Jerome
Hill
Artist
Fellows
2021-23
Ephrat Asherie is a NYC based b-girl, performer, choreographer and director, and a 2016 Bessie Award Winner for Innovative Achievement in Dance. Asherie has received numerous awards to support her work including Dance Magazine’s Inaugural Harkness Promise Award, a Jacob’s Pillow Fellowship at the Tilles Center, a Jerome Foundation Travel and Study Grant, and a National Dance Project award. The live performance chapter of her new project UnderScored is being commissioned by Works & Process at the Guggenheim Museum and will premiere in 2021. She is honored to have been mentored by Richard Santiago (aka Break Easy) and to have worked and collaborated with Dorrance Dance, Doug Elkins, Rennie Harris, Bill Irwin, Gus Solomons Jr., and Buddha Stretch. Asherie is a co-founding member of the all-female house dance collective MAWU and is forever grateful to NYC’s underground dance community for inspiring her to pursue a life as an artist.
Fellowship Statement
My work is rooted in the complex rhythmic, physical, cultural, and spiritual lineages of New York City's underground dance community, a community I have been fortunate to be a part of for almost two decades. The performers I collaborate with are all part of the underground scene and we share, not only common movement languages (including breaking, hip hop, house, and vogue) but also an interest in exploring unconventional ways of remixing dances in various contexts, including creating for the stage. Implicit in working in these Latinx and African American vernacular forms is an ongoing conversation around the systemic racism that plagues this country, the struggles of the LGBTQIA+ community, joy as a form of resistance and resilience, and the commodification of culture as a means to make communities of color invisible. The underground dance scene and NYC’s complex labyrinth of cultural collisions inspired my hybrid approach to movement, which is integral to my work.
Photo by Claudia Celestino
Vie Boheme, a Motown native who blossomed creatively in Pittsburgh and refined in Minneapolis, is a multimodal artist, choreographer, dancer, and singer. Her choreographic work has been presented at Intermedia Arts, the Guthrie Theater, the Southern Theater, the Walker Art Center, Dance Alloy Theater, and the Kauffman Center. She received a Cultural Community Partnership Award from the Minnesota State Arts Board in support of her most recent work, CENTERPLAY, and is a former co-creative director, vocal artist, and choreographer for Stokley Williams, founding front man of Mint Condition. She was a founding member of The August Wilson Center Dance Ensemble (Top 25 to Watch, Dance Magazine, 2012) and also a former dance artist with Camille A. Brown & Dancers and TU Dance. Boheme’s recent TedxMinneapolis talk, Is Performing Art Worth the Struggle?, is available for viewing. She is a Vinyasa, Yin and fitness yoga instructor with her own signature teaching philosophy, CoreKinetics Yoga; and a Teaching Specialist in the Dance Department at the University of Minnesota.
Fellowship Statement
I am a multimodal artist; a choreographer, singer, dancer, actress, poet and a writer. I design theatrical performance experiences that weave all of these mediums. I bring athletic agility to vocal performance by singing and dancing in unison, eliminating the boundary between the visual and audio experience. I also weave sentiment and storytelling through poetry and monologues. Each performance piece is designed to give a glimpse into the sometimes dark and complex emotional spaces people experience that seem elusive and ever present.
My work is acknowledgement and expression of the experiences of African American women. Multilayered, interwoven, shining light filtered through many cultural layers.
J. Bouey is out here doing their best, damnit! Currently moving on pandemic timing and prioritizing rest, Bouey is a dance artist who daringly explores trauma and mental illnesses from their Black american, agender, and sexually queer perspective in their creative practice. Bouey’s work has been shared through live performance and film.
Living with depression and severe anxiety, Bouey is finding their way back to joy with a determination to manifest the dreams dreamt from their youth. These dreams sustained them when the sun didn’t shine or shined too bright to see.
Fellowship Statement
Yo, what's up?! This fellowship has found me knee-deep in grief research! The onset of the pandemic prompted me to study grief to equip me with the knowledge to support Black folx who've experienced death and loss due to covid-19. The research led me to reckon with my underexplored grief.
Photo by Natalie Tsui
DejaJoelle is an African Centered artist that focuses on the Healing and Liberation of Black Communities across the globe. DejaJoelle does not find comfort in highlighting where she’s been or what she has “accomplished” but has accepted that life is an everlasting journey that is worth being present for. Give Thanks.
Fellowship Statement
I am an African Centered - Healing Artist, Choreographer, Director, and Cultural Healing Curator. I believe Dance serves as our connection to ourselves, our communities, and our overall Divinity. I create intentional spaces for Black, LGBTQ2, and Deaf community to discover their own practices toward Healing using Dance, Body Reclamation, and other Healing practices. As the world experiences collective hurt and grief, I trust that our greatest act of REVOLUTION and REBELLION against hatred and corruption is Self-Love and Healing through Dance. I refuse to fuel the fire of destruction and heinousness and instead focus my Art and energy on properly handling Black people who continue to be mishandled.
Photo by Awa Mally
Fana Fraser was born and raised on Kairi, now known as Trinidad and Tobago, and is currently living in Brooklyn on Lenape land. Her work is rooted in a contemporary Caribbean aesthetic and framed by narratives of eroticism, power, and compassion. Her performances have been presented at region(es): Central, ISSUE Project Room, Wassaic Project, Brooklyn Museum, The Knockdown Center, Movement Research at Judson Church, BAAD!, La MaMa Moves!, the CURRENT SESSIONS, Gibney, Trinidad Theatre Workshop, and Emerging Artists Theatre.
Fraser was a Movement Research Van Lier Fellow (2017), a resident artist at the inaugural MANCC Forward Dialogues Choreographic Lab (2017), the Dance & Performance Institute in Trinidad & Tobago (2016) and Dance Your Future (2016)—a project partnership between BAAD! and Pepatián. She has served as Rehearsal Director for Ailey II. A full spectrum doula-in-training, Fraser currently works as a co-director for Pepatián.
Fellowship Statement
I am guided
by spirit
animal
shadow
knowing and desire. I am from playful heat, fire and nebula
ocean, salt sweet, ferocious madness. Grounded by love and rage I dance,
embody sound and string language, to resurrect voices of ancestors
unsilenced,
I serve as a channel for remembered stories to be told.
I am opening to delightful fantasy, winding and spiraling things into wild
magnificence
in honor and as offering
to the survivors, the warriors who have come before me.
With kin, I am ready to help cast hope for the children of our children’s
children’s children,
to listen, give thanks and praise their dreams.
Photo by Whitney Browne
Jerron Herman (he/him) is a disabled artist working in dance and text to facilitate welcoming. From late 2018 into 2019 he produced four world premiere commissions for Gibney, Performance Space New York, The Whitney Museum, and Danspace Project, and performed excerpts at The Kennedy Center. Jerron joined Kinetic Light in 2019, having been a member of Heidi Latsky Dance since 2011.
Jerron has served on the Board of Trustees at Dance/USA since 2017, most recently as Vice Chair. He was a finalist for the Lark Play Development Lab/Apothetae Fellowship and received The King’s College Alumni Award also in 2017. From 2019-2020 he curated the series Access Check 2.0: Mapping Accessibility for the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation and writes extensively on art & culture. Jerron was named a 2020 Disability Futures Fellow by the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Fellowship Statement
My work aspires to connect disparate contexts together to reveal their cohesion. In recent pieces I’ve sampled and sourced from history, popular culture, and text. Now, I wish to use my body as a source. Growing up in medicalized contexts such as physical and occupational therapy I relied on others’ expertise of my body to will it and control it; I experienced a similar fashioning in dance, but through movement experimentation have noticed explicit choreography across my limbs. When mitigating pain or crossing my body I’ve noticed the movement is active, and has the potential to parallel contexts outside the body. I’m following the symbolism in my diagnosis to reveal the scholarship inherent in the unnoticed quakes. What can my warring hemispheres teach me?
Photo by Mark Wickens
Herb Johnson III (aka JDot Tight Eyez) graduated from Perpich Center for the Performing Arts in 2010 and studied 3 years at the Lundstrum Center for Arts. Johnson is now an an Urban & Street dance instructor at the University of Minnesota. He choreographs and performs solo and in groups 612 Crew, DeadPool, and Mixtape. Professional work includes iLuminate from America’s Got Talent, choreographing G-Easy's Halftime Show 2018, and Super Bowl 52 Halftime Show 2018 with Justin Timberlake. Johnson was a 2017 McKnight Dancer Fellow and received a 2018 Momentum: New Dance Works commission and a grant from the Foundation of Contemporary Arts. Additionally, he received a Jerome Travel/Study grant in 2018 to travel to Dusseldorf, Germany to attend European Buck Session’s annual Krump dance event.
