 I'm Shura, and I'm the third person to be showing with the raw-cooked series at the Brooklyn Museum. I was born in Russia, and I came to America when I was 15. I studied music for 20 years, and music is still the biggest motivation for my art. So the piece that I'm doing for the show, the Domino piece is based on a piece of music. It's a sonata by Hinastera, Argentinian composer. And the whole piece is based on... So I'm using a double square format, which is basically a division of a rectangle into two, and using the traffic light, the three circles to divide that. It relates to this piece of music. The Domino pieces will be placed in the lobby of the museum, and of course they form a game, a Domino game, and that's how I worked on them kind of playfully, and that's how it also relates to music. Then I'm doing eight large-scale paintings that will be shown at the Bozar Court. There could be called diptychs, because for each side of the court there will be two paintings that relate to the pieces in the museum. So when I was thinking about the portraiture, and looking at all the portraiture that is there, I thought that of course the portraits represent the people in time that they were painted. So I thought for my work I would use the images that everybody knows about in New York. The image of a woman is taken from a sign of a man and a woman throwing stuff in the garbage. And the man is a man from a stoplight. So it's something that everybody sees and sees often. This is the first time I'm doing work specifically with the idea in mind of space and the work surrounding my work.