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Sharing the Legacy of 快活app Student Jack Nathan at a New York City Gallery

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Nicole Militello

Senior Media Relations Specialist

Nicole Militello

News  •
Jack Nathan

In the middle of New York City鈥檚 bustling streets, right by the Brooklyn Bridge, you鈥檒l find a new, colorful, . It shares a story best told through the work hanging on the walls. A story of ambition. 听A story of grief. And a story of perseverance.

Happy Jack Clothing

The Happy Jack Gallery celebrates the life of the late Jack Nathan, a 快活app student who died in the summer of 2020. The walls are covered with Jack鈥檚 creations and with the work of a close friend, 快活app student Eli Bucksbaum. The gallery raises awareness for mental health 鈥 a mission Jack, who contended with anxiety and depression, supported through the launch of his .

The passion in the paintings testifies to a friendship started at 快活app and their times as roommates.

Jack Nathan painting

鈥淥ne day we just decided to go to Michael鈥檚 and get a bunch of paint and canvases and go downstairs and just paint because there was nothing else to do,鈥 Bucksbaum says. 鈥淏oth of us just fell completely in love with the idea of art. It was really fun. We would just paint. It鈥檚 as simple as that.鈥

And as simple as that, they bonded through their art. It was an outlet that Jack always made time for because, as he would tell Bucksbaum, you get to decide how your day goes. 鈥淚f your anxiety pops up, try and fill it with something that you know is going to relieve it. He found his own coping method, and that鈥檚 the biggest battle of anxiety is finding ways to deal with it. You鈥檙e not getting rid of it, but maybe you鈥檙e putting it into something and you鈥檙e creating something bigger 鈥 that鈥檚 what Jack did.鈥

Jack was not one to wait for life to happen to him. 鈥淗e was a go-getter,鈥 Bucksbaum recalls. So when the two friends took an entrepreneurship class taught by Daniels College of Business professor Stephen Haag, the wheels started turning for Jack.

Their assignment was to come up with a business idea and make a dollar off of it, and that was when the idea for Happy Jack clothing was born. Jack started buying clothes and using the on-campus heat press to imprint his designs. When the ink ran out one day, Jack bought his own press and installed it in his room.

鈥淚 remember I walked into his room after class, and he [had] 20 hoodies with printed designs on them,鈥 Bucksbaum says. 鈥淲e just started going to thrift stores, and he would buy as many clothes as he could and then print his own designs on them. After about a week, there was like 150 articles of clothing in his room.鈥

Happy Jack鈥檚 motto reflects its namesake鈥檚 personal philosophy: 鈥淭o the individuals who struggle with life, who thrive in life, and who simply, live life. I look forward to making this world a better place with you all.鈥 Jack wanted not only to spread awareness, but also to support organizations doing the same.

鈥淗e always had the charitable mindset with everything,鈥 Bucksbaum says. He remembers when Jack first made a profit. He couldn鈥檛 wait to write a check to support and , organizations that raise awareness about mental health challenges facing children and young adults.

Although Jack wasn鈥檛 able to launch many of his designs, his legacy carries on. His iPad contained hundreds of designs, and his mother, Bradi Harrison, now puts those on shirts and keeps his business running with Jack's father, David, and his sister, Drew. Jack鈥檚 designs are spotted on shirts and hoodies all over the country. They also are for sale at the new pop-up shop.

The shop continues Jack鈥檚 mission to destigmatize mental illness. Harrison asked Bucksbaum to curate the gallery, and he also is displaying some of his own artwork, which is available at the silent听听where 50% of the profits will be donated to Child Mind Institute in honor of Jack.听

Artwork by Eli Bucksbaum
Artwork by Eli Bucksbaum

鈥淣ow with the gallery, it鈥檚 really a tribute to honor Jack,鈥 Bucksbaum says. 鈥淚 tried to show the art in the way that [he] and I wanted to show our art, because we always talked about having a gallery. I miss him, and I feel like this has brought me closer to him, and it鈥檚 helped me cope. I just feel like it鈥檚 my duty as his friend to do the things we talked about.鈥

Painting has helped Bucksbaum deal with the complicated feelings of grief. His work relies heavily on wisdom from Jack. For example, his preference for thick layers of paint speaks to his understanding of the human psyche. 鈥淭hose are all the anxieties 鈥 the things we deal with that are dark and miserable and make us sad, but they are not what define us,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey just have the most layers. They鈥檙e just the things that really build us as humans, but it鈥檚 not our overall representation of us. It鈥檚 just what鈥檚 underneath.鈥

When people step into the gallery or look at the artwork online, Bucksbaum wants them to understand Jack 鈥 a go-getter, someone who didn鈥檛 care about the constraints of society, someone who was making a difference with his art. Bucksbaum says the message Jack would want people to take away from the gallery is simple: 鈥淚t鈥檚 the cheesiest thing, and everyone hears it, but just be you. Be yourself. And people say that a lot, but he meant it, and he did it.鈥