FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PRESS RELEASE - April 1999
Asia
Society Presents Special Event
"The Eighth Orphic Feast: Edible Still Life
in Clay"
A "happening"
called The
Eighth Orphic Feast: Edible Still Life in Clay
will delight guests at the Asia Society on Friday,
May 21 at 7:00 P.M. The Asia Society is located
at 725 Park Avenue (at 70th Street), New York City.
Dress is "black tie and comfortable shoes."
Created
by artists Mimi Oka and Doug Fitch, "Orphic
Feasts" engage audiences in an artistic experience
that uses food as a medium. "Edible Still
Life in Clay" will combine the tradition
of still-life painting with an old Chinese recipe
known as Beggar's Chicken, which calls for a chicken
to be wrapped first in lotus leaves, then in clay,
and then baked. Fitch and Oka will collaborate
with guest chef Marc Felix, chef/owner of La Folie
restaurant in Taos, New Mexico, on innovative
recipes - far beyond the traditional chicken dishes.
Ingredients will be wrapped first in a variety
of organic skins such as emptied pineapples, lotus
leaves or hollowed breads, and then swathed in
wet clay. Then the clay will be formed into an
amazing variety of objects and shapes by a team
of visual artists, and assembled into a still-life
installation.
When guests arrive to enjoy the cocktail hour,
the still life will be waiting for them to peruse.
Guests will choose their favorite sculptures,
and, with hammers, break them open to reveal their
mystery dinner, delectably cooked inside. Aprons,
which the guests may take home with them after
the event, will be provided.
Tickets
for this special once-in-a-lifetime event are
$300 per person. For reservations and further
information: (212) 327-9360 or -9235.
The Asia
Society is America's leading institution dedicated
to fostering understanding of Asia and communication
between Americans and the peoples of Asia and
the Pacific. A nonprofit, nonpartisan educational
institution, the Asia Society presents a wide
range of programs including major art exhibitions,
performances, media programs, international conferences
and lectures, and initiatives to improve elementary
and secondary education about Asia. The Asia Society
is headquartered in New York City, with regional
centers in Washington, D.C., Houston, Los Angeles,
Hong Kong, Manila and Melbourne, Australia, and
representative offices in San Francisco, Seattle
and Shanghai. The Asia Society is on the Worldwide
Web (www.asiasociety.org).