The Next Installment of...
The Last Supper Party
An Evening of Poetry and Music with Clarisse Kim, Frances Ancheta, and Tadeh Kennedy
Curated by Kimi Sugioka
At Temo's Cafe
Open Microphone to Follow
Date(s) & Time(s): Sat. January 4, 6:00pm
Duration: 90 minutes w/ intermission
Location: 3000 24th St, SF, CA 94110
Ticket Information
Entry Free - Donations accepted.
Reservations Mandatory.
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Inaugural Last Supper Party
Full Interview with Fe Bongolan
The Last Supper Party is a monthly spoken word and music performance series inspired by Fe Bongolan’s landmark painting of the same name; a 200 sq. ft. canvas that covered one wall of our office when we were housed on Sutter Street during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Last Supper Party presents the voices of diverse artists and writers who call out the myriad injustices and impacts of corruption, unchecked power and greed.
We invite our audience to share ideas and find inspiration in the thoughts and words of artists whose perspectives are drawn from a kaleidoscope of cultures. But who are united by compassion and a common desire to seek justice, equity and truth.
On even months (October, December, February, April and June) The Last Supper Party will be part of the Mission Arts Performance Project (MAPP).
The Story of The Last Supper Party Painting
“1985. Ronald Reagan was still President. The global movement to end apartheid and free Nelson Mandela from Robben Island Prison was underway. In San Francisco homelessness was ramping up. The AIDS pandemic was taking down swaths of our city’s population: friends, family, and co-workers. Yet a whole other world of class and wealth did nothing while the rest of our world was in trouble. Sitting in my studio in an Inverness cabin, I stayed with my paints and let something happen. It was there that I found my artist’s voice to not attack directly, but to let the exposure of that apathy – bred by a society that embraced greed over humanity—do the work.
Forty years later, with all that has changed and not changed, it is painfully unsurprising that this painting still shouts.”
~ Fe Bongolan
About the Artists
Clarisse Kim
Clarisse Kim is the youth poet laureate ambassador of Marin County. Her writing has been published in Crashtest Magazine, the Weight Journal, and Under the Madness Magazine, among others. When she isn't writing, Clarisse can be found reading the latest sci-fi novel, eating her weight in MadeGood berry granola bars, or playing (and losing) crane games. Learn more about Clarisse HERE.
Frances Ancheta
Frances Ancheta is a Filipina American singer/songwriter and acoustic musician. Her musical style has been described by many as “thoughtful, eclectic acoustic folk and indie pop/rock” and “tropical new wave folk”. Frances has released three albums to date, most recently "Hidden Gems". Her music has garnered international independent and internet radio airplay in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Spain. As a creative arts therapist and cancer survivor, Frances has experienced how music heals the soul, and she values music’s ability to help people understand the world around them, to connect with others, and to heal. View Frances's website HERE.
Tadeh Kennedy
Tadeh is an Oakland-based writer, educator, editor, musician, and comics maker. He is deeply impacted by his Armenian roots, exploring the intersections of borders, language, and erasure. Tadeh writes horror, speculative, and historical fiction. He hopes to one day see the inside of a volcano. Learn more about Tadeh HERE.
Kimi Sugioka (Curator)
Kimi Sugioka is a poet, songwriter, and educator. She is the current Poet Laureate for the City of Alameda, a post that includes creating platforms for the presentation of a diverse variety of poets and spoken-word artists. Kimi also performs her own work frequently throughout the Bay Area. Born in Chapel Hill, North Carolina and raised in Berkeley, California, Kimi has worked in public education for decades, and earned her BA from San Francisco State University and MFA from the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado.
Fe Bongolan is a Bay Area visual and performing artist. She is an alumnae of San Francisco State University with a Bachelor’s degree in Crafts and Design. She found theater arts in her last year at SFSU, and to this day it consumes her life. After working as an actress with Asian American Theater Company and Teatro Campesino, in 1992 she began work with the Medea Project: Theater for Incarcerated Women, immediately involved as an artist from the community working alongside Rhodessa Jones in helping women inmates from San Francisco County Jail write their stories for performance. In 28 years with the Medea Project, Fe developed as actor, writer, dramaturge and assistant director to Rhodessa, helping inmates and ex-offenders find their voice and develop their writing for performance in jail, the community and main stage.