Fellowship Statement
Herb Johnson III is a multi-disciplinary artist and Krump Scholar. As a leader of the Krump dance movement in Minnesota, he aspires to continue to build and bring visibility to the community through training within the style and event organization.
Photo by Juiceedope (Julius Johnson)
LeilAwa [Leila Awadallah] is a Palestinian, Arab-American dancer, choreographer, filmmaker and cultural activist based in Minneapolis, Mni Sota Makoce and Beirut, Lebanon. She holds a BFA in Dance and minor in Arabic Language and Literature from the University of Minnesota. LeilAwa founded the project: Body Watani (body-as-homeland) and is developing an offering of Arab Rooted Contemporary dance, both of which engage with dance forms, rhythms and rituals of SWANA, ancestral memories, and embodied reflections on settler-colonial occupation and indigenous resistance.
LeilAwa’s work and research has been supported by Jerome Foundation, Springboard for the Arts, Arab American National Museum, Mizna, Lebanese National Theatre, Amalgam, Camargo Foundation, Cedar Tree Project, Walker, Rhythmically Speaking, Threads Dance Co. and SAGE. Leila danced with Ananya Dance Theatre, performing locally, nationally, and internationally in Ethiopia, Palestine and India; is a founding member of Kelvin Wailey, 3wadallahs and Solidarity Rising; and a collaborator with Theatre of the Women of the Camp.
Fellowship Statement
LeilAwa (lay-luh-wuh) merges my gifted name, لیلى , with my family lineage, عوض اللھ , to embody a self that is both rooted in histories and becoming into futures. I dive deep into intersections of arts and activism, beginning with body and breathing outwards to examine the ways dance engages with human rights, invites healing, invokes critical thinking, and physicalizes practices of decolonizing our bodies / lands through re-membering and re-imagining. This emerging project: Body Watani is a pathway, a container with soft edges, space for artists / peoples to reflect on this notion of body as a site of living homeland. Through this fellowship, I will take steps to establish Body Watani as a project-based dance company split between Minneapolis and Beirut, building community, creating workshops, growing collaborations, and initiating the company’s first full piece, Terraena: hakawati of the sea. As well as prioritizing Arab, SWANA, and Mediterranean dance / cultural / political studies. SWANA [South West Asia and North Africa] is a decolonial term used when referring to the ‘Middle East’ or ‘Arab world’ (which is not all Arab) to locate geographically rather than ethnically.
Photo by Trista Marie Photo
Jordan Demetrius Lloyd is a dance artist based in Brooklyn, NY. Originally from Albany, NY, Lloyd graduated from The College at Brockport where he performed works by Maura Keefe and Alexandra Beller. He has collaborated with and performed for Karl Rogers, Netta Yerushalmy, Tammy Carrasco, Monica Bill Barnes, Catherine Galasso, Laura Peterson, Ambika Raina and David Dorfman Dance. His teaching practice has brought him to Rutgers University and Mark Morris Dance Center, and his work has been produced by New York Live Arts, BRIC, ISSUE Project Room, Movement Research at Judson Memorial Church, The Center for Performance Research and Brooklyn Studios for Dance. He was selected as a 2019 Center for Performance Research Artist in Resident and is a recipient of the 2019-21 Fresh Tracks Performance and Residency Program at New York Live Arts. For more please head to jordandlloyd.com
Fellowship Statement
My approach to making is visual and imaginative, using movement as a tool to manipulate time and space and to stretch the edges of the collective experience. I work intuitively when generating material and focus on formal elements such as shape, color and texture to arrive at a place of cohesion. My work is home to considerations of place and moments in the world, teetering along lines of fantasy and vast, radical imagination. By rooting my work in compositional specificity and performative intention, I aim to muddle interpretation and complicate association, keeping the viewing experience active and participatory. Movement, to me, can act as a portal into memory, ancestry and a deeper level of feeling that widens the possibilities of what a moment represents. In many ways, my work seeks to sustain attention, evoke questions, and stimulate opinions while bringing communities together to share a specific moment in time.
Photo by Aundre Larrow
Taja Will is a queer, Latinx (Chilean) adoptee, performer, choreographer, and Healing Justice practitioner based in the Twin Cities, the occupied land of the Dakota and Anishinaabe peoples. Will integrates improvisation, somatic modalities, text and vocals in contemporary performance that explores visceral connections to current socio-cultural realities through ritual, archetypes and everyday magic.
Will has been presented in Walker Art Center Choreographer’s Evening, Red Eye Theater, Right Here Showcase and the Candy Box Dance Festival and is the recipient of a 2018 McKnight Choreography Fellowship, administered by the Cowles Center and funded by The McKnight Foundation. Will recently received support from the National Association of Latinx Arts & Culture, the Minnesota State Arts Board, and Metropolitan Regional Arts Council. As a performer Will has collaborated with Sara Shelton Mann, Rosy Simas, Keith Hennessy, Pramila Vasudevan, Deborah Jinza Thayer, Timmy Rehborg, Body Cartography Project and Miguel Gutierrez among others.
Fellowship Statement
My work is conceptual, state-based, grounded in personal practice, and always in relationship to socio-cultural realities of the moment. In that, my areas of attention for the fellowship duration will include personal movement practice, mentorship, and writing/artist advocacy. For me, a weekly, uninterrupted personal movement practice is a foundation for my creativity, physical range, and the creation of new work. Mentorship is my primary affinity. I intend to continue my mentorship with Sara Shelton Mann, as she is willing and able, and start a mentorship with a voice-based artist and a contemporary performance artist who engages with writing. Another area of focus I’m invested in is writing, creative and pragmatic. I’m interested in developing tools for artists to encourage further equity in relationship with presenters and institutional partners, such as a values rider.
Photo by Nanne Sorvold
Alternates and Finalists in Dance
In recognition of COVID, finalists received $5,000 grant awards and alternates received $7,500 grant awards. Finalists in dance included:
Hadar Ahuvia, Maria Bauman-Morales*, Alexandra Bodnarchuk, Moriah Evans, Kayla Farrish, Davalois Fearon, Molly Lieber and Eleanor Smith, Malcolm Low, Kaleena Miller, Music From The Sole (Leonardo Sandoval, Gregory Richardson)*, Christopher “Unpezverde” Núñez, Valerie Oliveiro*, Same As Sister (S.A.S.) (Briana Brown-Tipley, Hilary Brown-Istrefi)*, Mariana Valencia
* indicates recommended Alternates (panels recommended Alternates in the event that anyone recommended as a Fellow not be able to accept the Fellowship)
Catina Bacote grew up in New Haven, Connecticut. Her nonfiction has appeared in Tin House, Ploughshares, Kweli, Gettysburg Review, Gulf Coast, TriQuarterly, The Common, Prairie Schooner, December Magazine, Southern California Review, and in the anthology, This Is the Place: Women Writing About Home. Her work has been supported by residencies at Hedgebrook, Headlands Center for the Arts, The Millay Colony, Willapa Bay AiR, the Djerassi Resident Artist Program, Brush Creek Foundation for the Arts, the MacDowell Colony where she received the Ann Cox Chambers Long-form Journalism Fellowship, and the Ragdale Foundation where she received the Alice Judson Hayes Social Justice Fellowship. Bacote holds an MFA from the University of Iowa, where she was admitted as a Dean’s Graduate Research Fellow and subsequently served as the Provost’s Visiting Writer in Nonfiction. Currently, she is an assistant professor of creative writing at St. John’s University in Queens, New York.
Fellowship Statement
I am interested in how the writer’s voice acts as an ethical pointer in a world where poverty and excessive wealth, political repression, gun violence, racial segregation, and mass incarceration persist. My nonfiction writing depends on collecting personal testimony and attempts to uncover intimate stories that have not been told or retell those distorted by the realms of politics or entertainment. However, some tales feel dangerous to share because even the people they touch have kept silent. But as an artist, I aspire to step into uncharted territory and gently bring others along with me. I engage in this work not as a distant observer or objective researcher but as a Black woman whose life has been shaped by racial and economic injustice. Presently, I am working on my first book-in-progress, Eastern Circle, which chronicles the lasting impact of the illegal drug trade on my family and community.
