high school woodshop. He is thrilled to be coming full circle through the Makers residency by sharing his knowledge with Chinatown youth.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Residency
Makers
Gary Lum and Heidi Ratanavanich in W.O.W.’s basement workshop (Photo by Mei Lum)
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REFLECTION BY MAKERS RESIDENCY ARTIST IN RESIDENCE

I had about 8 days of studio time in the W.O.W. woodshop studio [being remote, from Philadelphia]. These visits were: connecting and learning about W.O.W. family, setting up tools and machines for the space, helping on projects when I was around, and spending time experimenting with the old crate wood. The residency brought me closer to the material and overall project each time.

The project I proposed shifted while I was working with the crates. As I got to know these aged crates, I had to accept that the material on its own would not be enough for my original concept. I would have to introduce new material to reinforce the design of a modular furniture – side table to shelf system. I realized that the

project changing actually felt more aligned with the W.O.W. Project itself. This metaphor became clear to me. The crates, like the shop, were going through a transition into a new space, a new thing. Bringing in new material, new support would continue its life.

Wrapping my head around this transition – that changes can be helpful and lead to new ideas that are just as strong as the initial idea was a game changer. I continue to learn how to pivot and move from one idea to another. This was also made possible through numerous conversations with W.O.W. folks (Mei and Gary) and also with my partner, Connie. With this support from them, I felt I could do it. I am grateful.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 Makers Residency
Left to right: Sophia Chok, Emily Wen, and Heidi Ratanavanich at the Maker’s Residency showcase, Kai Huie holds her final project with her dad (Photos by Marion Aguas)
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Arriving at W.O.W., I was welcomed warmly, introduced to other youths of Chinatown, and began learning the craft of woodworking from Heidi and Gary. Although our time was limited, the experience taught me that art wasn’t just about the craft and creation, but also the ability to bring people together and share stories. Each conversation I had, while learning woodworking, taught me something new and expanded my understanding of the world. With this realization, I continued my journey to understand art and Chinatown by applying for the Resist, Recycle, and Regenerate Fellowship this past year. Without the workshop, I would never have known about such an impactful program that continues to positively shape and impact the community.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
” Makers Residency
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Chinatown Youth Initiative participants and Heidi Ratanavich during a workshop (Photo by Mei Lum)

REFLECTION BY GARY LUM

The call for residency applicants did not disappoint. So many talented creatives came out to propose engaging programs for W.O.W. workshops. We are grateful for the responsiveness by everyone. Our collective goal is to keep the creative spirit in each of us alive and thriving.

Our resident artist Heidi was a kind, compassionate and patient instructor and woodworker. She guided our participants, some novice and others with limited experience, with grace. All engaged in a meaningful, respectful way, creating with W.O.W. crate panels. Some built tabletop standing shelf units, others added a convertible end table with legs.

The workshop was abuzz with quiet, focused excitement; sawing, drilling, nailing, sanding, staining and stenciling. Safety was key, awareness of surroundings and help was always a step away. The collaboration and project completion was satisfying and celebrated. What was especially notable was how each builder was supported and trusted the process of making; open to learning, doing and getting it done. This undoubtedly carries forward to the next exploration and foray into creating. Build on!

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Makers Residency
Gary Lum Makers Residency Mentor Gary Lum mentors workshop participants (photo by Mei Lum)
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Our collective goal is to keep the creative spirit in each of us alive and thriving.
The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Residency
Makers
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Clockwise from top: Mei Lum, Heidi Ratanavanich, and CYI participants at the Maker’s Residency showcase, Mei and Gary Lum at the Maker’s Residency showcase, Final project made by Sophia Chok (Photos by Marion Aguas)

Resist Recycle Regenerate (RRR)

About Resist Recycle Regenerate (RRR)

Resist Recycle Regenerate is a youth program that seeks to intersect art and activism through building women, non binary, and trans-centric leadership within the Chinatown community. RRR’s youth mentorship program model promotes young women and non binary youth as leaders and role models to inspire growth and leadership development in their peers through artmaking. Former fellows can become program leaders, mentoring and guiding the next cohort of younger fellows.

The program was organized into three main phases: in the first phase, fellows reclaim cultural practices and build artmaking practices in a women and non binary space. Former fellows taught the cohort how to make paper out of recycled confetti collected during the annual Lunar New Year Parade. Guest artists led workshops on various artmaking skills the fellows would use throughout the program. The first phase ended with the fellow’s collaborative team building project: a paper sculpture lion head.

Under the guidance of the program’s teaching artist, Emily Chow Bluck, the fellows completed their collaborative project and began the second phase of the program by performing in our Lunar New Year W.O.W. the Crowd Street Battle. The fellows developed their facilitation

and programming skills by leading kitemaking community workshops with CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities and a sign making workshop in collaboration with Q-Wave for their Lunar New Year for All campaign. The fellows got first hand experience in grassroots cultural organizing by participating in a protest/action led by Chinatown Art Brigade and delivered a statement condemning Museum of Chinese in America’s jail concession deal.

