Week 1: History Colorado Center

When entering the History Colorado Center, I was aware that I would be working on some projects with them. However, it wasn't until I entered that I realized how important these projects are to everyone working on them and to the people that they're directed towards.

At the museum, I have been given the tasks to help them create an illustration book based off of the Japanese Internment  Camps that occurred with President Roosevelts Executive Order 9066. The book follows a character named Akiko, a woman who immigrants to the United States to be married to a Colorado farmer named Kenji. While the story itself doesn't focus solely on the Internment Camps and instead on the struggle of being a Japanese immigrant in the early 1900s, the book itself shows the dedication and care that the History Colorado Center takes with its topics.
Concept sketch for a handkerchief and nengajo.

Concept sketch for Empress and Emperor dolls along with a rattlesnake's rattler.
Not afraid to shy away from the bleak and terrible parts of Colorado history, the truth of Colorado can be found throughout the entirety of the museum from KKK outfits to a model of Camp Amache (the Internment Camp that the illustration book touches on).

History Colorado is there to teach about the true Colorado history in any interactive way that it can, it completes its job and I'm incredibly proud to be working on these projects with them.
Me, nervously trying the skiing simulator in the museum (I crashed).

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