Lexie Bean (they/he) is a queer and trans multimedia artist whose work revolves around themes of bodies, homes, cyclical violence, and LGBTQIA+ identities. They're a member of the RAINN National Leadership Council and a Lambda Literary Award Finalist for Written On The Body, centering fellow trans survivors of domestic and sexual abuse, and served as a keynote speaker for MaleSurvivor and universities around the United States. Their experimental and animated short films, Full, Trans Boy Remember, and The Ship We Built, which later became an #OwnVoices, Kirkus Starred novel with Penguin Random House and a feature-length film script, have played in festivals globally. Their latest writing, A Scavenger Hunt For People Loneliest In Their Own Homes, was commissioned by Price Hill Will. Their work has been featured in Teen Vogue, the New York Times, Huffington Post, Feminist Wire, Ms. Magazine, Them, Logo’s New Now Next, Bust Magazine, Autostraddle, and more. www.lexiebean.com
Fellowship Statement
I’m interested in creating for those who blame themselves for falling into the same mistakes again and again; people who can't hold their own bodies. I want to create for those struggling with shame, developing new vocabularies, and forming families; people who are afraid of change. Queer folks surviving the Midwest, where I'm from. I’m interested in developing narratives where there is danger in forgetting, and remind us all that there is resilience in imagination.
I am currently working on several personal projects relating to these themes: a television pilot, Flyovers; my first Young Adult novel, All My Good Memories Of That House Were With You; my first auto-fiction novel for adults, Across From You; continued building and collaboration for the screenplay version of my debut novel, The Ship We Built; as well as collaborative pieces, like What Will I Become?, through documentary and anthology curation.
Photo by Llewellyn Nuñez
Ama Codjoe (she/her) is the author of Blood of the Air (Northwestern University Press, 2020), winner of the Drinking Gourd Chapbook Poetry Prize and Bluest Nude forthcoming from Milkweed Editions in Fall 2022. Her work has been awarded support from Cave Canem, Jerome, Robert Rauschenberg, and Saltonstall foundations, as well as from Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop, Crosstown Arts, Hedgebrook, and MacDowell. Among other honors, Codjoe is the recipient of a 2017 Rona Jaffe Writer’s Award, a 2019 NEA Creative Writing Fellowship, a 2020 BRIO Award from the Bronx Council on the Arts, and a 2020 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship.
Fellowship Statement
I want to continue to learn about the world and about myself through the practice of poetry in the hopes of making true for myself and others Adrienne Rich’s lines from Dreamwood: “that poetry/ isn’t revolution but a way of knowing/ why it must come.” I want to be led into poems by color, music, serendipity, research and travel. Currently, I am revising and shaping my first full-length collection Bluest Nude.
Photo by Jamie Harmon
Carson Faust is a queer writer, and an enrolled member of the Edisto Natchez-Kusso Tribe of South Carolina. His writing has received support from the Tin House Writers’ Workshops as well as the Minnesota State Arts Board, and has appeared or is forthcoming in TriQuarterly, Waxwing, AnomalyJournal, Passages North, Foglifter Journal, and elsewhere. He serves as a board member for 826 MSP—a nonprofit organization that provides literacy- and creative writing-based programming for underserved K-12 students in the Twin Cities area. He is represented by Annie Hwang of Ayesha Pande Literary.
Fellowship Statement
My novel-in-progress—A Bible Or A Knife—utilizes the genre of horror to grapple with the ways in which Indigenous and queer identities are represented, misrepresented, or erased within the canon. Canonically, queer folks and people of color are often confined to antagonistic or secondary roles; Native American stories and histories are used as tools and backdrops within horror narratives. My work aims to turn these banalities on their heads: When Indigenous people maintain their hold on and connection to their homeland, how might the lingering shadow of colonialism persist? What does it look like when land is haunted by the colonizers who failed to remove Native American communities?
Photo by Laura Rae Photography
Sherrie Fernandez-Williams earned an MFA from Hamline University. She is the author of Soft: A Memoir and is a recipient of a Minnesota State Arts Board Artist Initiative Grant, a Beyond the Pure Fellowship, and SASE/Jerome Grant. She was a Loft Mentor Series winner in Creative Nonfiction, a Jones’ Playwright Commission Award Winner, and was selected for the Givens Black Writers Collaborative. Her poems and essays appear in New Limestone Review, Aquifer: The Florida Review, the minnesota review, Rain Taxi’s-Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: Poems in the Wake of Racial Justice, and the anthology, How Dare We! Write, among others. She co-curates the Queer Voices Reading Series with writer and performer Lisa Marie Brimmer in collaboration with Quatrefoil Library and Hennepin County Library.
Fellowship Statement
There were glimmers of hope at the start of the 20th century for my Afro-Cubans ancestors who worked in the cigar factories in Hillsborough County, Florida and lived in planned communities designed to stabilize the lives of workers who created enormous wealth for the factory owners. There was a lot to negotiate. They were black men and women in the south experiencing the horrors of that time, and they were sometimes welcomed and sometimes unwelcomed members of the Cuban community. My fellowship goal is to complete my work in progress, Here Before, a hybrid of prose and poetry. I am a descendant of enslaved Africans brought to Barbados and Cuba, and the southern states of Georgia and North Carolina. I want to resurrect my dead and have them tell a truth beyond prolonged disenfranchisement, especially as it relates to their spiritual lives.
Photo by Anna Min, Min Enterprises Photography, LLC
Susanna Horng is a Taiwanese-American writer, educator, mother, and activist. Her work has been supported by a 2018 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship in Fiction from The New York Foundation for the Arts and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Her writing has been published in Bennington Review, Minerva Rising, and Global City Review. She is a teaching artist for Girls Write Now and a Clinical Associate Professor in Liberal Studies at New York University. She lives with her family in New York City.
Fellowship Statement
I write about the silence of being a woman from a patriarchal culture, the silence of being a woman of color navigating white spaces, the silence of being a mother and caretaker on the second shift.
I care about word play, multilingualism, and language. How multiple or misunderstood meanings of the same word(s) trigger deeper emotional truths. What gets voiced. What gets sacrificed. The costs of trying and failing to communicate.
I am finishing a collection of linked stories that examines the success and failures of the American Dream, the sorrows of living in one of the largest Chinese diasporas, and the loneliness of being the perpetual outsider. I am also working on a novel about privilege, class, and equity.
Junauda Petrus-Nasah is a writer, a soul sweetener, runaway witch, and multi-dimensional performance artist of Black-Caribbean descent, born and working on Dakota land in Minneapolis. She employs poetics, the erotic, and experiences re-membered via ancestral dreaming within her writing. She’s written for the stage, including the aerial-poetic-play, There Are Other Worlds and co-wrote the puppet show, Queen with Erik Ehn. She wrote and directed, Sweetness of Wild, an experimental, episodic film project inspired by wildness, queerness, Black-diasporic-futurism, ancestral healing, sweetness, shimmer and liberation. She is the co-founder of performance collective Free Black Dirt with Erin Sharkey. Her writing can be found in several anthologies, including Queer Voices, How I Resist and Pleasure Activism. Her first YA novel, The Stars and The Blackness Between Them received a Coretta Scott King Honor Award and was a Minnesota Book Award Finalist. She is currently writing her second young adult novel, Black Circus.
Fellowship Statement
For my fellowship, I’ll center on healing and balance as an artist. I’ll get professional career counseling, as well as take more walks, rest and reflect. I will spend intentional time researching Black and queer ancestors of my artistic lineage. I’ll spend time connecting with my artistic mentors, including Alexis DeVeaux and Sharon Bridgeforth. I’ll be writing, researching and editing new books including a young adult book, Black Circus, set in the 90s about a young, Black woman studying aerial acrobatic arts with a mysterious and mystical former circus performer. I’ll work on a collection of poetry, pum pum, as well as an experimental interdisciplinary work called Erotics of Abolition.
Photo by Ngowo Nasah
Michael Prior (he/him) is a writer and a teacher. His poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The New Republic, Poetry, Narrative Magazine, Poetry Northwest, Poetry Daily, the Academy of American Poets’ Poem-A-Day series, Global Poetry Anthology (2015 and 2020), and the Asian American Writers’ Workshop’s The Margins. He is the recipient of awards and fellowships from The Sewanee Review, Magma Poetry, Hawthornden Castle International Retreat for Writers, and the Banff Centre for the Arts. He is the author of Burning Province (McClelland & Stewart / Penguin Random House, 2020) and Model Disciple (Véhicule Press, 2016). Michael holds an MFA from Cornell University. He lives in Saint Paul, where he teaches English and creative writing at Macalester College.