The third phase of the program synthesized the skills, experiences, and interests that had been fostered throughout the year. Leaders and coordinators continued their growth and development alongside the fellows by participating in a writing workshop led by Huiying B. Dandelion,

RRR’s youth mentorship program model promotes young women and non binary youth as leaders and role models to inspire growth and leadership development in their peers through artmaking. Former fellows can become program leaders, mentoring and guiding the next cohort of younger fellows.

exploring themes of identity, imagination, and storytelling. Program leaders guided the cohort through the process of creating final projects that incorporated the handmade confetti paper and applied the artmaking skills learned during the first phase of the program. Fellows’ projects engaged with themes of personal and collective migration stories, Chinatown history, daughterhood, and diasporic belonging. Fellows had the opportunity to share and discuss their projects with the community during their virtual showcase “Daughters of the Diaspora” . Experimenting with digital platforms and collective storytelling, these web-based projects explored and reimagined what it means to be part of a diaspora in a time of

isolation. By weaving together collective Asian/American histories, personal migration stories, and research about communal and cultural practices, the RRR fellows fostered a women-centered digital space to share their experiences with the program and their exploration of Asian/American selfhood and identity.

RRR cohort craft lion head in the W.O.W. studio space (Photo by Ja Bulsombut) This program was made possible by the generous support from:

RRR Cohort & Leadership Team

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Polaroids of RRRs 2019 - 2020 leadership and staff in front of Wing On Wo & Co. Resist Recycle
Regenerate
Resist Recycle Regenerate 41

RESIST RECYCLE REGENERATE PROGRAM TIMELINE

RESIST RECYCLE REGENERATE PROGRAM TIMELINE

SEPT 2019 Onboarding and Grounding Fellows in Chinatown History

FEB 2020

LNY Parade + Learning Lion Dance + Community Lantern-making

OCT 2019 Art + Activism, Artist Workshops

NOV 2019 Artist Workshops Continue, Lion Head Construction Begins

JAN 2020

LNY Parade Prep

DEC 2019

Lunar New Year (LNY) Paper Mache Lion Build

MARCH 2020 Final Project ideation, shift to virtual workshops

APRIL 2020 Final Projects Continue

2019-20 RRR Program Accomplishments

MAY 2020 Final Project Work Time, RRR Showcase

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
2019-2020
2019-20 Resist Recycle Regenerate 42

REFLECTION BY RRR TEACHING ARTIST

My first year as teaching artist for Resist, Recycle, Regenerate proved to be a most memorable experience. I joined RRR in 2019 in an effort to find more rootedness in the community and cultural life of Chinatown. As an artist and educator with a socially engaged practice and commitment to community organizing and leadership development within Asian diasporic and multiracial communities I was drawn to W.O.W.’s and RRR’s missions like a plant’s leaves are compelled towards the sun.

Some of my favorite moments of RRR were by far the days when the fellows and I worked on the Lunar New Year lion head project. RRR, and specifically the lion head project, provided a

REFLECTION BY GUEST RRR FACILITATOR

We Create Our Own Light was a 5-week class that began at the start of the pandemic. I had planned a workshop series for RRR leaders who were looking for the space and time to nurture and nourish themselves in the midst of all they were doing for others. I created the sessions based on themes from unearthing our power within ancestral connection and imagining the liberated futures we want for ourselves and our communities. I used poetry and speculative fiction of BIPOC writers like Audre Lorde and Alexis Pauline

unique opportunity for me to craft a curriculum that contained a balance of teaching both conventional rigor and community-orientedness.

I loved how the act of creating the lion head required and actively supported not only the cultivation of individual creativity and technique acquisition, but also aptitude for group work, skill sharing, delegation, collaboration, storytelling, and collective decisionmaking. Nothing was more exciting than when a fellow learned how to shape simple reeds into a three dimensional sculptural form or when the group took the fruits of their labor and danced with the lion head at the Lunar New Year Street Battle performance!

Gumbs to reflect on our internal power, and also explore the ways our cultural and intergenerational upbringings both held power, and also kept us from actualizing our fullest selves. We ended our class with a final reading where participants showcased their poems, brimming with the stories from their lives, with an intimate audience. Looking back, I feel proud of how we were able to create deeper understandings of ourselves through writing, in relation to each other, and the work we are doing in the world.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Emily Chow Bluck (they/them/theirs) RRR Teaching Artist huiying b. chan (he/him/his)
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Guest RRR Facilitator

It was incredible to watch the RRR leaders and fellows experiment with confetti paper sculpture, and create an entire lion head with the help of our teaching artist, Emily Chow Bluck. I’ll never forget the feeling of debuting the lion head in front of the crowd, of feeling the collective warmth and care of the environment. It was so exciting to see the lineage of RRR to grow in a self-sustained way, and to see the leadership pipeline continue to flourish. Every year, new fellows and leaders show their dedication toward the program and innovate what we’re able to do and try - it’s always surprising and truly an adventure.

