Satomi Shirai discusses her work in "Portraiture Now: Asian American Portraits of Encounter." The title of Satomi Shirai's photographic project, "Home and Home: New York in My Life," indicates a coming-to-grips with the dislocations caused by her move to the city from Japan in 2004. She writes about how she watched a small cherry tree in her Queens neighborhood and how she was shocked to discover one day that it had been cut down. What makes Shirai a true artist of cultural conflict and engagement is that she did not flinch from this episode, or from America. Instead, her wonderfully overstuffed, sensually detailed photographs create the visual terrain that shows Shirai's ongoing engagement with two cultures. Shirai graduated from Musashino Art University in Tokyo (1996) and worked as a commercial photographer in Japan before moving to New York City. She received her MFA from Hunter College in 2010. She has exhibited widely, including in the National Portrait Gallery's Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition (2009). Recorded at NPG, September 16, 2011. Interview by Jasmine Fernandez, intern, Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Program. Image: Fortune Telling / Satomi Shirai / Digital chromogenic print, 2007 / Collection of the artist / Copyright Satomi Shirai