
CULTURAL PROGRAMS & SYSTEMS
Our work is structured as an integrated cultural system that connects production, education, and preservation. Rather than operating as isolated programs, these components form a continuous cycle that supports the long-term transmission of cultural knowledge.
Through this system, we create pathways for cultural continuity—ensuring that heritage is not only preserved, but actively practiced, shared, and reinterpreted across generations and across regions.
Cultural Production
Through exhibitions, international art initiatives, and publications, we support the contemporary expression of cultural heritage.
These activities enable artists to reinterpret tradition within a modern context, forming an essential component of an evolving cultural system
Cultural Education
Through partnerships with schools and communities, we deliver youth-centered cultural education programs focused on literacy, creativity, and engagement.
Programs may include storytelling, music, food culture, and everyday traditions, offering diverse entry points into heritage learning.
These initiatives support intergenerational transmission and foster long-term cultural continuity.
Cultural Archive & Research
We document cultural practices, objects, and narratives through visual, textual, and oral forms, contributing to the development of a long-term cultural archive.
These efforts preserve knowledge systems while supporting future research and creative work.
Embodied Cultural Practice
We integrate embodied practices such as Manchurian archery as a form of lived cultural transmission.
These practices connect physical skill, historical knowledge, and cultural identity, extending cultural engagement beyond representation into lived experience

International Cultural Exchange
We facilitate international cultural exchange initiatives that connect artists, educators, and cultural practitioners across regions.
These initiatives may include field-based learning, cultural visits, and collaborative programs that engage with cultural sites, communities, and historical contexts.
Rather than tourism, these exchanges are designed as learning-based experiences that deepen cultural understanding and support the continuity of heritage across global contexts.
Together, these interconnected systems form a sustainable cultural infrastructure—transforming cultural engagement from isolated activities into a long-term, evolving system of knowledge transmission.