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CCC 60th Anniversary Celebrations

  • Oct 6, 2025
  • 4 min read

Updated: 7 hours ago


舊金山中華文化中心 六十週年慶典


60th Anniversary Gala - Shape the Future, Shift the Landscape - October 17, 2025 ​

60th Anniversary Festival Opening Night - A Radical Retrospective - October 25, 2025

Through the Decades Happy Hours - October 29 - 31, 2025

Future Forward! Open House and Art Showcase - November 1, 2025



In 2025, the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco marks 60 years of radical resilience, cultural power, and artistic imagination. Founded in 1965 out of the Civil Rights Movement, CCC has been a vital force in shifting narratives, uplifting community, and forging new futures through art.

This fall CCC celebrated six decades of transformation with a month of celebratory events that honored the past, ignited the present, and boldly imagined what’s next.




History of Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco (CCC)

In 1965, when the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco (CCC) was founded, the United States stood at a seismic turning point. The Civil Rights Act had just passed, and long-standing immigration quotas rooted in exclusionary, racist policy were finally lifted. For Chinese Americans, the shift was dramatic: the annual cap jumped from 105 to 20,000, ushering in a wave of new immigrants and redefining the cultural landscape of communities like San Francisco’s Chinatown.


At the same time, Chinatown was facing another reckoning. Rapid real estate development threatened the neighborhood’s future, including plans for the Hilton Hotel. Community members pushed back fiercely, resisting the displacement and gentrification, and approved the hotel's development only under the condition that space be provided for a community cultural center where arts and culture could be a means of transforming dominant and regressive narratives about the community. The Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco became the neighborhood’s first cultural center and is now one of the nation’s oldest Asian-American arts organizations.


From the 1970s through the 1990s, CCC hosted boundary-pushing exhibitions and educational programs that platformed Chinese and Chinese American art. Highlights included Wu Guanzhong: A Contemporary Artist (1989), Six Contemporary Chinese Women Artists (1991–1992), and Weyman Lew: Of People and Places (1991). The Center also became one of the sites for the City’s pioneering Neighborhood Arts Program. Yet, CCC's trajectory was shaped by Cold War suspicion, shifting U.S.–China politics, and xenophobia. Breaking through these constraints, CCC entered the new millennium ready to pursue its most daring curatorial vision yet.


​Beginning in 2009, CCC embarked on a bold new path, shapeshifting from a traditional arts nonprofit into a future-forging contemporary arts organization. Reimagining its role as both a cultural pillar and a portal to radical creativity, CCC activated the entire neighborhood. From Portsmouth Square to Ross Alley and vacant storefronts, Chinatown became a site of continuous invention and social imagination. With a curatorial vision rooted in place, people, and political urgency, CCC launched initiatives that redefined what an Asian American arts institution could be. The XianRui (Fresh & Sharp) series (2008–present) elevated mid-career artists of Chinese descent in solo exhibitions; Without Walls turned bridges, alleys, and parks into platforms for public art; the WOMEN我們 series (2010–present) reframed feminist and LGBTQ+ voices in the diaspora. Later, 41 Ross (founded in 2014) grew into a laboratory for socially engaged practice, and the Hungry Ghost Festival transformed rituals into a platform for solidarity and defiance. Together, these interventions reverberated across Chinatown and beyond.


CCC is now poised for a new stage of lasting impact. In 2024, CCC and the San Francisco Arts Commission launched the Chinatown Artist Registry, a first-of-its-kind platform ensuring artists with deep neighborhood ties lead major, permanent, public art commissions. The founding in 2017 of the Chinatown Media & Arts Collaborative (CMAC) by six leading Asian American community organizations marked a deeper shift toward a community-powered model alchemizing arts, culture, activism, and urban planning. And with the securing of CCC’s first permanent, street-level home on Grant Avenue, the Center gains a physical anchor to match its vision for the future. This is unprecedented infrastructure that pivots from survival to imagination and asserts Chinatown as both a cultural engine for the city and a blueprint for Asian American culture.




About the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco (CCC)

For 60 years, the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco (CCC) has uplifted Chinatown through the arts as both a vibrant neighborhood and a powerful metaphor for the immigrant experience. Founded in 1965 amid the civil rights movement, CCC emerged as a bold response to racism, displacement, and gentrification. From a hard-won cultural space, it has evolved into a dynamic hub that shifts narratives, supports innovative art, and advances social justice.


CCC amplifies marginalized voices, reclaims public space, and strengthens community through exhibitions, festivals, and educational programs. Signature initiatives include C.H.A.T. Chinatown History Art Tours, the XianRui Artist Series, and the 41 Ross Artist-in-Residence program. With locations on Kearny Street, Ross Alley, and the newly acquired 667 Grant Ave, CCC continues to champion immigrant and LGBTQIA2S+ rights. Recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts and other major foundations, CCC celebrates its 60th anniversary with Chinatown Pride, the Hungry Ghost Festival, and its Gala.

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750 Kearny St, 3rd Fl

San Francisco, CA 94108

(415) 986-1822

info@cccsf.us

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© 2022 by Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco.

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