Reflections By The

Stepping into a coordinator role was definitely exciting. I think I had a lot of expectations of how I wanted the program to go [but] a big takeaway for me was to be open-minded, to trust the process and see what comes of it! This became especially clear to me when the program had to go online and I continue to be amazed at how thoughtful, creative and brilliant the fellows’ final projects turned out to be. My favorite RRR memory would definitely be the lion-head dance, but also when we were practicing! Those are the moments when I truly feel we are a community!

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RRR Leadership Team

It was challenging at first stepping into a new role as program leader, but one thing I really took away from this experience is to trust the process. My favorite memory from RRR would be our lion dance performance at the street battle — it was the first time we performed together as a team and we had so much fun rehearsing it hours before! The fellows definitely impacted my RRR experience because each fellow brought something so unique to the sessions each week, and I loved hearing their innovative and creative ideas, individually and as a team.

The past year of RRR has taught me more about leading spaces that foster Asian American creativity, advocacy work, and the learnings of new skill-building techniques. The RRR program has opened up my life to the organizing work of many inspiring scholars, educators, and writers in the field of activism. Our journey from creating a lion head for the Lunar New Year parade to the cumulation of a virtual end-of-year Daughters of the Diaspora showcase were moments of patience and belief in our process. I realized that the creation of stories and art to disrupt power and create social change takes time.

The W.O.W. Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 45 The W O W Project Annual Report: Fiscal Year 2020 Resist Recycle Regenerate

[My biggest takeaway from RRR was] learning about yourself in a new perspective and learning from the other fellows. I feel like RRR introduced me to some topics that I have never really thought about or have been interested in before.

I also never realized how huge of an impact the intersection between art and activism was and am really glad I had the opportunity to. Additionally, I am very inspired by the artists and fellows I met through this program :) and want to bring the things I learned through all walks of life!

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After completing the RRR project, what I took away was a sense of community. I’ve learned a lot about art and activism and culture and also a lot about Wing On Wo and Chinatown. I don’t know any other program that could do that.

I found a community that I’ve never encountered before. One that actively engages in history, activism and supports LGBTQ rights. I’ve learned so much about the community around me and about myself. I am incredibly thankful for RRR for teaching me so much.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
RRR 2020 fellows, leadership, and staff, and interns pose in front of the LNY Lion Head (photo by Marion Aguas)
Resist Recycle Regenerate
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Grassroots Fundraising

W.O.W. Project’s Fundraising Strategy

This year The W.O.W. Project team took a deep dive into learning the power of grassroots fundraising by participating in a workshop supported by NYC Funders Capacity Building Collaborative. We left feeling empowered by the fundraising toolkit we walked away with and the belief that raising our own money with the support of our community is the pathway to liberation. We are stronger and more connected to the work when our community is investing and supporting the programming that is envisioned by us and for us.

Board Member, Em, W.O.W.’s Program Manager, Kristin, and Mei gave birth to our Lunar New Year fundraising campaign during this workshop as a way to pilot our very first peer to peer fundraising model during our community’s most festive time. The success of this fundraiser inspired us to rethink the ways we fundraise with and for the community and how to align our fundraising strategies with our ideals of sustainability, people power, and social justice. We were able to create a model for future fundraisers, deepen our relationship to our community, and build our own skills as a team.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Grassroots Fundraising Lunar New Year Fundraiser $6,700 4 Year Anniversary Fundraiser $32,800 Total Raised $39,500 Peer to Peer Fundraising Auction Sliding Scale Ticket Sales Raffle
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The W.O.W. Project’s Fundraising Strategy

Peer to peer fundraising rallies our W.O.W. community champions to lead a team of close friends and allies to help fundraise for W.O.W.’s collective fundraising goal. It harnesses people power in fueling our work and makes sure the people who are participating in our programs also have a stake in their growth and development.

Peer to Peer Fundraising Auction

Auctions showcase the ways in which artists can support community efforts through the donation of their artwork. This year, heartbroken by the devastating fire at 70 Mulberry and the damage it had on our community archives, we gathered over 20 artists to raise $10,000 to support the Museum of Chinese in America in rebuilding their archive that documents our neighborhood’s most treasured mementos, artifacts, and stories.

Sliding Scale Ticket Sales

As part of our fundraising campaigns, we have also held community programming as a way to not only create space for connection, but also as a way to contribute to our fundraising efforts. With sliding scale donation ticket sales, we were able to contribute a significant amount to our 4 year anniversary fundraising campaign.

