Frances Cruz

Frances Cruz

Mix it up!


My point of view manifests in this series of food paintings and sculptures I’ve created. It is about my own relationship with food as an Asian American who finds a lot of joy and comfort in eating. Living in an incredibly diverse area of the northeast has allowed me to discover and try out the wide variety of delicious foods out there. Despite being Filipino, I’ve come to enjoy eating foods from other cultures more often than my own culture’s food. These include American food, Italian food, Japanese food, Korean food, etc.

Looking at artists such as Wayne Thiebaud, Gina Beavers, and Jennifer Coates for inspiration, these colorful still lifes are directly based on my own pleasurable memories of a lot of my favorite foods that I’ve eaten at places such as my own home, my college campus, and family gatherings. I am especially attracted to the use of texture to emulate decadence and provoke hunger in my viewers. Incorporating texture in these works has also aided me in my ability to remember how exactly something tastes and feels when it is eaten. This can be seen in the numerous marks carved into the Cookie Dough Cake to recreate the appearance of sponge cake and the cake’s strawberry jam filling in All Western that has been made gooey with wax medium, to name a few instances.

Laura Gonzales Fernandez

Laura Gonzales Fernandez

Shadows of a Memory


I have my best memories growing up in Colombia because maybe as a child every memory and emotion is heightened, for good or bad. My memories from childhood are the ones I cherish the most and they keep me afloat and secure. But nothing was ever easy and as usual, when you are a child you don’t really see the scope of things and the reality of the moment. Adults try to sugarcoat and romanticize your environment because being a child means you are innocent and incapable of understanding the harsh realities of life. Once I immigrated to the United States in 2015 I began to acknowledge how much I loved my country which I never felt before. It’s one of those instances where you don’t realize how much you care about something until you lose it. But as you grow up, you also start to think critically and uncover hard truths that were hidden from you. The wars, the death, the scars, the victims, the scandals, the oligarchies, and the corruption behind each government. I began to read, to see, to learn and apply them into my artwork which started to become socio-political as I learned more about Colombia.

This story is a way to talk about the experiences of many people, but also to acknowledge the fact that children have a beautiful way of experiencing things, seeking to acknowledge both the good and the bad out of every situation. Forced displacement is an issue that still hunts and scars Colombian history but something that not many people know about, which is the reason for creation. This story is not only the story of Colombians but it is also the story of many people that have been affected by forced displacement and violence, leaving home and finding hope somewhere else. This book is a homage to my people and our resilience.

Konstantin Pribylov

Konstantin Pribylov

Dystopia vs. Sustainability


Greetings, my name is Kosta, Kostya or k0sp. I am Mason Gross senior with a drawing concentration. Originally from Moscow, Russia, now an immigrant based in New Brunswick, NJ. Originally, my exhibition plan was to make an entire exhibition from one of my collections. I am still finishing up on 17 sustainable development goals. Due to unforeseen circumstances, the government of the country I am from has committed acts of crime against our brotherly nation: Ukraine. Some of my ancestors are also from Ukraine. I want people to realize that even the soldiers don’t want this war, and this is only a war of one man and his ideas: Vladimir Putin. His regime had affected the lives of many destinies: political killings, bombed buildings, and destruction of the Russian economy. His energy is focused on enriching his friends. With my exhibit Dystopia vs. Sustainability, I combine two collections. On one side, talk about Putin’s pyramid and Russian corruption, Ukrainian Invasion. Dictatorships are strange, what’s even more strange is being born in one. On the other hand, I talk about some of the UN sustainable development goals, of what we, humans, should be worried about on a global level. I explore issues of world sustainability on one side and personal politics on the other. I also enjoy meticulous documentation of my work aka time-lapses: which are available with all of the artworks in the show.

Chuan Nitta

Chuan Nitta

Did You Eat Yet?



Did you eat yet? Or as my Korean grandmother would ask in her dialect, “밥 먹었니?” A seemingly simple question from the surface, it holds more meaning than most people would expect. Following the devastating Korean War, food was scarce in Korea. To ask if someone had eaten was equivalent to asking how they were doing. As Korea slowly healed from the war’s devastations, the tradition carried on to the present day to show care about someone’s general well-being. I wish to ask this question to not just the people who visit my show, but also to extend the question to the Korean diaspora.

My thesis project titled, “Did you eat yet?” is a show dedicated to my Korean grandmother, Kang Yusun. Growing up in my first-generation immigrant household, my grandmother has always been the matriarch of the family — devoted to protecting and taking care of her family members. I’ve always had a strong emotional connection with my grandmother and a need to make work about her. As she gets older and nearing her 90s, I want to take this time to discover more about my grandmother’s personal identity, despite the language barriers we face. Even though she is my grandmother, there is so much I don’t know about her that she almost feels like a fictional character. By learning and researching more about her, I am also learning more about where I come from and the generational line that connects me to my ancestors. Despite my desperate attempts to connect with my grandmother’s life story, however, I’m also realizing and accepting that she isn’t permanent.

Through a primarily multichannel media installation that involves video, printmaking, painting, and sculpture, my project explores memory as a landscape, mortality, and ideas of access — what I choose to offer and hide from my audience — all while sprinkling in stories of Korean mythology and folklore. Designed to be a domestic space in the Korean countryside, I am incorporating textile and embroidery work in my project to honor the same labor of love my grandmother has done her whole life, while also challenging the ideas of what “belongs” on the white gallery walls. My interest in craftwork began early in the Covid-19 pandemic, when art supply stores were all closed and I could only work with what I had at home, which were my grandmother’s fabrics and sewing supplies. Also included in this show, such as the cushions and crocheted coaster, are handmade items from her and other women in my family — a collaboration and celebration of female creativity. Much of my work in this show involves the hand to honor traditional women’s work, or craft, that has largely been ignored in the fine arts world. While this show is partially an offering for the Korean diaspora, it is also ultimately a small love letter to my grandmother in a language without words. With this show, I hope to provide the viewer a belly full of food, just as my grandmother has provided for me.