Fellowship Statement
As a Yonsei, whose Japanese grandparents were forcibly incarcerated in a camp during the Second World War, my poems explore intergenerational memory, cultural trauma, diaspora, and my own mixed-race identity. My engagement with the lyric often encompasses the ways various verse forms might be reimagined to express my own experience and to attend to conversations about race in North America. I am currently at work on a manuscript of ekphrastic responses to Japanese American and Japanese Canadian visual artists whose work either documents or re-witnesses the Internment.
Photo by Rocio Anica
Peggy Robles-Alvarado is a Dominican and Puerto Rican Pushcart Prize nominee, 2020 Atticus Review Poetry Contest winner, and a BRIO award winner with fellowships from CantoMundo, Desert Nights Rising Stars, The Frost Place, and VONA. With degrees in education and an MFA in Performance Studies this former teen mother, and initiated priestess in Lukumi and Palo celebrates womanhood and honors cultural rituals. She’s a three-time International Latino Book Award winner who authored Conversations With My Skin (2011), and Homage To The Warrior Women (2012). Through Robleswrites Productions, she created The Abuela Stories Project (2016) and Mujeres, The Magic, The Movement, and The Muse (2017). Her work has been featured on HBO Habla Women, Lincoln Center, and her poetry appears in several anthologies including The Breakbeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNext (2020), and What Saves Us: Poems of Empathy and Outrage in the Age of Trump (2019). For more visit Robleswrites.com.
Fellowship Statement
My poetry honors and questions cultural norms, rituals, and the use of Spanglish and Caribbean slang as valuable forms of communication, and language production rooted in oral tradition. My work celebrates women who don’t break but gracefully stretch through emotional, physical, and socio-economic struggles. With humor, heartbreak, hand me down rituals, and speakeasy belief systems that coax Afro-Cuban deities into clandestine gatherings, problems are handled, and communities are sustained. My work embraces the possibility of repair as related to the body and mind of a people marred by imagined and perceived borders resulting from forced immigration, colonization, displacement, and how spiritual practices involving water and words foster survival. These themes derive from my experiences as a rape survivor, teen mother, initiated priestess in Lukumi and Palo Afro- Caribbean spiritual systems, and a daughter of Dominican and Puerto Rican parents whose footing in America was never secure.
Photo by Jorge Alvarado
Michael Torres was born and brought up in Pomona, California where he spent his adolescence as a graffiti artist. His debut collection of poems, An Incomplete List of Names (Beacon Press, 2020) was selected by Raquel Salas Rivera for the National Poetry Series and named one of NPR’s Best Books of 2020. His honors include awards and support from the National Endowment for the Arts, the McKnight Foundation, the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, CantoMundo, VONA Voices, the Minnesota State Arts Board, the Jerome Foundation, the Camargo Foundation, and the Loft Literary Center. Currently he’s an Assistant Professor in the MFA program at Minnesota State University, Mankato, and a teaching artist with the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop. Visit him at: michaeltorreswriter.com
Fellowship Statement
My writing often focuses on masculinity through a Mexican-American cultural lens. Currently, I’m fascinated by the idea of capacity, and the capaciousness of art in relation to my own self as brown man in America. Moreover, I’m interested in where this fascination with capacity is rooted.
Since the publication of An Incomplete List of Names, I’ve been working on poems and creative nonfiction prose. The poems approach capacity by way of the metaphysical. The nonfiction work seeks to explore capacity through how I understand my own brown body in its various roles—as father, husband, brother, son, homie, colleague—as I move through life in the Midwest, as I exist in academia, as I consider pop culture, and when I visit California, leaning back in the passenger seat of my homie’s Cutlass—windows rolled down, my right arm hanging out the window.
Photo by Henry Jimenez
Alternates and Finalists in Literature
In recognition of COVID, finalists received $5,000 grant awards and alternates received $7,500 grant awards. Finalists in literature included:
Victoria Blanco*, Archie Bongiovanni, Kim Coleman Foote, Crystal Hana Kim, Aditi Natasha Kini*, Naomi Jackson*, Nicole Shawan Junior, Cathy Linh Che, Camille Rankine, Katie Gee Salisbury*, Nicole Sealey
* indicates recommended Alternates (panels recommended Alternates in the event that anyone recommended as a Fellow not be able to accept the Fellowship)
Daniel Chew and Micaela Durand have been collaborators for ten years since film at NYU. Latent in their films are issues of intimacy and connection, two feelings that are increasingly difficult to discern and cultivate in our technologically mediated present. For them, collaboration is one way of dealing with this alienated condition. It is also a political decision that not only acknowledges filmmaking as a collaborative effort, but also strives to move beyond the idea of an artistic genius with its attendant ideas around gender, race, and sexuality. Their work has been shown extensively in the U.S. and abroad including at the International Film Festival Rotterdam, MoMA PS1, White Columns, 47 Canal, Sheffield Doc/Fest, Parish Art Museum, and MoCA LA. In Spring 2020, they were fellows at MacDowell.
Fellowship Statement
We are currently finishing a trilogy of films that we describe as showing the internet without showing the internet. By this, we mean that instead of relying on literal translations of technology and social media, we strive to show how the internet makes us feel and how our digital selves and physical bodies are intimately intertwined in our current moment. The trilogy started with First (2019), a film that follows a teenage girl who interacts with friends and strangers, receiving messages both benign and threatening. The second, Negative Two (2020), revolves around a twenty-something gay man navigating loneliness and the city through gay hook-up apps. We are currently in post-production for 38 (2021) which tells the story of a 38-year-old woman who obsessively watches the social media accounts of the young woman who broke up her marriage.
Photo by Tony Jackson
Lyle Mitchell Corbine, Jr. is a filmmaker. His short films Shinaab and Shinaab, Part II premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2017 and 2019 and the Toronto International Film Festival in 2017 and 2018. He was supported at the Sundance Institute Screenwriters Lab and Directors Lab in 2017 and 2018. He has been a recipient of numerous grants and fellowships from the Sundance Institute, McKnight Foundation, Time Warner Foundation, Maryland Film Festival, and the Minnesota State Arts Board. His first feature, Wild Indian, will premiere in the U.S. Dramatic Competition at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival. Corbine is one of Variety’s 10 Directors to Watch for 2021.
Fellowship Statement
While I love making ambitious personal films like the Shinaab series and my first feature Wild Indian, I want to pursue making genre films that are accessible and for everyone. I am currently working on a number of both types of projects. Stay tuned...
Photo by Joel Feld
Cy Dodson, owner of Minneapolis-based, Triumph Pictures, is focused on producing award-winning documentary content. Dodson combines his use of cinematography and editing to craft compelling tales of the human spirit creating memorable, gripping productions. His latest film Say His Name: Five Days for George Floyd was commissioned by Twin Cities Public Television (TPT) for their 2020 Project, premiering in April 2021. His third film, Emmy-nominated Beneath the Ink (2018) hits on complex racial issues in his Ohio hometown that highlights human stories of forgiveness and redemption. The film won numerous jury and audience awards at festivals worldwide including DocEdge (Academy qualifying), BendFilm, and Palm Springs Shortfest. Conde Nast acquired the film for their GQ Stories platform and it was selected as a Vimeo Staff Pick. Dodson is also the recipient of a 2020 McKnight Media Artist Fellowship, administered by FilmNorth and funded by the McKnight Foundation.
Fellowship Statement
I am unassuming by nature, introverted even. My quiet personality allows me to connect with my subjects. They find the freedom to confide intimate stories with honesty and sincerity. My path to documentary filmmaking was not immediate, but now I feel it’s my purpose. For example, with the recent unrest in my neighborhood in Minneapolis, I was compelled to tell my community’s story with Say His Name. My duty as a documentary filmmaker is to continue be there, letting voices be heard in the name of social justice and reform. I seek out stories that are unique yet universal, that have multiple layers of complexity yet make a direct, personal connection to viewers that can be reflective and change perceptions. My responsibility is to exercise my craft––as a cinematographer and editor––in such a way that voices are heightened. Their voices, in turn, are my voice, and my art.
Photo by Mark Brown
Joua Lee Grande is a filmmaker, photographer and community educator whose goal to highlight underrepresented perspectives and communities drives her work. She produces documentaries and edits the news part-time at WCCO TV 4 News. She has produced short documentaries such as Legislating from Home and Laos Girls Teen Project. Grande was a 2019 Diverse Voices in Docs Fellow through Kartemquin Films and Community Film Workshop of Chicago. She is a member of collectives such as A-Doc and Brown Girls Doc Mafia and a community educator and worker. She teaches media production and related arts at the Saint Paul Neighborhood Network and other institutions throughout the Twin Cities. She is currently in early production for her first feature documentary Spirited.
