KINFOLK: PORTALS OF

REMEMBRANCE


NEW VIRTUAL MONUMENTS BY DEREK FORDJOUR, JACOLBY SATTERWHITE, TOURMALINE & EGYPTT LABEIJA

Presented in partnership with:

ON VIEW BEGINNING MAY 17, 2025

OPENING RECEPTION:
SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 4 PM



About the Project

Reimagining the New York City AIDS Memorial as a dynamic site of memory and empowerment, pioneering digital platform Kinfolk and the New York City AIDS Memorial are thrilled to present Portals of Remembrance, a new exhibition featuring three monuments created by four renowned contemporary artists. This collaboration aims to honor and illuminate the stories of underrepresented figures within the HIV/AIDS movement through three virtual monuments created by Derek Fordjour, Egyptt LaBeija, Tourmaline, and Jacolby Satterwhite.

Kinfolk, known for amplifying Black and Brown stories through immersive augmented reality (AR) experiences, will leverage cutting-edge technology to embolden narratives of resilience, survival, and advocacy. Utilizing the site of the New York City AIDS Memorial, each artist will contribute a distinct perspective, giving voice to those often excluded from historical accounts and transforming how we engage with and preserve collective memory. 

To experience Portals of Remembrance, download the free Kinfolk app on your mobile device. Scan the QR code found on the signage in the New York City AIDS Memorial Park or click the button below to download:

Download the Kinfolk App

Viewing the Monuments

  1. Open the Kinfolk app

  2. Visit the exhibition markers located throughout the park

  3. When prompted, tap the green check to activate the artwork, or explore the Portals of Remembrance exhibition map

About the Works

Derek Fordjour

In Cellular Chaser, Fordjour draws inspiration from his acclaimed Black jockey series, using the imagery of the jockey and horse to explore themes of hypervisibility, death, disappearance, and stalled progress. His work underscores the enduring impact of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, particularly its disproportionate impact on African Americans, who account for nearly 40% of new HIV infections.


Egyptt LaBeija & Tourmaline

Expanding on the themes from Tourmaline’s short film, Atlantic is a Sea of Bones and LaBeija’s enduring legacy, this work creates an experience that is both a tribute and a testament to personal and collective histories of Black queer and trans resilience. LaBeija’s iconic movements, combined with immersive audio storytelling, guide visitors through a powerful journey that bridges the past and present, using motifs of the ocean and cycles of survival. Harnessing AR’s unique ability to make the unseen visible, the experience transforms the physical memorial space into a portal for memory and transformation, challenging historical erasure and celebrating Black trans narratives. The project stands as a beacon for forward-looking empowerment and reminds us that survival is an act of creativity and that remembrance is an act of imagination. Together, it honors the past while envisioning a future where these stories continue to flourish and inspire.


Jacolby Satterwhite

You Make Me Feel Mighty Real is a tribute to Sylvester, the legendary musician and trailblazer who revolutionized mainstream music with unapologetic Black queer humanity, blues and jubilance. In an era when LGBTQ+ visibility was scarce, Sylvester’s presence in disco and pop culture shattered barriers, proving that a Black, openly gay artist could command the spotlight on his own terms. His music - ecstatic, defiant and deeply personal - became anthems of liberation, inspiring future generations of queer artists and paving the way for Black gay representation in all media.

By depicting Sylvester as a Byzantine-style religious icon, this AR sculpture reclaims the visual language of divinity, elevating him to the status of a saint—a protector of the marginalized, a symbol of transcendence, and a patron of queer resilience. Byzantine icons were traditionally used to communicate spiritual power and eternal presence, and through augmented reality, Sylvester’s iconography is reimagined in a contemporary, living form, accessible in the digital space. His shimmering presence in AR defies the limitations of physical monuments, echoing the ethereal, otherworldly essence he embodied in life.

As the AIDS epidemic took so many bright voices, including Sylvester himself, this piece honors his legacy not just as a performer, but as a beacon of defiance, self-love and enduring queer power. In digital resurrection, his spirit continues to shine, reminding us that queer joy is sacred, and that our icons deserve to be immortalized in ways as limitless as their impact.


About Kinfolk

Kinfolk is a non-profit digital and educational platform with a mission to bring Black and Brown narratives to the forefront. Through immersive AR experiences, users can leverage technology to experience history come to life anywhere. The platform was co-founded in 2017 by Idris Brewster to bridge communities, and since its inception, with support from the Mellon Foundation, it has changed how we learn about our historical heroes.  Recognizing that school curriculum, cultural institutions, and monuments have systematically excluded BIPOC histories, Brewster debuted the Monuments Project, through Kinfolk, which inserts hundreds of digital monuments into public spaces.


Location

 

Kinfolk: Portals of Remembrance can be viewed at the New York City AIDS Memorial Park at St. Vincent’s Triangle, located between 7th Avenue, Greenwich Avenue, and West 12th Street, New York City.

For more information and directions, click here.


Press


Support & Thanks

Leadership support for Kinfolk: Portals of Remembrance was generously provided by Google.

Cultural programming at the New York City AIDS Memorial is made possible, in part, by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. Support for Kinfolk has been provided by the Mellon Foundation.

Thank you to the Kinfolk Tech Foundation: Idris Brewster, Aja Evans, Angie Fan, Micah Milner, and Ravon Ruffin Feliz. This installation was made with the support of Powerhouse Arts. Kinfolk: Portals of Remembrance is exhibited through NYC Parks’ Art in the Parks program. The New York City AIDS Memorial and Kinfolk extend an extra special thanks to Karen Wong.

All images courtesy of the artists and Kinfolk Tech Foundation.