Raffle

Raffles allow for a more accessible way for our community to plug into our fundraising efforts by requiring $10 for entry. During our 4 year anniversary, Wing on Wo ran a rug raffle to contribute to The W.O.W. Project’s fundraising efforts, raising almost $2,000 in ticket sales.

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The W.O.W. Project Lunar New Year Fundraising Campaign

To usher in the Year of the Metal Rat, W.O.W. kicked off its first-ever peer-to-peer fundraiser to harness the community’s collective power for a bold start to the new year. The W.O.W. the Crowd LNY Fundraising Campaign rallied community members to become team captains who recruited 3 or more of their friends and close allies to raise $500 as a team in the spirit of helping W.O.W. continue our cultural organizing work in Chinatown. Our goal was to mobilize 10 teams in order to fundraise $5,000 to kick off W.O.W.’s new year. Each team also received the chance to participate in a friendly dance/karaoke/performance street battle where each team had the opportunity to welcome in all of the good spirits into the W.O.W. storefront through music and song. At the culminating street battle, RRR team performed a lion dance with their hand-made confetti paper lion head. We raised a total of $6360.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Grassroots Fundraising Peer to Peer Fundraising

“This was our first-ever peer-to-peer fundraiser, and it was exciting to interact with and train members of the community in grassroots fundraising strategies. I learned that fundraising doesn’t have to be a topdown model: rather, it can be playful, innovative, and energetic, guided and led by the community who are most invested in and impacted by our work. I owe a lot of our knowledge and strategy to the series of grassroots fundraising training led by New York Women’s Foundation and North Star Fund. Attending these training sessions allowed me to interact with other grassroots organizations across the boroughs, and their work and resilience inspired me deeply. It was wonderful to transfer this knowledge to others in our community and to make conversations about money and fundraising more accessible and empowering rather than intimidating.

Grassroots Fundraising

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Clockwise from top left: May Chen leads a performance during the W.O.W. the Crowd street battle, Kristin Chang performs during the W.O.W. the Crowd street battle Mei Lum, Bob Lee, and Monica Chen at the W.O.W. the Crowd street battle (Photos by Marion Aguas)

4 Year Anniversary: W.O.W. Care as Community Medicine Fundraising Campaign

Our 4 year anniversary celebration came at a difficult time of both grief and rage, calling us to celebrate our 4 year milestone by deepening our commitment to building a pathway to liberation through collective care grounded in Chinatown. With this in mind, in honor of W.O.W.’s 4 year anniversary, we set an ambitious fundraising goal of $50,000, with 50% of the funds raised not only for The W.O.W. Project’s 5th year programming but also to support the resilience of NYC’s Chinatown and an abolitionist future re-envisioning community safety. Through a combination of donations from ticket sales for our 6 online programs, matching donations, and a raffle, we raised our largest total to date of $32,000. We split the funds with 3 organizations to support their incredible sustained work in their respective communities: Chinatown Youth Initiatives, a community based organization that works to build a legacy of leaders who strengthen awareness of self-identity and community issues through project initiatives, Communities United for Police Reform, a NYC campaign fighting for reforms that promote community safety and police accountability and The Black Excellence Collective, a black-led grassroots organizing collective that that uses direct action, art, and popular education to uplift and empower queer, transgender and gender non conforming people of color.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 Grassroots Fundraising
Auction Sliding Scale Ticket Sales Raffle

With the funding, we were able to offer all summer interns a stipend for their summer work, and were able to expand the number of internships to 13 this year. We’ve had record numbers of interested students for both our Summer Leadership Institute and Chinatown Beautification Day, as well as many returning youth leaders from last year. Fundraising never ends and we’re already thinking about fundraising for the following summer. But in many ways, The W.O.W. Project’s generous funding transfer helped the board reimagine boldly and urgently, which is incredibly important for our community today.“

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Chinatown Youth Initiatives during their Chinatown Beautification Day program.
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Special Programs

Special Programs

W.O.W.’s Special Programs works to serve the community through hosting events and facilitating conversation addressing relevant issues; stretching across generations, differing economic backgrounds, as well as language barriers. W.O.W.’s programs have explored topics such as intergenerational approaches to homemaking and community building, resisting co-optation of these spaces by gentrifying forces and white supremacy, as well as the heightened importance of these efforts in light of the global pandemic that has put these communities at heightened risk. W.O.W.’s programming this year created accessible alternative spaces for community engagement and fostered a sense of connection, resilience, and most importantly, hope in the midst of the particular challenges of this year. This year, W.O.W. hosted several public programs spanning a range of mediums and formats including panel discussions, workshops, and exhibitions such as Homeward Bound in Boston, and artistic community initiatives including Love Letters to Chinatown and its associated mural project.