Fellowship Statement
I believe that there is no such thing as absolute truth, and that storytelling serves as a tool to share versions of the truth. I utilize documentary filmmaking as a tool to elevate voices, perspectives and experiences from communities that are either underrepresented or misrepresented in the larger society. My work often pushes into topics that are deemed uncomfortable such as menstruation taboo and guest-daughter traditions. My goals are to build connection, draw out commonalities amidst human differences, and push viewers into places of discomfort so they can engage in conversations that ultimately lead to positive change. I am a big believer in contributing to a community that lifts others up to tell their own stories. So much of what I learn in my own journey to become a stronger filmmaker, I willingly share with others.
Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich is a filmmaker and artist. Her work has screened all over the world including at the Guggenheim Museum and the Whitney Museum of Art in New York and in Film Festivals such as True/False, New Orleans Film Festival, Doclisboa, and Blackstar Film Festival. She was named to Filmmaker Magazine's 2020 “25 New Faces of Independent Cinema List” and is the recipient of a 2020 San Francisco Film Society Rainin Grant, as well as a finalist in the 2020 Venice Film Festival’s prestigious film lab the Biennale Cinema College. She received a 2019 Rema Hort Mann Award, a 2019 UNDO Fellowship, a 2015 TFI Future Filmmaker Award, and a 2014 Princess Grace Award in film.
Fellowship Statement
I am interested in modes of filmmaking and remembering that are liberatory for black women. My work deconstructs the default conventions of representation that we have been taught, weaving together non-fiction, theatrical performance, narrative intervention, and fantasy. The result is a style of storytelling where the past is always present, and time is not linear but in fact a constant weave.
Photo by Dominick Lewis
Benjamin May’s directorial debut, The Legend of Swee’ Pea, premiered at DOC: NYC and played at over 40 festivals worldwide, winning five Best Documentary Feature awards and two Best Director awards. His second feature, Wet House, an immersive film about the largest harm reduction facility for chronic alcoholics in the US, is distributed by 1091Pictures and Saboteur Media. Ben's work has been funded by grants from the McKnight Foundation, St. Paul Cultural Star, and the Jerome Foundation.
Fellowship Statement
As a documentary filmmaker, I am most interested in subjects and environments we might consider strange or remote—not because they are inherently more interesting or offer more conflict—but because I believe we are all a lot more similar than we are different. Everyone is susceptible to abandonment, failure, and loss. And because film is a deeply intimate endeavor it is the ideal medium to probe our proximity, question our biases, and examine the constructions we take for granted.
Humans are robust, but life is fragile. Working as a neuroradiologist for the past ten years, I have learned that, despite our powerful tools to observe the nature of life, truth is elusive, and certainty is non-existent. As a physician and a filmmaker, I find this idea both terrifying and inspiring and it is the crux of my work.
LaJuné McMillian is a new media artist, and creative technologist making art that integrates performance, virtual reality, and physical computing to question our current forms of communication. McMillian has had the opportunity to show and speak about their work at Pioneer Works, National Sawdust, Leaders in Software and Art, Creative Tech Week, and Art & Code’s Weird Reality. McMillian was previously the Director of Skating at Figure Skating in Harlem, where they integrated STEAM and figure skating to teach girls of color about movement and technology. They have continued their research on Blackness, movement, and technology during residencies and fellowships at Eyebeam, Pioneer Works, Abrons Arts Center, Barbarian Group, and Barnard College.
Fellowship Statement
As an artist, I leverage embodied and digital technologies to research and develop various artistic works across platforms (digital, and in person). During this Fellowship I plan to continue my work on The Black Movement Library. A library for Black people to learn about digital technologies in relation to Blackness, our movements, our histories, and our liberation.
Photo by Sarah O’Connell
Stefani Saintonge is a Haitian-American filmmaker, educator and editor who won the juried and audience award at BlackStar Film Festival for her short film, Fucked Like A Star. Her work has screened at several festivals and institutions internationally including Edinburgh International Film Festival, Ann Arbor Film Festival, Hammer Museum and the Smithsonian National African American Museum. As a member of New Negress Film Society, she co-created their annual Black Women’s Film Conference. She has received support from SFFILM, Jerome Foundation and Bronx Arts Council and served as an artist in residence with Haiti Cultural Exchange. Her work as an editor has screened at Sundance Film Festival, Berlin International Film Festival, Tribeca Film Festival, Guggenheim Museum and PBS.
Fellowship Statement
The process of liberation fascinates me. Whether it's physical labor, spiritual awakenings or self-interrogation, my work investigates the minutia (and oftentimes the mundanity) of building a new world. It could be a spiritual plane where meditation yields new imaginings or an actual massive, rapid undoing. I am drawn to the repetitive physical acts that force growth. I will use this time to develop a feature film about the week leading up to the slave rebellion that would spark the Haitian Revolution.
Photo by Babas Denis
Anna Samo was born in 1980 in Russia. On her first job in Moscow while scanning and coloring hand drawn animation, she witnessed how thousands of separated drawings put together, suddenly turn into a living character. She experienced the tickling feeling of surprise and wonder. This feeling has not left her ever since.
Samo studied animation in Russia and Germany. She was encouraged to create very personal work and to strive for her own authentic voice. As an independent filmmaker she uses a variety of analog animation techniques to create emotional and poetic work. Her films have been screened and won awards at highly acclaimed film festivals around the globe such as Anima Mundi, Krakow Film Festival, Full Frame, DOC NYC, Berlin Film Festival - Berlinale, Annecy Film Festival and Sundance among many others. Samo relocated to the USA in 2013. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Fellowship Statement
I look around and filter what I find through what's inside me. And while doing so I discover something I did not know before. I am inspired by clowns, poets and fools.
Animation is a super power! You can create anything you want – it just takes time. The time spent outside the studio is being condensed, changed through the time spent in the studio. Hours, days, months become pressed into the seconds of film-time. And like the hero of an old tale, who has to wear out seven pairs of iron shoes, I have to paint over thousands of pages and draw down hundreds of pencils before I can arrive at my destination. I don't know where I am heading, but I like walking.
Photo by Tom Bergmann
Lily Jue Sheng is a moving image artist working across film, animation, collage, text, performance, and 2D mixed media. They were born in Shanghai, China, raised in New Jersey, and studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Massachusetts. Their work has recently been presented by Mono No Aware and The Poetry Project in New York City. Their work has been shown locally, nationally, and internationally including at Roulette Intermedium, ArtBook @ MoMA PS1, the Knockdown Center, and Outpost Artist Resources in New York City; Light Field Festival in San Francisco, Images Festival, Winnipeg Underground Festival, and CineCycle in Canada; and TCAC (Taipei Contemporary Art Center) in Taiwan.
Fellowship Statement
I make films. I also make images, poetry, and other things, within the process of filmmaking, and occasionally perform them. My current work uses my own speech and writing to sort through the noise of language attrition, code-switching, and place attachment. This approach produces sort of patchy, quotidian, and sometimes unwatchable films. It's also the way I know how to tell stories. It’s this storytelling that becomes my breaking process, breaking up hegemonic cinema/narrative traditions, especially continuity, classification, and translation.
I have been researching semi-colonial Shanghai, in an effort to learn more about labor, trade, and changing regimes. I’m hoping to parse the archives by making new readings. I’m also looking to gather stories in Shanghainese, to overlap the pedestrian, political, private, and public spheres of Shanghainese. This will open a line of inquiries. Who or what determines when or which oral tradition continues? How do passages, people, and cinematic media move in tandem?
I also recently completed a collaborative film titled Ikebana that might screen sometime in 2021.
Photo by Mono No Aware
Alternates and Finalists in Media/Film
In recognition of COVID, finalists received $5,000 grant awards and alternates received $7,500 grant awards. Finalists in media/film included:
Flavio Alves, Iván Cortázar, James Curry, Beatrice Glow, Chris Gude, Darine Hotait, Malik Isasis*, Mafe Izaguirre*, Sadé Clacken Joseph*, Jennifer Kramer*, Michael Premo, Deepak Rauniyar, Maribeth Romslo, Rafael Samanez, Kelly Ashton Todd
* indicates recommended Alternates (panels recommended Alternates in the event that anyone recommended as a Fellow not be able to accept the Fellowship)
Jay Afrisando is a music composer and sound artist who employs sound and other media to share awareness of human-nature-technology relationships. His work Gunung Siggalang is in Alex Lubet’s 2020 album Three Strings and The Truth: New Music for Mountain Dulcimer. In 2019, his multisensory work The (Real) Laptop Music :)) was presented at Aural Diversity Conference and he presented a full-sphere installation Gendhing Cosmic at Linux Audio Conference.
