In CYJO's book Kyopo (Umbrage), the relationship between ethnicity and identity is explored in portraits of the Korean diaspora.
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In CYJO's book Kyopo (Umbrage), the relationship between ethnicity and identity is explored in portraits of the Korean diaspora.

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Mixed Blood is a photographic and textual project portraying NYC and Beijing based families that include children with “mixed” races, ethnicities, and cultures. Mixed Blood questions and diffuses the historical categorization process of race/ethnicity and focuses on connective, cross-cultural experiences. The portraits and accompanying narratives illustrate the varying relationships family members have with their backgrounds, cultural context and citizenship. This unifying of race and cultures within a family unit continues to influence the evolution of American and global identity today.
Striking photos will challenge what you think makes up the typical American family
Korean-American artist CYJO's newest project, "Mixed Blood," shows that the stories of multiracial people have been long overlooked within an intensely negative racial climate, which often frames things in black and white.
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Fascinated by the evolution of identity, the photographer Cyjo, who styles her name CYJO, has created a series of portraits that examine how race, ethnicity, and heritage contextualize a person as an individual, and how they coexist within the framework of a family. Cyjo identifies herself as a Westerner of Korean ethnicity...
In her ongoing series, artist CYJO captures the beauty of mixed-race families through the power of portraiture.
Each photo is staged in a simple but effective way, with the parents on the left and their respective children to the right. See the rest of "Mixed Blood" below.
Powerful Portraits of Mixed-Race Families
via Slate

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Portraiture Now: Asian American Portraits of Encounter
This article was originally published in Arts + Culture Texas for their December 2012 issue and can be found here.
Shimomura Crossing the Delaware by Roger Shimomura, acrylic on canvas, 2010. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; acquired through the generosity of Raymond L. Ocampo Jr., Sandra Oleksy Ocampo, and Robert P. Ocampo.
The latest exhibition to grace the Louisa Stude Sarofim Gallery at Asia Society Texas Center introduces an ensemble of Asian and Asian-American artists exploring such themes as personal growth, home, and broader social complexities of Asian and American cultural confluence. Organized by the Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery, Portraiture Now: Asian American Portraits of Encounter examines identity from a range of cultural perspectives.