'Home Here' Short Essay
On Wednesday the 18th, our class was given the opportunity to visit the current exhibition, Home Here, being held in the Visual Arts Gallery. Curated by Lucy Rovetto, she includes the artwork of eleven women artists from Jersey City; Jennifer Roberts, Jin Jung, Pat Lay, Nicole DeMaio, Jaz Graf, Tina Maneca, Cheryl R. Riley, Isabelle Duverger, Katelyn Halpern, Laia Cabrera, and late historical figure and NJCU department chair member Ward Mount. Home Here is an installation with a narrative of memory preservation, with each artist displaying themes of history throughout their works. The works themselves are not labelled, flowing seamlessly in the room together and igniting conversation.
The first piece I was drawn to was that of Jin Jung, one of my current professors here at NJCU. It was the familiarity of those glossy, navy blue plaques hanging against the wall that got my attention. I have seen a few of them in the past around Jersey City and even outside of the Visual Arts Building, but never payed close enough attention to them. Were Here JC is a project started by Jung in 2021, currently being exhibited in Home Here. These handmade ceramic pieces spotlight people and places from Jersey City's history. Each plaque having a different historical figures or sites written in white, usually including dates and a short blurb. Her work's main showing is not in galleries, but blended into the every-day landscape of Jersey City as it continues to gentrify and develop. Jung's work is absolutely an art intervention as it is something that interrupts the public in their daily environment, allowing them to reflect on history for a moment or two where they might not have without Jung's artwork.
Were Here JC by Jin Jung
As I made my way through the gallery, I found myself in that cozy corner nook admiring the work of Jennifer Roberts. It is hard not to notice the hundreds of analog photographs adhered to the wall, and equally hard not to get hit with a wave of nostalgia while doing so. Family Album, Lost (& Found) is an installation artwork by Roberts with a heavy themes of memory, loss, and nostalgia. In 2008, Roberts lost a storage space full of all of her personal vintage photos from her family. This left her devastated, and as a painter, she began to repaint a handful of photographs from memory, but she found it made her feel even more sad about the travesty at hand. She ended up purchasing tons of old photographs on Ebay using these to fill the void her family archive left her. Somehow, these photographs of people she did not know personally, and seeing their old memories, helped her re-feel the nostalgia her family's photos made her feel. Feelings she thought she had forgotten began to come back to her through this project. Along with the anonymous photographs and the paintings of the pictures, Roberts also sets out a journal atop a chair and desk for viewers members to answer prompts and engage in self reflection. I believe this is an art intervention because it forced the viewer to stop, look, and feel. We are confronted with nameless personal history, allowing us to reflect on our own fragility.
| Family Album, Lost (& Found) (2026) by Jennifer Roberts |
Overall, this show really resonated with me because a lot of my art is about preserving memory and protecting it from being lost or erased. Taking a moment to read one of the plaques from Jin Jung’s We’re Here JC made me appreciate the histories and people that came before me, and how easy it is to forget them in everyday life. Jennifer Roberts’s Family Album, Lost (& Found) also hit me personally since it shows how fragile memories can be, and how important they can be. Although these two were my favorite, all of the artworks featured in Home Here showed me how art can act as a form of documentation and emotional storage, helping keep histories alive in ways that other archives cannot.
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