Abrons & W.O.W. Project Lunar New Year Party

Homeward Bound

Love Letters to Chinatown

4 Year Anniversary: Care As Community Medicine Programs

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Abrons & W.O.W. Project Lunar New Year Party

Abrons Arts Center and Wing on Wo & Co. rang in the Year of the Metal Rat with a celebration for the Lower East Side and Chinatown community, featuring live performances by MazuDogs,

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Wan Chi Ming Hung Gar Institute Dragon and Lion Dance Team, Vincent Chong and Wo Chan, karaoke, and DJ sets by HU DAT, Ushka, OHYUNG, and Yasmin Adele Majeed.
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Clockwise from top left: LNY Year of the Metal Rat 2020 by Taehee Whang, children interact with lion dancers performing in the black box theater at Abrons (Photo by Shaira Caer) Alison Kuo and Noa Kasman lead an arts activity (Photo by Shaira Caer) Vincent Chong and Wo Chan perform on stage (Photo courtesy of Vincent Chong)
Special Programs

Homeward Bound in Boston

Pao Arts Center hosted Homeward Bound: Global Intimacies in Converging Chinatowns, an exhibition curated by queer Chinese American scholars, organizers, and artists Mei Lum, Diane Wong, and Huiying B. Chan. Homeward Bound centers narratives of home, community, and intergenerational resistance.

The exhibition draws from four years of ethnographic research and oral history interviews with the Chinese diaspora that spans nine countries and 13 cities.

The installation uses photographs, oral histories, and multimedia archives to highlight stories of migration, displacement, and everyday resilience in Chinatowns around the world. This exhibition is the first of its kind to honor, preserve, and build on the history and present day issues of Chinatowns through community-led and curated narratives from residents globally.

This project really made me more intentionally historicize the kind of gentrification that we’re seeing in Chinatown… There’s a lot of historical connections that can be made to the kind of disinvestment and now gentrification that we’re seeing of American Chinatowns and I think making those cross-country, cross-city connections is really integral to the future fight around evictions, around displacement. And I think it really highlights the kind of rich history of resistance and political agency that exists within these neighborhoods.

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Clockwise from top left: Diane leads a digital tour of the Homeward Bound exhibit installed at the Pao Arts Center in Boston’s Chinatown (Photo by Mei Lum), photo gallery from the Homeward Bound exhibit (Photo by Hannah Claudia), Diane Wong, Huiying B. Dandelion, and Mei Lum at the Homeward Bound exhibit (Photo by Clara Lu)

The conversation that we had when we first landed with Roy and Erica [of Chinatown Community Development Center in San Francisco] really stuck with me: Whose Chinatown is this? What are we holding on to when we say we want Chinatown to stay the same?… When we think about an intergenerational community, all of our memories and nostalgia of home are different, and so what does that mean for our future? It just made me really think about what it means to build bridges across generations in order to have a common understanding of what we’re working towards, or what we want to build collectively…I’m still thinking about that now in my work.

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Clockwise from top left: “Displacement” wall from the Homeward Bound exhibit (Photo by Clara Lu), Visitors walk through the exhibit (Photo by Hannah Claudia), Diane Wong and huiying b. chan present during the opening of the Homeward Bound exhibit (Photo by Pao Arts Center) Huiying b. chan speaking to visitors and visitors walking through the exhibit (Photo by Pao Arts Center)
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This work is also a huge remembering, it’s a remembering of our roots and a preservation of our community in order to be able to shape its future. But it’s also like a huge remembering that is very much against the colonial education that we get in this country, the white history, and the white supremacist ideologies and values that get ingrained in us to forget where we come from and just assimilate or value other things.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Top to bottom: Exhibit wall from Homeward Bound exhibit (Photo by Clara Lu), Anju Madhok and Mei Lum set up the “Home” exhibit wall (Photo by Diane Wong)
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huiying b. chan, Homeward Bound Curator

Love Letters to Chinatown

The Love Letters to Chinatown (LLTC) 給唐人街情書 project sought to collect love letters, poems, illustrations, paintings, etc. inspired and dedicated to Chinatown to help uplift our neighborhood in its darkest times. The project invited members in the community and across the diaspora to submit art: poetry, stories, letters, illustrations in response to Huiying B. Dandelion’s prompt: Write a love letter to a person, business, or organization you hold dear in Chinatown. Consider Chinatown as a living being. What would you say to Chinatown during this time? What do you want her to know? What stories do you want to share?

