Raffle for AAPI Community Organizing

We are fundraising to support the AAPI community through this raffle. Featuring art donations from 15 artists, all proceeds go to CAAAV, an NYC-based organization that works to build grassroots community power across diverse poor and working class Asian immigrant and refugee communities.

To enter the raffle, send $10 via venmo to @jia-sung , with 'Raffle: <your email or instagram handle>' as the caption. Each venmo counts as one raffle entry! Winners will be picked via randomizer, and can choose their desired artwork in order of first to last. Enter by April 8.

Sarula Bao

Kiss, 2017

Gouache on paper

5" x 7"

Genevieve Bormes

Untitled, 2017

Print on archival paper

10" x 15"

Nicki Cherry

Tulip bulb, 2021

Glazed stoneware

4" x 1.5" x 1.5"

Rin Kim

Joseon Erotica

Print of watercolor on paper

14" x 22"

Matthew C. Kramer

I did have a manatee reading, 2020

Pen on paper

8.5" x 11"

Alex Krowiak

Winter in the West

Photo printed in Epson Fine Art paper with a matte finish and .5” white border.

13” x 19”

Mariangela Le Thanh

Self portrait eating bánh mì

Gouache on wood panel

8" x 10"

Marisha Lozada

untitled, 2019

Graphite, ink, and grommets on paper

20 x 16

Robyn Mah

Hyphen, 2019

Gouache and acrylic on mylar and wood panel

5" x 3" x 0.5"

Naomi Nakazato

Cyanotype No. 34_Summer 2020, 2020

Cyanotype on strathmore bristol paper, 270 gsm

7.5" x 11"

Sasha Pacek

GEO1, 2017

Acryla gouache on paper

13.5” x 9.6”

Jih-E Peng

Cheryn, 2021

Photograph, printed on (TBD)

TBD

Jennifer Seastone

Air: Moving Fast Staying Still, #2, 2020

Print, handmade paper (recycled book, cotton linter, coffee grinds)

11 1/2" x 8 1/4"

Jess X. Snow

The End of Empire, 2016

Giclee print

18" x 24"

Jia Sung

Guanyin, 2020

Gouache and pen on paper

6" x 9"

About CAAAV

CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities is a NYC-based organization that works to build grassroots community power across diverse poor and working class Asian immigrant and refugee communities. CAAAV was founded in 1986 by Asian American women in response to rising anti-Asian violence.

Their current projects include a Chinatown Tenants union that aims to build leadership among Chinatown residents and to advocate for fair housing policies, a NYCHA program to demand language-access and healthy living conditions, and a 7-month internship program for Asian youth.