Afrisando’s interactive installation Exploring the Music of Your Office was presented by the American Composers Forum (ACF) in the 2019 Landmark to Lowertown series. He received an Award for Excellence in 2019 from the Ambassador of the Republic of Indonesia for the United States, a 2016 Minnesota Emerging Composers Award from ACF and an Innovative Art Grant from Kelola Foundation (Yayasan Kelola) to create a participatory performance Mode[a]rn. His piece Water Siter was awarded the 2nd Prize Winner at Prix Annelie de Man 2015. He received a OneBeat 2015 residency in the US and an International Fellowship in Study of Korean Music in 2014.
Fellowship Statement
I use sound and other media to share awareness on complex issues that emerge as a result of our diverse perceptions and the technology we create, including issues on hearing and listening, disability and accessibility, the politics of technology and science, as well as culture and environment.
Through my artistic works, I aspire to capture and convey these intricate phenomena using various approaches, including but not limited to, audio and audiovisual works, 2D and 3D works, participatory work, improvisation, fixed media, and everything in between. Through my work, I want to invite my audiences to closely examine our relationships to other living entities, nature, and technology.
Photo by Kakia Gkoudina
Kashimana is a mother, musician, vocalist, composer, producer and teaching artist with a rich soulful blues voice. The name Kashimana means “that’s their heart” and you can hear Kashimana’s heart beating in the compelling sound of their music, which combines Soul, R&B, Folk, Afro-funk and more. Kashimana’s Love from the Sun CD of original songs draws from her Nigerian heritage and her experiences growing up in Nigeria and Kenya and living in the United States. In 2019, she was the In Common Composer in Residence in Willmar, MN, a Cedar Commissioned Artist, and a Northern Spark Festival Artist (as well as in 2018).
Fellowship Statement
The need to create change and to use my voice to ignite this change drives my work. I use my voice to see other universes and possibilities. With my voice, I hear the joy, the pain, where I come from and where I am going; with my voice, I heal, soothe, and create; with my voice, I am able to connect, harmonize, magnify, communicate, and transmogrify. This is why I use my voice to write, compose, sing and share.
Currently I’m experimenting with loops to create drones, chants, hums, and dissonant harmonies in an effort to create a visceral tingling effect. I use improvisational lyric writing to engage crowd participation towards collaborative creation. I’m also exploring ways of visually representing the vibrations that result from voices to create a more immersive experience.
Some works in progress include Phantom Cries (the musical), A Sprig of That, composed for a MNiature with MN Opera and a song on The Art of the Revolution album by Black artists in the wake of George Floyd’s death.
Leila Bordreuil is a Brooklyn-based cellist, composer and sound-artist from Southern France. After earning a degree in Cello Performance from the Conservatoire National d’Aix-en-Provence, she pursued studies in Experimental Music at Bard College under the mentorship of Marina Rosenfeld. In 2012, she moved to Brooklyn as a dedicated improviser where she became an active collaborator and “rising figure in New York’s Improvised music scene” (The Chicago Reader). In 2019, she released her debut solo LP Headflush, a “real abstract gem” (Boomkat) that “bears the authority of someone who has put many hours of thought and practice into creating her own sound” (Bandcamp).
Bordreuil received composer commissions from the French Embassy at Lincoln Center, ISSUE Project Room, the Kitchen, the French Alliance, Sounds of Stockholm Festival, GRM (Paris) and the American Symphony Orchestra. She is a 2020 artist-in-residence at the GRM, Paris. Past residencies include the McDowell Colony, ISSUE Project Room and E.M.S, Stockholm.
Fellowship Statement
My music draws from Noise, Free Improvisation, avant-garde and other experimental traditions, but adheres to no single genre. Cross-pollination is at the center of my work, both aesthetically and in practice. In my cello performances, I mix my instrument’s culturally inherited melancholia with cathartic harsh noise walls, creating “steadily scathing music [that] favors long and corrosive atonalities” (New York Times). My compositions create immersive environments that enhance psychoacoustic happenings and heighten subjective perception, supported by neuro-scientific research. Often incorporating site-specific resonance, I craft musicality out of an organized awareness of natural sound phenomena. My chamber music pieces are presented at prestigious concert halls and DIY basements alike, in an effort to permeate barriers of musical genre and scene.
During my fellowship I will create large ensemble pieces, study light art to expand my work with perception, and use the resources that Jerome Foundation provides to support the creation of DIY community art spaces after the pandemic.
Photo by Peter Ganushkin
Raised on the verge of several musical streams since her childhood, award-winning violinist and composer Layale Chaker received her musical training at the National Higher Conservatory of Beirut in her native Lebanon, at Conservatoire de Paris and the Royal Academy of Music in London.
Layale’s musical world lies at the intersection of classical contemporary music, Jazz, Arabic Music, and free improvisation. She has received commissions and presented performances and projects around Europe, the Middle-East, North and South America and Asia, and has collaborated with Daniel Barenboim and the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, Johnny Gandelsman, Holland Baroque, International Contemporary Ensemble, Oxford Orchestra, the New World Symphony, Babylon Orchestra, performing at the London Jazz Festival, Junger Kunstler Festival Bayreuth, the Lucerne Festival, and concert halls such as The Berlin Philharmonic, Abbaye de Royaumont, National Sawdust and Wigmore Hall. Her debut album with her ensemble Sarafand, Inner Rhyme, was released on In a Circle Records, and listed as “Top of The World” by Songlines with a 5-star review, NPR 10 Best Releases, and has received praises by the BBC Music Magazine, The New York Times, The Strad, Strings Magazine, Jazz World among others.
Fellowship Statement
As I have navigated through a succession of different places to call home throughout my life, music was one of the few constants that grounded me through these changes. It quickly became a familiar territory, and my way of relating to the world.
That feeling of finding one's home and voice in artistic practice soon turned into one of the main forces behind my work. Today, my communication with the world through music rises from a need and desire to create a haven of belonging, inclusion, visibility and communion for peoples’ histories and narratives through sound, and beyond words.
During the course of this fellowship, I hope and aspire to continue this focus on understanding and querying estrangement through my practice. This will be embodied through the way I conduct research for my various projects, through the development of my musical and artistic language and expression, and through the different works I intend to carry and create.
Photo by Anna Rakhvalova Photography
PaviElle is an amazing interdisciplinary artist, hailing from Rondo, a historically Black neighborhood in St. Paul, Minnesota. She is the recipient of an Upper Midwest Emmy Award as well as, a Sage Award for Dance and Choreography. She received a 2020 McKnight Artist Fellowship for Musicians and an, American Composers Forum Grant for her classical composition, A Requiem for Zula (2019) written in celebration of her Mother, Zula Young. She is known for her powerhouse vocals and for performing with an equally powerful 6-piece band. PaviElle was voted as Minneapolis City Pages “Best R&B Vocalist of 2015,” her band was named one of First Avenue’s Best New Bands of 2015. She is a Teaching artist and a part of the Jazz Department Faculty at MacPhail Center for Music. PaviElle honed her craft as a teenager at Penumbra Theatre, SteppingStone Theatre and with collective, EduPoetic Enterbrainment.
Fellowship Statement
I am a composer, musician, lyricist, spoken-word artist, dancer, playwright, and actor. I am influenced by so many prolific artists, nationally and locally, however, I embody my own unique technique and sound. I am an artist who believes in alchemy and that art can be used as a vehicle to not only heal myself but, to heal others in the process as well. I have realized in this process that my niche is in combining all of my artistic disciplines to create shows with music, movement, acting, dramatic storytelling and singing. The next movement and goal for my career is creating multi-disciplinary shows and further deepening learning how to orchestrate scores for orchestras. I plan to travel to work with composer mentors, as well as, study healing sound therapies. And, I hope to tour my work from this fellowship, nationally and locally.
Photo by Sharolyn B. Hagen
Eric Frye is an American composer and artist. He is known for his solo performance and installation work, which explore the dissociative and psychoactive functions of sound and image. Recently, he premiered audio-visual pieces in LA, Vancouver, Tokyo, and New York City. He has performed multi-channel works alongside central figures of experimental music including Curtis Roads and Beatriz Ferreyra (Ina GRM). His recent solo recordings include Diffusion Soliloquies (2020) and Sketches for Functional Music (2019) and sound design and voice processing for a short film, Elephant Juice, by Swiss designer Simone Niquille. Frye’s work has been shown at HeK, Switzerland; Hangar Art Centre, Barcelona; Audio Visual Arts, New York City; Rochester Art Center, Minnesota; Variform Gallery, Oregon: and more. He has performed extensively in the US, UK, Europe, and Asia.