Volunteers translated the letters, and another group of volunteers posted them around the neighborhood according to our no-contact policy. By posting the letters across Chinatown, we hoped to bring love and care to our community, reminding us that we are resilient. These messages of love and support stood in contrast to empty community spaces and notices of business closures. A selection of submitted love letters were also archived in an interactive map website designed spearheaded by the summer interns and designed in collaboration with Aaron Reiss.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Left to right: Nisma Saadaoui posting Love Letters around Chinatown (Photo courtesy of Nisma Saadaoui), Love letter to Chinatown by Ally Pratt
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Clockwise from top left: Love Letter to Happy Star Bakery by D Zhou, Love Letter to Chinatown by Laura E, “Add Oil” love letter by Mara Man, Love Letter to the Park on Forsyth St (Photo by LLTC Volunteers), Posted love letter to Tan Tin Hung Supermarket (Photo by LLTC Volunteers)

W.O.W. PROJECT 4 YEAR ANNIVERSARY PROGRAMS

As a final closeout to the summer-long 4 Year Anniversary series and celebration, we curated a digital Care as Community Medicine Care Package which compiled materials for community care and resilience, drawing elements from each of the events. Inspired by the Smithsonian APA Center’s digital care package, the Care as Community Medicine Care Package collated media to explore what healing, resiliency, and grounding can look like during this particular time of grief and rage, while making room for hope. It draws from ideas of healing and regeneration explored in Chinese medicine, in which everything is interconnected, fluid, and cyclical. Our hope is that by giving our community the tools we need to care for ourselves, we expand our capacity to love and nurture the relationships necessary for the many fights ahead.

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We Are Resilient: A National Conversation Across Chinatowns

A moderated discussion by Adriel Luis featuring a panel of groups from Chinatown communities across North America coming together to address urgent concerns in our various communities and for unity, solidarity, and community care. We were honored to be in community with San Francisco’s Chinatown community members and organizers Carmen Chen and Vida Kuang along with Chinese Cultural Center of San Francisco, organizers from AYPAL in Oakland’s Chinatown, members of Chinatown Community for Equitable Development from Los Angeles, Youth leaders and community organizers CPA Boston’s Chinese Youth Initiative and Pao Arts Center in Boston, members of Chinatown-International District (CID) Coalition in Seattle’s Chinatown, members from aiya哎呀 collective in Edmonton, Canada and members of the 1882 Foundation in Washington D.C.

A Lineage of Healing: A Workshop with TCM Practitioner Donna Mah

A workshop on Traditional Chinese practices/remedies/pressure points for participants at home to learn more about caring for themselves and healing in ways that are both personal and collective. During the workshop, Donna taught us about the five elements form a dynamic cycle that feed each other in a continuous pattern - highlighting the ways in which everything from the personal to global is interconnected, fluid, and cyclical. Using the five element cycle, Donna offered participants ways to care for ourselves and our communities.

Movement as Grounding: A Qigong Workshop with Lingji and Singha Hon

Lingji and Singha Hon led a guided Qigong session and tutorial to help participants ground themselves with spiritual wisdom, learning the beginnings of the path to complete liberation through movement.

Masks as Protection: A Workshop with Cantonese Opera Performer Mee Mee Chin

In collaboration with Singha Hon and Alison Kuo, Mee Mee Chin guided participants through a Cantonese Opera make-up tutorial and other preparations for performance delving into how we share emotion through masks and makeup.

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Illustrations by Sarula Bao

Open Mic: Imagining Our Irresistible Futures

Our intern-led Open Mic that brought together NYC’s communities of color to imagine our futures grounded in care, healing, and resilience. Featured artists and presenters included poets Franny Choi and Kay Ulanday Barrett, healers Seyi Adebanjo and Charlie L’Strange from the NYC POC Healing Circle, artists Joseph Cuillier and Mitchell Reece from The Black School, and Jarrad Packard and Andrea Torres from Urban Indigenous Collective.

WOW 4 Year Anni Celebration Party

The celebration of our four year anniversary culminated in a performance and celebration featuring performances from the W.O.W. team, other members of the Chinatown and diasporic community including Cynthia Qian, Clara Lu, Vincent Chong, Mark Tseng Putterman, and DJ sets by OHYUNG and Yasmin Adele Majeed.

Working with the W.O.W. Project to produce Masks as Protection was a life changing experience for me. As a biracial artist who does not have deep roots in the Manhattan Chinatown, WOW offered me a helping hand to reach out to the Chinese Opera community here, and then a platform, amazing collaborators, and a wonderful audience with whom I was able to build this opportunity for all of us to learn and form bonds based around our love for Asian American performance culture. The W.O.W. Project is leading the way for artists and organizations to do this type of engagement work that is accessible, equitable, anti-racist and deocolonial. While these are some “buzz words” of our time, the real life result is incredibly personal and touching.

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As a final closeout to the summer-long 4 Year Anniversary series and celebration, we curated a digital Care as Community Medicine Care Package which compiled materials for community care and resilience, drawing elements from each of the events. Inspired by the Smithsonian APA Center’s digital care package, the Care as Community Medicine Care Package collated media to explore what healing, resiliency, and grounding can look like during this particular time of grief and rage, while making room for hope. It draws from ideas of healing and regeneration explored in Chinese medicine, in which everything is interconnected, fluid, and cyclical. Our hope is that by giving our community the tools we need to care for ourselves, we expand our capacity to love and nurture the relationships necessary for the many fights ahead.

