Current Exhibition > Grace Guerra

2026
2026
2026
2026
2026
2026
2026
2026
2026
2026

This Belongs to Angela
Cypress Hills: A Walking Tour with my mom

Grace Guerra

I grew up in a city shaped by the culture and experiences of my parents—a landscape of
radicalism, movement, art, and resilience rooted in the Latino communities of Brooklyn and
Queens. I always knew about the duality that gave them shape, especially for my mother,
Angela: the struggles she faced, the life she sought, and the lessons she had passed on to
me. The streets in which she was raised were ones she chose to protect me from and spaces
she longed to revisit, bringing me along to reflect on what once was with layers of dignity and
remembrance.

The posters for this show draw their inspiration from a walking tour my mother and I took
through the area where she grew up, Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. My mom, who is by nature a collector, has never failed to preserve the city as it was in pieces. Her collection of photographs embodies the essence of New York that survives through those who have called it home for generations. When we were on our walk, she narrated the stories of the three places that were central to her upbringing: her high school, childhood home, and parish.

I intend to honor both the intimate and archival nature of this project by incorporating her handwriting and displaying the photographs she preserved, as well as the black and white photographs I took during our walk. The black and white color palette used for graphics establishes a unified visual language to distill the stories she shared with me. This exhibition is meant to be read like a book—a guided stroll through memories and places, through the lens of a daughter as she truly begins to discover her mother’s New York City.