Fellowship Statement
In 2020, I collaborated with Viennese artist Stefan Juster (Jung An Tagen). We produced two sound projects, Pulsar Acid and Variations for Computer Ashtray, with plans to work with film in the coming months. I am currently researching voice obfuscation software and ambisonics while collaborating with colleagues on a number of multi-disciplinary projects. Intertwining surreal narratives with a multi-disciplinary approach to sound, I am assembling a shapeshifting auditory scene, one that explores the malfunction of perception and how it relates to new ways of masking, or blurring the self.
Prince Harvey is a New York City-based artist, musician, and producer most famously known for recording his first album in an Apple Store. In 2017, he released an EP called Golden Child, followed by Stay Bold: 100 Days 100 Songs, where he premiered a new song every day for 100 days as a protest against Trump. In 2018, Prince was an artist at HarvestWorks and a commissioned artist at The Shed where he began work on a new music album and series of short films.
Harvey’s music has been featured in The New York Times, Noisey, Billboard, VICE, The Daily Beast, The Guardian, The Fader, and Afropunk among many others. Upon release of his first album, PHATASS, he received notice from major music and news publications, as well as celebrities like Lil Wayne, Russell Simmons and Talib Kweli. Prince Harvey’s forthcoming album will be released in Summer 2021.
Fellowship Statement
For the last one decade through music, film and performance works, I have been creating a guide that explores nuances of black and queer culture, usually censored from the general public. My practice is emboldened by my insatiable need to charter unchartered waters. To tell stories that haven't been told. To show the surprising extent of human potential through innovation and the exploring of new and unique avenues. Growing up without certain privileges, I have learned to infuse an element of hacking in the work that I do to accelerate the results that I want. As an artist I believe my talents are best utilized by creating personal and collective narratives that challenge widely accepted views of normalcy.
Photo by Christopher Garcia Valle
Gamin Kang, simply known as “gamin,” is a New York City-based multi-dimensional artist performing across the genres of traditional Korean music and cross-disciplinary collaborations worldwide. Ralph Samuelson, a senior advisor of Asian Cultural Council, once praised gamin as “a true pioneer and innovator, leading traditional instruments in exciting new directions.” Gamin plays 3 types of Korean winds and is a designated Yisuja (Senior Diplomate), official holder of Important Intangible Cultural Asset No. 46 for Court and Royal Military music. Gamin earned her Doctorate in Korean Musical Arts at Seoul National University.
Re-inventing new sonorities from ancient, somewhat restrictive, musical systems, gamin has received several cultural exchange program grants, including Artist-in-Residence at the Asian Cultural Council, and Ministry of Culture, Sports, Tourism of the Republic of Korea. Gamin has collaborated in cross-cultural improvisation in NYC with world-acclaimed musicians Jane Ira Bloom, Elliot Sharp, Ned Rothenberg, Jen Shyu, presenting premieres at Roulette, New School, and Metropolitan Museum. Gamin was a featured artist at the Silkroad concert, Seoul, 2018, performing on-stage with Yo-Yo Ma.
Fellowship Statement
I play three winds: piri (double reed bamboo oboe), taepyeongso (traditional oboe), and saengwhang (mouth organ). I am now on a journey to explore musical identity, discover new connections, and collaborate with artists from different backgrounds and cultures. Our common thread is communication and self-expression. My quest begins by studying other arts and music traditions, to discover how to best express these different strains through sound and composition.
In 2011, I began participating in musical activities outside of Korea, where I was born and educated. I have since devoted my career to intercultural music-making, working with western artists and those from East Asia, particularly in projects that bring together traditional instruments with digital sound sources.
Tradition is continually transformed by new generations of artists. My compositions merge Korean tradition with modern perspectives from audiences and environments. I am developing projects based on inter-disciplinary collaborations with interest in humanity and history.
Photo by Elan Asch
Anaïs Maviel is a vocalist, percussionist, composer, writer and community facilitator. Her work focuses on the function of music as essential to settling common grounds, addressing Relation, and creating utopian future. She works at the crossroads of mediums - music, visual art, dance, theater and performance art, and has been a creative force for artists such as William Parker, Daria Faïn, Shelley Hirsh, César Alvarez, Steffani Jemison. Maviel is dedicated to substantial creations from solo to large ensembles, music direction of cross-disciplinary works, and to expanding the power of music as a healing and transformative act. She performs and teaches extensively in New York, throughout North, South & Central America, and Europe. Both solo albums hOULe and in the garden, were released on Gold Bolus Recordings and received international acclaim. Lastly, Anaïs Maviel was the 2019 recipient of the Van Lier Fellowship to generate new works at Roulette Intermedium in New York City, and of the 2020 American Composers Forum Create commission for new work with the Rhythm Method string quartet.
Fellowship Statement
My work wants to hold space for weaving and disentangling narratives of self in relation to society, earth and cosmos. Despite globalization and refined technologies, individualized lives scarcely embrace interdependence. Yet the uniqueness of each being— this one thing that we share —is in fact our livelihood, both for one and many. The relational complexity of this Creole (not quite postcolonial) anthropocene era, is the field in which I operate. Music, as a form of communication prior to articulate language, is fundamental to the human experience and for the capacity to conceive of oneself in relation to one’s environment. I shape sensory experiences made of what I hear from the world, bridging the fragmented and envisioning harmony in the sensible. I hope to light the desire in everyone to re-create ways to relate, so that actualizing one means actualizing all. Transformation is an alchemical phenomenon, a leap connecting ancestral wisdom to utopian futures.
Photo by Dar Es Salaam Riser
Samora Abayomi Pinderhughes is a composer, pianist and vocalist known for large multidisciplinary projects and for his use of music to examine sociopolitical issues. Samora is the director and creator of The Transformations Suite, an acclaimed project combining music, theatre, and poetry to examine the radical history of resistance within the communities of the African Diaspora. Samora’s collaborators include Sara Bareilles, Titus Kaphar, Herbie Hancock, Glenn Ligon, Daveed Diggs, and Lalah Hathaway. He works frequently with Common on compositions for music and film, and is a featured member on the new albums, August Greene and Let Love, with Common and Robert Glasper. A Sundance Composers Lab fellow, Samora scored the award-winning documentary Whose Streets? and the Field of Vision film Concussion Protocol. He is a member of Blackout for Human Rights, the arts & social justice collective founded by Ryan Coogler and Ava DuVernay, and was musical director for their #MLKNow and #JusticeForFlint events.
Fellowship Statement
As an artist, my primary goal is to ensure that whoever experiences my work will be altered in some way that affects their daily lives; how they think and act, how they relate to others, how they consider their daily relationship to their country and world. I hope to bend the conventions of artistic genre and discipline to create pieces that deeply pierce the soul, grasping at the foundational elements of what it means to be alive in this moment. My work deeply criticizes the oppressive systems of American corporatism and colonialism, and reveals the many ways people are wounded by these systems as well as the many ways they fight back, imagining possibilities beyond what is allowed. I am a prison and police abolitionist. Current projects I'm working on include The Healing Project (about trauma & healing from incarceration and violence), Venus Smiles Not (about how traditional masculinity distorts the ways men learn how to deal with loss), and Grief, a collection of songs reflecting on the past two years. I'm honored to receive this support from the Jerome Foundation to continue my work.
Photo by Jacob Blickenstaff
Alternates and Finalists in Music
In recognition of COVID, finalists received $5,000 grant awards and alternates received $7,500 grant awards. Finalists in music included:
Truth Bachman, Yacine Boulares, Stephanie Chou, Shayna Dunkelman, Amanda Ekery*, Liberty Ellman, Ricardo Gallo*, Ritika Ganguly*, Asuka Kakitani*, Jenny Klukken, Cecilia Lopez, Queen Drea (a/k/a Andrea Reynolds), Kavita Shah, Kevin Sun, Anjna Swaminathan, Alicia Waller
* indicates recommended Alternates (panels recommended Alternates in the event that anyone recommended as a Fellow not be able to accept the Fellowship)
Phillip Howze is a playwright and theater maker whose works include Self Portraits (BRIC-Arts Media) and Frontieres Sans Frontieres (Bushwick Starr). His plays have been seen and developed at American AF Festival, Bay Area Playwrights, Clubbed Thumb, Lincoln Center Education, New York Theater Workshop, Page 73, PRELUDE, Public Theater/NYSF, San Francisco Playhouse, Sundance Theater Institute, Theatre Masters, and Yale Cabaret. He is currently a Lucas Artist Fellow at Montalvo Arts Center, a Resident Writer at Lincoln Center Theater/LCT3, and was recently named Lecturer in Playwriting at Harvard University’s new Theater, Dance & Media program. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
Fellowship Statement
Fellowship is a noun. Among its meanings are communion and companionship. In a year of unfathomable loss, collective grievance and individual grief, when we have been necessarily distanced from each other, thoughts of fellowship could rightly feel like a throwback, or frivolity. Often for theater artists, fellowship has served as a friendly harbinger: a herald of hope, company and good humor. How might fellowship serve this same cause today? Not to commiserate with the times, but to imagine and commune in renewed ways. To wonder and refashion old words into new worlds. Together, to remember the meaning of things.