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Illustration by Singa Hon and bottom illustration by Sarula Bao

“Amidst a year of searching and isolation, We Are Resilient offered me a cherished opportunity to connect with the community in such a meaningful way. Moderating a conversation with thoughtful and deeply invested people from Chinatowns across North America inspired me to reflect on how critical Chinatowns have been in my own life and lineage, and invigorated my sense of responsibility for their futures. To this day, I remain connected with the people I met, and have also incorporated modes of healing that I learned from the Care As Community Medicine series into my everyday practice. I am so grateful for the W.O.W. Project for leading us toward a vision where we can honor our histories by thriving together.

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Graphic notes for We Are Resilient: A National Conversation Across Chinatowns program, by Clara Lu.

“Conceptualized in the earliest days of the pandemic and our collective isolation, the workshop started with ideas around a virtual offering of select Chinese Medicine-based practices to help folks ground and take care of themselves at home. The killing of George Floyd on May 25, 2020 and our universal reckoning with the historic, systemic, communal and personal threads that demand, question, and contemplate justice - altered our consciousness and thus, the frame of the workshop. More than ever, the container of our gathering, in virtual space, needed to be broad enough to contain the whole of our experience, name and unnamed, as we came together. Concepts of “lineage” in the millenia-old health and healing systems of Chinese medicine, and the traditions we’ve encountered through the hands and hearts of our elders and community aimed to connect us to the depths of our capacities to hold, heal and transform.

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Illustration by Singha Hon depicting the 5 elements from our Lineage of Healing program with TCM practitioner Donna Mah.

“Stewarding W.O.W. Project’s first virtual anniversary programming series was really intriguing witnessing and experimenting with ways of creating and holding nonphysical space. It was a challenge trying to access and build a sense of connection over Zoom where the closest thing to feeling and getting a read for a group energy was entering gallery view mode. There’s so much that you miss when you are limited to hosting in virtual space that

gave me a heightened appreciation for the power of in person gathering. We certainly got familiar with navigating technical difficulties but the patience and continued enthusiasm of the community was a great source of encouragement. In spite of these challenges, there were some really magical moments where the physical isolation seemed to melt away to reveal a deeply felt connection, proving just what is possible in these circumstances.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020 Special Programs
Screenshot of featured guests and performers from Open Mic: Imagining Our Irresistible Futures Franny Choi Poet Joseph Cuillier III The Black School Charlie L’Strange NYC POC Healing Circle Mitchell Reece The Black School Kay Ulanday Barret Affiliation Seyi Adebanjo
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NYC POC Healing Circle

“In a year full of memorable experiences and challenges, co-hosting the Movement as Grounding workshop with my sister Singha was one of the brightest moments. Im so grateful and honored to have taken part in W.O.W. Project’s courageous, collective journey toward healing and liberation.

In this year of isolation, like many, I‘ve realized how essential family, community, and connection is to leading a healthy and vital life. The creative process of developing the workshop with my sister led us deep into vulnerable and magical spaces through the trusting bond of sisterhood. We explored our unique lineage and

experiences learning Taiji Quan and Qigong from our father, while cultivating our own healing rituals within an empowered and personal framework of divine femininity.

It means so much to me that I’m still in contact with several of the workshop participants who take my online classes. As a New Yorker living in Berlin, maintaining this connection to communities in the US broadens my perspective and brings a much needed feeling of “home” to my life abroad.

Thank you W.O.W.!!

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Screenshot from Movement as Grounding

Looking Forward

Reflecting on The W.O.W. Project’s Upcoming Program Year

This program year brought unexpected challenges to our work and to our communities both in and out of New York. The W.O.W. Project’s work has always been about building community and connecting with cultural heritage together — across generations, language barriers, and relationships to Asian America. As we enter our fifth program year at a time when Chinatowns across the US are facing uncertainty through multiple crises, questions we ask ourselves about resilience and community-building feel more important than ever. Who makes up our communities? What is the importance of place-based work in a virtual world? How can we show up for each other?

As we grow as an organization and a team, we want to ensure that any growth comes intentionally and in ways that help us answer these questions and center our values. In 2019, at this year’s team retreat, we spent time refocusing on what mission-driven work can look like for us going forward, as well as on grounding ourselves and our own agency in today’s political conditions.

Our virtual anniversary programming this summer focused on imagining our collective futures through healing, caring for each other, and fighting for Chinatown’s resiliency and building our solidarity practice with the movement for Black lives. While we incorporate into a non-profit, build our partnerships with other Chinatown organizations, and continue our core programs this upcoming year, we hope to stay grounded in the healing we’ve begun together in 2020.

We are so grateful for the opportunity to keep dreaming and growing with you in this program year and those to come.

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Looking Forward
- The W.O.W. Project Board Members
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We hope to stay grounded in the healing we’ve begun together in 2020.

