@SFOMuseum Twitter Posts Tagged aapiheritagemonth This is SFO Museum's archive of the @SFOMuseum Twitter account. There are 20 posts and this is page 2 of 2. See all the tags or all the Twitter posts that have been archived so far.
Born in India and raised in Chicago, writer and director Amrita Singh presents the story of thirteen-year-old Aishwarya Narayanan who questions the meaning of success while vying for a spot at the prestigious National Spelling Bee. #VideoArts #VideoArtsSFO #AAPIHeritageMonth https://t.co/YYqdrkCe9M
This tweet was posted on May 04, 2023.
See "Namoo House” by Joyce Hsu post-security in International Terminal A and online at: https://t.co/BNpmPynPvd #JoyceHsu #APAHM #AAPIHeritageMonth #AAPIHM #publicart @SFAC
This tweet was posted on May 02, 2023.
The graphic background is a stylized aerial view of SFO’s runways and terminals. The flowers and insects are reminiscent of model airplanes coming in for a landing. #JoyceHsu #APAHM #AAPIHeritageMonth #AAPIHM #publicart @SFAC
This tweet was posted on May 02, 2023.
“Namoo” is a Korean word that implies nature. The title of “Namoo House” by Joyce Hsu suggests that the airport fuses science, nature, and imagination to become the transit home for all travelers. #JoyceHsu #APAHM #AAPIHeritageMonth #AAPIHM #publicart @SFAC
This tweet was posted on May 02, 2023.
Joyce Hsu is a Bay Area artist best known for her mechanized creatures that inhabit a fantasy world of the artist’s creation. #JoyceHsu #APAHM #AAPIHeritageMonth #AAPIHM #publicart @SFAC
This tweet was posted on May 02, 2023.
Jason G. Yuen worked at SFO for 24 years from 1968 to 1992 as the director of Planning and Construction and after he retired, the chairman of the Master Plan Advisory Board. Read more about him: https://t.co/pK5nKgLkYZ #aapi #aapihm #aapiheritagemonth
This tweet was posted on May 13, 2022.
See “The Central Pacific” by #PhilipCheung, on display, post-security in Terminal 3. https://t.co/upNlGh3FEz #AAPIHeritageMonth
This tweet was posted on May 26, 2019.
Photographer #PhilipCheung documents 690 miles of railroad track between Sacramento, CA & Promontory, UT. In examining the landscape of these 3 states, Cheung focuses on nineteenth-century Chinese migrant workers’ contributions to the transcontinental railroad. #AAPIHeritageMonth
This tweet was posted on May 26, 2019.






