Regram @cyknyc @gyopo.us Happy Chuseok! ššššš š½š„¢šš„š¶š°š·š®š Each fall GYOPO collaborates with a diasporic Korean artist on a limited edition artwork benefiting GYOPO, to ensure all of our programs remain free. Today we're launching our 2020 artist edition by acclaimed New York-based painter Byron Kim. šš°š“š®š¦šµšŖš¤ šš°š³šµš³š¢šŖšµš“: ššÆšØš¦šš¢ ššŖš®š¢šŗš¶šØš¢, šš³š¶šÆš¢ š'šš°š¶š»š¢, šš¢šÆšÆšŗ šš¢š³š¬, šš¶šš¶ šš³šŖš¦š³-ššŖš®, ššŖš©š¢šŖš šš¢š³šŖ, š š°š¶šÆšØ šš°š°šÆ ššøš¢š¬, šš©šŖš»š¶ šš¢šš„š¢š®š¢šÆš„š°, šš°š£š¢ šš©š¦š„š°š°š³šŖ, šš¦šµš¦š³ šš°š® is a 2-tiered limited edition and original work to benefit GYOPO. Printed by @elnopalpress in Los Angeles, and using @clecosmetics makeup foundation as his medium, Kim has created an edition of 40 prints and three hand-painted works. šš°š“š®š¦šµšŖš¤ šš°š³šµš³š¢šŖšµš“ invites us to consider what skin color signifies, the range of shades within our species, and the impossibility of a single portrait to capture the complexity of an individual. In collaboration with Kim, GYOPO selected nine AAPI participants in the US whose skin tones are represented in a grid. The subjects of these portraits (Angela Dimayuga, Aruna DāSouza, Danny Park, Lulu Grier-Kim, Mihail Lari, Young Joon Kwak, Shizu Saldamando, Toba Khedoori, and Peter Som) are an intergenerational, multi-gendered and culturally diverse group of remarkable artists, writers, chefs, students, activists, designers, and entrepreneurs who, as individuals are unique and integral members of the AAPI community, and together, represent the vastness of diasporic Asian identities. Through this abstracted portrait, they have been united to represent a whole, which we believe is a meaningful gesture during this time of racial reckoning and physical distance. Link in bio for more info. ā¬ļø #GYOPO wishes to thank Korean-owned CLE Cosmetics for their collaboration and in-kind donation. #clecosmetics @elnopalpress @clecosmetics https://www.instagram.com/p/CFv2VjtFKHS/?igshid=16i1h8md9kmk0