We wee honored to be part of 20 organizations across New York City that participated in Naming the Lost, a COVID memorial project dedicated to the experiences and losses New Yorkers have faced since the start of the pandemic.

In April 2023, we invited our community members to gather in our studio and reflect on the impact of the pandemic, the failures of systems that exacerbated profound loss, and the lack of collective mourning over the past three years. Participants brought in small items that held meaningful memories or represented something they want to let go of. Together, we incorporated these found objects and personal artifacts into a community-created wind chime that mixes sound and sculpture to inspire space for remembrance and grieving.

Naming the Lost: Reverberations of Grief

The pandemic has exacerbated challenges that many within The W.O.W. Project and Chinatown have been facing for decades, from gentrification and displacement of long-term working-class residents to racist and misogynistic violence against Asian women, trans, and non-binary people. Because our work is rooted in the healing that happens when we’re in community, the physical act of gathering and creating a Naming the Lost memorial together has helped transform the grief and rage that so many of us have been holding onto for the past three years.
— UNKNOWN

The wind chime was hung on the Greenwood Cemetery 5th Ave entrance for the month of May and was activated alongside the other memorials on May 11th in a dedication ceremony at the cemetery. The project was brought back to Chinatown in June, where it was activated during W.O.W.'s 7 year anniversary finale celebration on June 23rd.

A group of seven people squatting and smiling in front of a black fence decorated with colorful ribbons and fabric pieces, outside on a sidewalk during daytime.
Collection of colorful beaded necklaces and jewelry on a beige surface, including a black and white braided strap, gold accents, and small decorative elements.
A young woman standing on a chair holding a long string of objects hanging from the ceiling, while an older woman observes in a room with various items and decorations.