Please join us in congratulating Byanca Morales Cabrera who was awarded the Imagining America Joy of Giving Fellowship for the 2021-2022 academic year. A Visual Arts major in graphic design, photography, and print media, she is also a Linehan Artist Scholar class of 2024.
Byanca Morales Cabrera creates artworks with a focus on diversity and the representation of communities of color; she tackles cultural taboos specifically within the LatinX community. Her work employs portraiture, cultural textile pattern designs, mark-making, and in the near future, she will expand her artistic practice into public art and mixed-media installations.
The Imagining America JOG Fellowship provides a $2000 tuition scholarship, mentorship guidance along with financial support for a community project. As a JOG Fellow, Byanca will receive registration and travel award to participate in the National Gathering that will take place Fall 2022. UMBC is an active member of Imagining America and in 2015, was the co-host of the National Conference that took place on campus and downtown Baltimore City in cooperation with MICA, Morgan State University, and Towson University.
"Todos Unidos (2021) is a project seeking to create a public art piece that would both honor the hard working community of immigrants the USA was built by and for those who continue to positively develop the country. Choosing to model the environment location to be at the CASA of Maryland location, a very important organization in the immigrant community and Immigrant rights movement. The video/clip above displays my process and my design's translation into 3D modeling through the usage of the application: SketchUp."
"ReMix (2021) in fact mixes a handful of different mediums, with a goal of creating a new piece of artwork on the topic of recent and current events that have occurred in this past year, with a focus on Racism. I also sought to create a soundtrack of my video as well, choosing a song whose lyrics truly resonated to the present and editing 50+ year old statements, recordings still relevant in the present."