As we look ahead to our 5 Year Anniversary, we hope to continue the momentum of our digital community-building and celebrate the momentous milestone of 5 years. We plan to host either digital or hybrid programming around the theme of growth and planting seeds, commemorating the long-lasting relationships between W.O.W. and partner organizations and collaborators. In our first year of our Civic Practice Partnership

Residency at The Met we will be holding programs about vessels and community care to explore what we carry and what we hold. Heading into 2021, our Artist Residency, Resist Recycle Regenerate program, and the Internship program have shifted into the digital space. Despite these changes, W.O.W. remains a space where we organize, reflect, and care for each other.

The W.O.W. Project Program Team

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
Left to right: LNY ceramic vessel’s wishing well, LNY ceramic vessel’s ox made by Heidi Lau (Photos by Heidi Lau)
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The W.O.W. Project Team

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Screenshot of The W.O.W. Project team meeting, clockwise left to right: Bonnie Chen, Clara Lu, Mei Lum, Joy Freund, Emily Chow Bluck, huiying b. chan, Nisma Saadaoui, Kristin Chang, Diane Wong, Angela Chan, Yuki Haraguchi, Em He, Singha Hon, Jade Levine
Looking Forward
W.O.W. feels like a space where things are abundant and possible as long as we have our creativity and imagination.
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huiying b. chan

Special Thanks

We couldn’t do this without our incredible community and supporters. These programs were made possible by the generous support from:

Funders

Fiscal Sponsor

NYFA (New York Foundation for the Arts)

Community Partners

CYI

NYCJW

Abrons Art Center

QWave

Pao Arts Center

CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities

Chinatown Art Brigade (CAB)

Chinatown Youth Initiatives (CYI)

United East Athletics Association (UEAA)

Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA)

Q Wave

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Donors

W.O.W. Elder 長老

Jeffrey Bandeen

W.O.W. Auntie/Uncle 阿姨 /叔叔

Thomas Finkelpearl

Stephanie Shih

Neal Bermas

W.O.W. Benefactor 恩人

Eugenie Tsai

Elizabeth Strickler

Emma Karasz

W.O.W. Collaborator 合作伴儿

Olympia Moy

Zhi-Da Zhong

Stevie Huynh

Ava Hama

W.O.W. Friend 朋友

Julie Lee

May Ying Chen

Janet Hon

W.O.W. Neighbor 鄰居

Hana Sun

Mélissa Emily

Corky Lee

May Chen

Rocky Chin

Amanda Estrine

Diane Gibson

Cal Hsiao

Joyce Ligh

Joanna Lui

Nate Nworb

Walter Tian

Lu Yang

Lena Sze

Julia Lubey

Cal Hsiao

Denise Zhou

Rebecca Fitton

Val Chan

Gordon Mark

Pam & Joe McCarthy

Ruby Martin

Anna Harsanyi

Randall Kennedy

Dan Ping He

Jane Joseph

Alison Kuo

Curtis Ho

Katie Browning

Maggie Dillon

Ben Israelow

Tinyan Lui

W.O.W. Community Member 社區成員

RG McCarrick

Minerva Chin

Frederick Smith

Yasmin Majeed

Randy Frankel

Kemi Ilesanmi

Hoi Leung

Diana Zheng

Gabriel Sands

Nitai Deitel

Christina Chung

Natalie Fang

Julie Schneider

Tong Xiang

Hannah Joseph

Billy Bang

Monica Chen

Amy Chin

Esther Cohen

Alex Hing

Nick Lo

Michael Mah

Greg Milo

Robert Rusli

Walter Schiffer

Erica Sze-Tu

Jane Tian

Pearl Wong

Monona Yin

Diana Zeng

Kevin Gallagher

Trinh Nguyen

Charlotte Fleming

Charlene Wang de Chen

Max Wilson

Mary Kennedy

Alex MacLeish

Alexandra Smith

Christine Coll

Julie Nguyen

Clair Beltran

Lili Brown

Shannon Daniels

Molly Lang

Diana Chan

Calvin Stalvig

Robyn Trem

Aleta Phelps

Nina Huang

Hana Sun

Melanie Wang

Benjamin Lundberg Sanchez

Lilly Lam

Dan Lau

Arthur Soong

Tomie Arai

Rachel Chung

Curtis Ho

E Ying Murphy

Grace Lin

Jan Lee

Katie Yun

Emma Karasz

Linda Zhang

Tracie Hall

Jacki Hom

Joanie Wang

Cynthia Char

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How To Get Involved

@wowprojectnyc

Credits

The W O W Project Annual Report Fiscal Year 2020
wowprojectnyc.org
26 Mott Street, New York, NY 10013
Report design by Clara Lu with help from Yuki Haraguchi, Singha Hon, and the W O W Project team Front cover photo taken by Marion Aguas Back cover photo taken by Marion Aguas
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