Celebrating its 15th year, the free festival showcases Asian and Asian Pacific cultures

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (September 24, 2019) – The Asian Coalition of Tallahassee (ACT) presents its 15th annual Experience Asia Festival on Saturday, October 5 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at downtown Tallahassee’s Lewis and Bloxham Parks, located at 205 East Park Ave.

The Japanese community tent featuring Origami paper folding.
Mezzo-soprano and Tokyo native Sahoko Sato sings at Experience Asia.

Featuring free admission, the family-friendly festival celebrates the diversity of Asian and Asian Pacific cultures through performances, demonstrations, cuisine, arts and crafts and more.

The festival’s two stages will host engaging displays from Japan, the Philippines, India, the Middle East, Indonesia, China, Taiwan, and the Polynesian Islands including Hawaii. Traditional drummers, dancers, musicians, martial artists and others will represent their unique culture and express their heritage through shared cultural experiences.

Additionally, the Experience Asia Festival features more than 60 exhibitors and vendors of food, arts and crafts, jewelry, clothing and other cultural items that are available for purchase.

Experience Asia guests try their hand at water yo-yo, a traditional Japanese game.

Sponsored by the Consulate-General of Japan in Miami, the festival’s featured performers are the Matsuriza Taiko Drummers, who offer a dynamic and thundering performance of the 2,000-year-old Japanese art form on the festival’s main stage. Under the leadership of Takemasa Ishikura, who directs the group in playing both traditional music and modern arrangements, Matsuriza performs almost daily at Walt Disney World’s EPCOT. A fan-favorite of the festival each year, Matsuriza continues to mesmerize listeners with their rolling, clashing and dramatic choreography and sound.

At the Japan booths, guests will have the opportunity to write their name in Hiragana and Katakana, create Tanabata decorations, make origami, try on a Yukata (kimono), experience a traditional tea ceremony, purchase Japanese crafts and join students from FSU and Valdosta State University in a traditional parade of a Shinto shrine.

Last year, Experience Asia attracted more than 18,500 people from Florida and Georgia. Launched by the ACT in 2004, the festival brings together various Asian communities within the Tallahassee area and shares Asian heritage with the community at large through unique cultural experiences.

Experience Asia is sponsored by the City of Tallahassee, Visit Tallahassee, the Tallahassee County Council on Culture & Arts, ABC 27 and Tallahassee Community College.

A display of Ikebana, the Japanese art of flower arrangement.

For more information, visit www.asiantlh.org. For questions, contact ACT Chair Aurora Torres-Hansen at [email protected] or 850-321-1114.

For more information about the Consulate-General of Japan in Miami, please contact Miwako Patton at [email protected] or [email protected] and visit www.miami.us.emb-japan.go.jp/itprtop_en/index.html.