#  Crossings Gallery 

 



##  body of work 

 At the Gallery May 29-September 4, 2025 

artist: payal kumar



 

 [ Coming Soon: Hugo Nakashima-Brown's Familiar Faces | Living Spaces arrow\_circle\_right ](https://edportal.harvard.edu/event/opening-reception-familiar-faces-living-spaces) 

 

       ![red and white colors combined to create flowers coming from legs](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_21_9__1920x825/public/2025-05/image%201%20%281%29.png?h=5725bc15&itok=ZbtdcInE) 

 

 



 

 



 

What does the body carry—and who is it carrying it for? In *body of wor*k, multidisciplinary artist payal kumar delves into the burdened, beautiful, and often fragmented body through a vivid blend of paintings, textiles, zines, and poetry. Their work draws from North Indian folk traditions and protective talismans to explore care, medicalization, and the limits of bodily autonomy in a world shaped by capitalism, colonialism, and generational trauma.

Braiding together kumar's intimate journey as both caregiver and patient, this collection invites viewers to witness the reimagining of our bodies as vessels of connection rather than limitation.

Step into this bold, genre-crossing exhibit and experience a powerful invitation to see the body—and care—itself, anew.



 

### Care Sessions 

 

On July 30, Participants experienced *body of work* as a space for collective rest and healing. They met the artist, explored the gallery, sipped herbal tea from [Sankofa Anacaona Botanicals](https://www.instagram.com/sankofa.anacaona.botanicals/?hl=en), and received calming ear acupuncture\* from local 5NP-certified practitioners. There was also time in the Zine Nook, to engage in hands-on reflection through an art-making activity.

*\*Free auricular (ear) acupuncture offered in a communal setting. Sessions were available on a first-come, first-served. Participants were separated by folding screens for privacy and treated together for twenty-minute sessions. Not intended as a substitute for professional medical care.*



 



      ![art by payal kumar head figures with nature pieces sprouting up](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_1_1__480x480/public/2025-05/18x24%20print%20abundance.jpg?itok=ESCYGUdw) 

 

 

  

 



### Zine Nook 

 

Come rest and digest in our resource nook! Flip through handmade, community-created booklets (aka “zines”) and explore themes of bodily autonomy, healing, medical justice, and more. Feel inspired? Add your zine to the collection or read one that speaks to you—this space is for sharing voices and stories.



 



      ![red and white colors combined to create flowers coming from legs](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_1_1__480x480/public/2025-05/image%201%20%281%29.png?itok=c-obLupT) 

 

 

  

 



 

 

 

##  Meet the Artist 

   ![payal kumar sits in a black dress with a red background](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_1_1__360x360_scale/public/2025-05/Payal_Kumar_3%20FAVORITE-seated.jpg?itok=kMggHHYn) 

 

**payal kumar** (they/them) is a multidisciplinary cultural worker and abortion doula whose work is rooted in the in-betweens. Their work across mediums is grounded in forms of folk art and \[sub\]cultural resistance from peoples' movements across local and global margins (particularly from their family’s villages in the Madhubani district of Bihar). Their visual art and performance pieces have found homes across grassroots protests and cozy intergenerational dinners, in gallery spaces like the Museum of Fine Arts, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and international TRANS\* Future Archives, and through collaborative learning spaces like the Allied Media Conference. payal is a participant of the 2024 Artist Pipeline program at the Harvard Ed Portal and a recipient of the prestigious Boston LAB Grant in 2021. Through creative strategies, they call on us to challenge the state's monopoly on Imagination so that we may all unearth and activate our collective power.

*Headshot by Mel Taing*



 

##  Artist's Statement 

**What Lingers Within?**

I use mixed media- paintings, illustrations, zines, textile, poetry- to explore the individual and collective body beyond the borders of our skin. Inspired by North Indian folk art and protective healing talismans, each piece reflects the tension of navigating a body that doesn’t seem to be yours. As someone whose experience of self is shaped by intergenerational trauma and chronic illness, I use artmaking as a diagnostic tool to bring the inside out. In this process, I explore our porosity as beings shaped by our society. What are the things that linger within us? Are they just ours? These pieces are not self portraits, but reflections of a diasporic chimera that is fragmented, fluid, and extends past ourselves.

 

 





###    Read more from the artist  expand\_more  

 

Embedded in my work is the question of care and where we find it in a world that constantly demands our life and labor for survival. From being a patient myself to working in community health spaces as a clinical advocate, the tools we have to make our bodies legible through our medical system often fall short as a result of deep-rooted colonial inequity. Our bodies are pathologized when not productive and marked as monstrous when mad. Both as caregivers and care receivers, these systems can further isolate us from our bodies and each other. In these works, I invoke traditional cultural forms and community conversations as an homage to the histories and practices that nourish us; by sharing our stories, I hope we can reclaim our agency and reimagine the body as a site for intentional resistance, healing, and connection.



 

 

 



 

 

 

 

##  June 5 | body of work Opening Event 

 



     ![artist payal kumar gives a speech at opening event at gallery](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_3_4__480x640/public/2025-06/1A3A6337.jpg?itok=mfuThsgw) 

 



 

  

 

     ![four people stand around with strawberry pops at food truck](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_1_1__480x480/public/2025-06/1A3A6445.jpg?itok=DSTFYERI) 

 



 

  

 

     ![opening event for body of work ed portal entrance](/sites/g/files/omnuum12051/files/styles/hwp_1_1__480x480/public/2025-06/1A3A6457.jpg?itok=dCOLKMvb) 

 



 

  

 

 

 

 

##  About Crossings Gallery 

The Crossings Gallery showcases work by contemporary Allston-Brighton, Harvard, and Boston artists, complemented by artist talks, panel discussions, and interactive workshops. Open during Harvard Ed Portal hours, the gallery also features street-facing exhibitions for public viewing anytime.