The Smithsonian's initiative on documenting Asians in America started humbly enough two decades ago, with a borrowed exhibit in a borrowed museum wing and a tiny staff.
1 / 6Lisa Sasaki, the director of the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, poses for a photograph in front of the Smithsonian Castle on the National Mall in Washington, Monday, May 13, 2019. On May 18, the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center launches a $25 million fundraising drive for permanent gallery space on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. with a glitzy party in Los Angeles full of celebrities and politicians..
"Whenever we needed to do a public lecture or exhibit, I had to go beg one of these other institutions to lend a space," Odo said."We had to really convince our colleagues that this was a field, this was a demographic ... that needed to be recognized and needed to be held with some respect." "The ability to have that visibility and recognition is so important," said Lisa Sasaki, the center's director. Despite temporary exhibits along the mall, she said,"there has never been a dedicated space where the public could consistently visit and find out about the history and culture of Asian Americans."
He says the Asian American community has evolved enough as an identity to support a permanent gallery dedicated to their shared experience in America. Sasaki says $25 million is a fundraising goal for phase one of the project. Congressional approval is not required for a gallery within existing space, unlike the stand-alone 400,000-square-foot National Museum of African American History and Culture, which opened in 2016 .
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