Title:
Miss Mine Okubo, Nisei, who resettled to New York from the Topaz Center, is speaking at a tea in her ...Date:
1945-03-06Subject:
Japanese Americans--Evacuation and relocation, 1942-1945--PhotographsNote:
Full title:Miss Mine Okubo, Nisei, who resettled to New York from the Topaz Center, is speaking at a tea in her honor at the
opening of an exhibit of her drawings and paintings of center life at the American Common in New York City on March 6, under
the auspices of the Common Council for American Unity. Miss Okubo came East in 1944 to serve as contributing artist to Fortune
Magazine's special issue on Japan. She has also contributed to the New York Times, Saturday Review of Literature, Survey Graphic,
and Lamp. She recently completed a manuscript for a book about the evacuation of Japanese Americans from the West Coast. Born
in Riverside, Calif., her art work has been widely exhibited on the West Coast, where she won several prizes. The University
of California awarded her the B.A. and M.A. degrees, and in 1938 its highest art honor--the Bertha Henicke Taussig Memorial
Traveling Fellowship. On this she studied for two years in Europe. She returned to this country when the war started and began
work almost immediately at the Golden Gate Fair, demonstrating fresco painting. She was evacuated to the Tanforan Center in
May 1942 and taught art for six months. At Central Utah, she was on the staff of the Topaz Times and art editor of Trek. Her
father, a married brother and family are at the Poston Center. Another brother teaches art at Heart Mountain. A married sister
and family resettled in Brooklyn, N.Y. Two other brothers are in the U.S. Army--Pvt. Senji, who recently returned from France
with the Purple Heart after service with the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, and Pfc. Soku, who is stationed at Fort Snelling,
Minn.<lb/> Photographer: Fujihira, Toge<lb/> New York, New York.
Local Call Number:
WRA no. G-827
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Related Item:
METACOLLECTION:
Voices in Confinement: A Digital Archive of Japanese-American Internees