Topaz Toddlers Exhibition: Children’s Art from an American Concentration Camp

Topaz Toddlers Exhibition: Children’s Art from an American Concentration Camp

Free
Fri, Mar 13, 2026 — Sat, Mar 14, 2026

About this event

Arts & Culture

On view February 4-March 14 Wed-Sat, 12 noon-5 pm   FREE This exhibit showcases the art, stories, and history of preschoolers incarcerated at Utah’s WWII Japanese American incarceration camp, Topaz. Despite unjust imprisonment, these toddlers experienced preschool life much like other American children, taught by dedicated Japanese American teachers. More than 70 years later, a collection of art created by the preschoolers resurfaced. Over 20 of the Topaz preschoolers—who are now elders in their 80s—have been interviewed and reunited with their art pieces. The exhibition was researched, interpreted, and designed in collaboration with current college students and an early childhood education scholar, working alongside community members to share new perspectives and analysis.   A panel discussion was held on February 22 with speakers who discussed the preschoolers’ artwork and the project that located nearly 30 of them, as well as background on preschool education at Topaz, analysis of the artwork from an early childhood education research perspective, and reflections and reactions from some of the “toddler” artists.    The exhibition and panel discussion are sponsored by The Topaz Museum, The Takahashi Foundation, The Anthropological Studies Center at Sonoma State University, and The Koret Foundation.

About this calendar

Oakland Asian Cultural Center

OACC builds vibrant communities through multicultural and multidisciplinary API arts, culture, and social justice programs.