The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II, died on Feb. 10 in Manhattan. She was 88 and lived in Manhattan. Miss Okubo, who pronounced her first name mee-neh, was one of 110,000 Japanese and... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II, died on Feb. 10 in Manhattan. She was 88 and lived in Manhattan. Miss Okubo, who pronounced her first name mee-neh, was one of 110,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans living in Western states who were evacuated from their homes early in 1942. They were interned by the federal government as a precautionary measure, a move that has been much criticized. Two- thirds of the internees were, like... Read full biography
The following obituary is from The New York Times:. Miné Okubo, Whose Art Chronicled Internment Camps, Dies at 88. February 25, 2001, By ERIC PACE. Miné Okubo, a Japanese-American artist who recorded in 2,000 drawings. and a book what she saw and felt as an internee in American detention camps for Japanese and Japanese-Americans during World War II, died on Feb. 10 in Manhattan. She was 88 and lived in Manhattan. Miss Okubo, who pronounced her first name mee-neh, was one of 110,000 Japanese and Japanese-Americans living in Western states who were evacuated from their homes early in 1942. They were interned by the federal government as a precautionary measure, a move that has been much criticized. Two- thirds of the internees were, like her, American citizens. She was born to Japanese immigrant parents in Riverside, Californ... Read full biography
Mine Okubo - Artist Info
About Mine Okubo: Books
Books & Publications (22)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
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