@Catt.co_ • cattcostudio.com • Letras Para Gume, Mixed Media •
5 Questions:
1. My family’s journey to the United States was rooted in survival, sacrifice, and hope. My father grew up in poverty, with limited access to opportunity despite his strong work ethic. When an opportunity arose to travel to the U.S. for promised work, both of my parents viewed it as a temporary solution. A necessary step for both of them to earn a living, support their family, and eventually return home to Mexico.
That plan changed over time. What was meant to be a brief stay became a lifetime shaped by labor, perseverance, and deep love for their family. My parents wanted the best for us, even when it required enduring uncertainty and hardship. Forty years later, our family remains in the United States, with my father now buried here. In the final years of his life, he became disabled, yet he persevered with quiet strength until the very end.
Today, my mother continues to be a pillar for our family. Her resilience and unwavering strength inspire me to persevere through even the toughest moments. Together, my parents’ sacrifices and perseverance form the foundation of my values and drive me to honor their legacy through my own determination and growth.
2. Our immigration story has deeply shaped my relationship with both my family and my community. Growing up, there were many nights when I barely saw my parents because they were working long hours to provide for us. Their absence wasn’t a lack of love rather it was an act of it. That sacrifice taught me early on what commitment, responsibility, and perseverance truly looked like.
What grounded us were the moments we carved out together. Weekly family days at the park were always my favorite. Those afternoons felt sacred time. Laughter came easily, and for a moment, everything felt whole. The park was also where our community gathered. I watched friends and neighbors who immigrated around the same time as my parents play basketball, share stories and chisme, chasing down our parents asking for a paleta from El Paletero. Everyone looked out for one another. It was a space of connection, familiarity, and belonging.
Because of this, my idea of family extends beyond blood. It looks like shared meals, collective care, and people who understand sacrifice because they’ve lived it too. My community feels like resilience, cultural pride, and mutual support. Even in hardship, people find ways to build joy, connection, and a home. Home is where the heart is.
3. Ni de aquí, ni de allá is the best way to describe home for me. Home is where you cultivate love, support, and strength. My home does not belong to one place but every person I’ve met and loved. From my family in Mexico to my family here and to the family I have yet to meet. You are my home. Tradition lives through us and although change is certain we carry our stories with us and move forward with the journey of life. As change comes I find myself sharing these stories and traditions to those around me.
4. For me the pull is strongest when I am experiencing intense emotion. Whether is joy or worry I am reminded of those who came before and those who will come after. I often find comfort in things that remind me of home such as music and food.
5. My hope is centered around community and the bridges that are built from it. I’m incredibly grateful to have met all walks of life who have made an impact on me through their lives, missions, and experiences. The power of art has greatly allowed my dreams to manifest themselves. My dream is to make this world bigger and create a space that gives others the freedom and opportunity to explore their own dreams.
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Bio | Art Statement
I am a multidisciplinary visual artist with a BFA from UIC. My work explores the shifting nature of memory and nostalgia. How it is repeated, altered, and reassembled over time.
Drawing from my Nahua and Mexican heritage, I engage memory as both personal and collective, shaped by cultural histories and ancestral narratives. Through repetition and reworking of forms, I reflect the cyclical process of remembering, where images evolve with each return.
My practice is an act of reconstruction, creating space for identity, continuity, and transformation to coexist.

Framed Photo and letter
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Featured Artists | Akira – Light that Heals • Alejandra Lemus • Angie Zaveleta • Anna Silivonchik • Bane-xxa • Calayah • Catherine Economopoulos • Christian Joshua Varela Solis • Cindy Uriostegui • Darth Rudo • El Poeta • Grecia Solorio • Idil Duman • Javier Viñuela • Jimena Hernández Aguilar • Julia Obrien • Kaltra • Kybo • Lorena Salinas • Lydia Gunn • Mariana Perez • Mary Antar • Michael Azpeitia • Papaya Guayaba • Peauxline • Rita Garcia Šindelář • Roele Phantom • santi[ago alvarado] • Schantelle Alonzo “Mishipiku” • Scribe • Tai Kojro-Badziak • Toni Maugeri • Valeria Osornio • Victoria Park • Victoria-Riza • Yekseny Guerrero

