Nov 12 Wednesday
Our 2025 Request for Qualifications (RFQ) stems from Hui Mo‘olelo, a program that cultivates site-specific stories through community workshops rooted in Maui County. Selected artists will interpret one of these stories as a work of visual, performance, or experiential public art developed in collaboration with community members. The goal of these public art projects is to promote the unique history, culture and community of distinct sites throughout the County of Maui.
Please review each project description below carefully and base your proposal on one of the provided story excerpts. (Click https://vimeo.com/939718380 to view a 5-minute film summarizing this work.) We will accept submissions from a variety of disciplines, but are particularly interested in funding the following categories:- New Media Projects (light, projection, or digital installations)- Fine Art Performances (pop-up performances, street performances, or happenings)- Interactive or Participatory Projects (works that invite audience or community engagement)- Mural or Surface-Based Projects ( large-scale wall, column, or railing installations)- Experiential or Environmental Art Installations (landscape-scale or site-integrated works)
Artist applications will be reviewed by a community panel. Selected artists will then enter a collaborative development phase, working closely with community members, Maui Public Art Corps, and partners to refine their initial ideas into a site-specific, participatory artwork. This process includes identifying a proverb from Mary Kawena Pukui’s ʻŌlelo No‘eau: Hawaiian Proverbs and Poetical Sayings to ground each work in historical and cultural context.
Application requirements: Applications will only be received via CaFÉ and will not be accepted after the marked deadline. Entry Deadline: 11/30/25 at 11:59 p.m. MST
Apply HERE https://artist.callforentry.org/festivals_unique_info.php?ID=16305
Nov 13 Thursday
This event is a part of Honouliuli National Historic Site's 10th Anniversary Celebration.
This presentation will begin with a short description of the game of Go and its strategy. It will then cover the history of Go in Japan from its arrival in the 6th century to the present. Upon its introduction into Japan, the game was first played by court nobility then eventually spread to the samurai class and then to the general population. The game enjoyed institutional support by the Tokugawa Shoguns from the 17th to 19th centuries and the Shoguns gave the strongest Go player a governmental position with a stipend. Professional Go players emerged in the 20th century with major corporations sponsoring Go tournaments much like corporations sponsor tennis and golf tournaments in the West.
Kobashigawa will then cover the history of Go in Hawaii from the time of the arrival of Japanese immigrants to the outbreak of the war with Japan, ending with the discussion of the significance of Go at the Honouliuli Internment Camp as well as all the mainland interment camps. Two Honouliuli internees will be highlighted. Both were Japanese Americans born in Hawaii, interned at Honouliuli, then sent to mainland interment camps and, of course, played Go during their internment days.
Go is also a popular game in Korea, although it is unknown if the 2,700 Korean POWs played it while incarcerated.
Sid Kobashigawa spent 16 years of teaching the class "Buddhist Philosophy and the Game of Go" at Punahou School to over 180 local students each year.
Nov 14 Friday
DJ Jet Boy spins an eclectic set at mixcloud.com/live/djjetboy808 November 5 6pm
Nov 15 Saturday
Nov 16 Sunday
Nov 17 Monday
Nov 18 Tuesday
Nov 19 Wednesday