EXHIBITIONS, INSTALLATIONS AND SHOWS

Family Amnesia was presented as an Artist Spotlight by Magnum Foundation at Photoville Opening Night on June 3rd, 2023. MORE INFO

Five Mixed Media Collages were exhibited in “in/stasis” at Artists Space as part of Whitney Museum of Art’s ISP, a show featuring artists exploring and challenging our collective understanding of displacement (May 20-29, 2022) MORE INFO

“Resistance in Progress”, a multimedia installation in the After the Plaster Foundation, or Where Can We Live? at Queens Museum (Sept. 16 2020 - Feb 28, 2021). Read my post abut the show and a recent New York Times Review - CLICK HERE

Acts of Remembering

My visual essay, "Acts of Remembering" was published in "Survivance" a collaboration between the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and e-flux Architecture in May 2021. The essay debuts some of my mixed media collages I’ve been working on during the 2020-2021 pandemic year.  Below are excerpts from the essay.

To see my collages and read the full essay, CLICK HERE

Learn more about this project, CLICK HERE

“Mapping Indigenous, Black and Asian Resistance in NYC” was part of the Maps exhibition at FiveMyles Gallery (2021-22) is a work-in-progress multimedia installation that honors the under told stories of decolonization, liberation, and uprisings against white supremacy led by people of color on Lenape land (currently known as New York City) spanning the last 400 years. The installation currently features three organza banners, a 75-minute video and a selection of research materials. This work-in-progress exhibition is a culmination of work produced during my KODA residency on Governors Island.

“Imagining De-Gentrified Futures” an Apexart group exhibition curated by Betty Yu opens virtually on Nov. 4th, and closes Dec. 19th, 2020. It’s an interactive exhibition attempting to imagine socially-just futures for our cities and aiming to rethink the assumed trajectory of urban development. Drawing inspiration from anti-gentrification resistance across the U.S., decolonization movements, and Afrofuturism, this exhibition gives permission to imagine, to dream, to unleash and explore ways in which socially-just futures can exist for city communities. More INFO HERE

"Intimate / Distant" Betty Yu's new interactive multi-media project produced through International Center of Photography, June 28th 2020 to September 30th, 2020.

In/Visible Labor in Chinatown, my multimedia installation was part of Souls of NYC Chinatown (October 2021)

“We Were Here: Unmasking Yellow Peril'' is a multimedia project inviting Asian-Americans to participate in reclaiming, and reasserting our own narratives, through telling our families’ stories of immigration, labor, discrimination, and resilience. CLICK HERE for more info

(Dis)Placed in Sunset Park, Intimate/Distant, De-gentrifying My Parents’ Block Installation at “Brooklyn Utopias” at the Old Stone House Exhibition (Aug 20 - Oct 18th, 2020) Photography by Etienne Frossard. Click HERE for more info.

The Youth Visions for Tomorrow, Today! End Homelessness Poster is part of New York Historical Society’s (NYHS) Art for Change: The Artist & Homeless Collaborative exhibition (December 3, 2021 – April 3, 2022)

During the Fall of 2020, I collaborated with youth leaders and members of The Door, a comprehensive youth development services organization that operates a runaway and youth homeless program to create Youth Visions for Tomorrow, Today! End Homelessness, an engaging 2D poster that provides a platform for voices and perspectives about youth homelessness to be heard.

I worked with The Door’s youth leaders to bring our poster project into the 21st century digital age using augmented reality (AR). Visitors will be able to use their mobile devices to unlock video interviews, “envisioning an end to homelessness” drawings, letters to the future, and more.

The Youth Visions for Tomorrow, Today! End Homelessness Poster is part of New York Historical Society’s (NYHS) Art for Change: The Artist & Homeless Collaborative exhibition (December 3, 2021 – April 3, 2022) which examines the history of modern homelessness in New York City and the response of artists and activists in the 1980s and '90s.