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Rooted in her decades-long relationship with Self Help Graphics, Flores created the print in collaboration with Dewey Tafoya, SHG’s Lead Printer, and Gabby Claro, Studio Assistant. The imagery draws from a community altar she created at Gloria Molina Grand Park in 2025, where hundreds gathered to reflect, leave messages, and bear witness. Monarch butterflies symbolize migration and transformation; sunflowers ground the work in deeper histories of land and belonging. Flores reflects on the symbolism within the piece: “The sunflowers represent the Native American soil on which the Statue of Liberty stands and are a reminder that unless you or your ancestors are Indigenous to this land, or were brought here as enslaved people, everyone here is an immigrant. The stories of immigrants reflect tragedy, resilience, fortitude, love, and ultimately hope. The monarch butterflies represent migration—and that hope immigrants of all backgrounds strive for: a metamorphosis from struggle to success in the land of opportunity. Migration is part of nature, part of the human spirit. It is to explore, to survive, to seek shelter, and to create a better life.” For Flores, even the title carries meaning. The word “boarder” is marked with an “X,” underscoring that these children were not temporary occupants, ‘boarding’ within the system—they died within it. Learn more about Consuelo’s print by watching the video here or reading the blog on our website, linked below.
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