Student wins Cupertino nonprofit’s art contest
‘Bridging Generational Currents’
Saratoga High School sophomore Athena Zhang won a Cupertino-based nonprofit’s art contest for a design that uses natural elements to depict artificial intelligence.
Zhang’s “Bridging Generational Currents” won the 2024 Art Design Contest held by the Chinese American Coalition for Compassionate Care (CACCC), which supports end-of-life care concerns in the Chinese community.
Zhang’s design will be used in CACCC’s Compassion in Action, a fundraiser and a series of educational programs set for May 17-31, 2025. The student artist won $300 for her artwork, inspired by the importance of water in Chinese culture.
“Water symbolizes the ability to overcome and adapt, which goes hand in hand with the concept of CACCC’s 20th anniversary theme, ‘Empowering Caregiving with Human-Centered AI,’” said Zhang in a release.
Zhang’s design uses two koi fish to “illustrate perseverance and transformation. From an abstract perspective, the koi fish act as a ‘bridge’ for the human-centered AI to cross and reach the ones in need of caregiving,” Zhang added.
“The elements she chose to use in her final artwork are symbolically and culturally meaningful, as well as personal,” said Sandy Chen Stokes, CACCC’s founder and executive director.
‘Home Alone’ screening
The Cupertino Library is hosting a Christmas Eve screening of “Home Alone” at 2 p.m. on Dec. 24. The 1990 comedy follows the adventures of an 8-year-old boy who accidentally gets left behind in a frenzied rush to the airport for a family vacation in Paris over the holiday season. After learning to fend for himself, the boy has to protect his house against two bumbling burglars who are planning to rob it.