Photo by Beowulf Sheehan
Modesto Flako Jimenez is a Bushwick-raised artist and educator. He was the 2015 Hispanic Organization of Latino Artists (HOLA) Best Ensemble Award Winner, ATI Best Actor Award Winner 2016, HOLA Outstanding Solo Performer 2017 and 2016 Princess Grace Honorarium in Theater. He has taught theater and poetry in NYC Public Schools for ten years. He has toured internationally and appeared on TEDxBushwick, performed in Wooster Group’s Early Shaker Spirituals, Richard Maxwell’s Samara, Kaneza Schaal’s JACK &. and Victor Morales’ Esperento. In 2018 he became the first Dominican-American Lead Artist in The Public Theater’s UTR Festival for ¡Oye! For My Dear Brooklyn.
Fellowship Statement
I am currently working on Taxilandia, a culmination of my work over the past 9 years that serves as a living collection of the people, spaces, and stories from my community. After the virtual run with La Jolla Playhouse in San Diego and The Tank in NYC, when Covid-19 rules permit, I will start the groundwork for a live production with New York Theatre Workshop and the Bushwick Starr. After the city-run, I will use Taxilandia and what I've learned from my years of collaborative creation in New York City to lead conversations with displaced people across America. I want to collaborate with local artists and theaters to adapt the show for their own communities. The 15 years of teaching artist work and cataloging gentrification I’ve done within Bushwick will inform the artistic conversations I’ll have with communities across America.
Photo by Crichton Atkinson
Amoke Kubat remains curious about self, the natural world, and the Sacred. She reclaims African Indigenous Spiritual sensibilities to reconnect to the first worlds, Spirit and Nature, as practice for holistic wellness. Self-taught, Amoke uses artmaking and writing to continue to heal herself and hold a position of wellness in an America sick with social injustices.
Amoke is an accidental playwright. Her play ANGRY BLACK WOMAN & Well Intentioned White Girl began as a conversation with a friend. Amoke expressed her annoyance with being called “angry black woman.” Her friend responded, “Like the well intentioned white girl'”? This play continues to tour as public readings in Minneapolis and rural Minnesota cities, and is available on Vimeo. As a Naked Stage Fellow, her second play, Old Good Pussy and Good Old Pussy, was performed at the Pillsbury House Theater in 2020. This play explores aging, ageist stereotypes, sexuality, and the social interpersonal tensions between intergenerations.
Fellowship Statement
My artistry is a tapestry of growing relationships, that has been woven from a motherless life, non-traditional black experience, discovery of the self through pain and tribulations as I strive to live my fullest life. I draw upon the strengths of diasporic African peoples and my Ancestors.
In 2020, in the time of COVID and World Wide Socio-political UNRESTS, I fought past, present and future. It was the battle to proclaim and be heard that, MY LIFE MATTERED when growing old is disdainfully feared. Old and aging peoples are more vulnerable and at risk and sometimes seen as collateral damage.
My new work will explore Black women's UNSAIDS about AGING; mind, body, and sexuality. But what if old black women, upon turning 100, revealed themselves to be Goddesses?
Ying Liu is a Brooklyn-based multimedia artist whose work hybridizes theater, dance, video, and performance art with DIY props and an exuberant sense of play by employing consumer technology—such as VR, GoPro and GPS—and featuring diverse, multi-generational performers. Emily Harvey Foundation (NYC) has presented Liu’s projects in numerous solo showings (2014-2017). In 2017, she staged HANG OUT, a site-specific, episodic play in Manhattan Chinatown’s Sara D. Roosevelt Park. MAKE A FOUNTAIN, an extensive catalog documenting those performances, was released in 2018. Liu was a resident artist at LMCC 2018-19 and ISSUE Project Room 2019, and a fellow at Institute for Public Architecture 2020. Her recent projects included PLAYDATE, a neighborhood-wide play in and about Downtown Brooklyn, and PIGTAIL–A Swivel Stool Dance™—both commissioned by ISSUE Project Room.
Fellowship Statement
Highlighting the shifting, participatory nature of viewership, mediated in real time by everyday use of technology, my practice reveals how experimentation is most fruitful when it escapes predetermination. My projects have included collaborations with bankers, construction and municipal workers, sociologists, psychotherapists, dog walkers, and scientists—sometimes all in the same performance. Poking at the traditional boundaries of media-based art, and often smashing the 4th wall between performer and spectator, I stir together contradictory forces of memory, spatiality, and the inherent friction and great possibilities of sociality. My second book, Heavily Prescribed Good Times, on PLAYDATE and PIGTAIL, will be released in 2021.
Photo by Steve Bookman
Ifrah Mansour is a Somali, refugee, Muslim, self-taught multimedia artist and an educator based in Minnesota. Her artwork explores trauma through the eyes of children to uncover the resiliencies of blacks, Muslims, and refugees. She interweaves poetry, puppetry, films, and installations. She's been featured in Middle East Eye, BBC, VICE, OkayAfrica, Star Tribune, and City Pages. Her critically acclaimed How to Have Fun in a Civil War premiered at Guthrie Theatre and toured to cities in Greater Minnesota. Her first national museum exhibition, Can I Touch It!? premiered at Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Her visual poem, I am a Refugee, is part of PBS’s short Film festival. Mansour’s installation, My Aqal, Banned and Blessed premiered at Queens Museum in New York. Learn More: facebook.com/ifrahmansourart
Fellowship Statement
My artwork is informed by my lived experience, and that of my community of Muslim, refugee, black, and Somali immigrants. I create art out of my most painful experiences to connect communities, spark conversation, and create meaningful relationships between refugees and Americans. As a refugee, I didn’t see my story represented on stage or in cinema. Now, I am a self-taught multimedia artist blending poetry, puppetry, sculptural installation, and films to stage resilient refugee stories. I am also an educator to East-African elders that often are learning for the first time. They teach me so much about Somali life and culture. My proudest work, How to Have Fun in a Civil War, is a play about Somali history seen through the eyes of children, has given me such an insight to bringing out the hidden complex identities, and resiliency of minorities in Minnesota. With my fellowship, I hope to learn what it takes to write, develop, produce and distribute powerful refugee and new American stories in cinema.
Photo by Lindsey Marcy
So + Bex (So Mak and Bex Kwan) are not the same person. However, they are best friends who are both queer, gender non-conforming Chinese artists of roughly the same height (Bex is an inch taller), working with shadow, sound, and performance. Both alumni of EmergeNYC, the Hemispheric New York Emerging Performers Program, they began developing their collaborative artistic vocabulary at Brooklyn Arts Exchange (BAX), first as participants in the Upstart Program 2017-8, Space Grantees 2018, and then as Artists in Residence from 2019-2021. So + Bex were featured at The Brick’s 2018 Trans Theatre Festival, were Spring 2019 BRIClab residents, and were featured at the Highline's Out of Line series in July 2019. As solo artists, they have been invited to present at theaters, galleries, and universities in Singapore and the U.S., including La MaMa, the National Asian American Theater Company, and 3LD.
Fellowship Statement
When we first met in 2015, we were finding ourselves in situations of surreal overlapping identity where our housemates were confusing us with each other. It was both absurd and surprised neither of us. Our work always circles back to these questions: how can people like us—queer, gender non-conforming, East Asian people—build power with each other if we are seen as identical? How do our persons stretch to be at once threatening (especially in the age of the COVID-19 pandemic), harmless (especially in comparison to Black people), and interchangeable (especially in media)? How do we shoulder the perpetual foreignness that we are assigned while managing the distance that we feel from our own cultural and ancestral roots? Our process weaves dreamscapes from shadow puppetry, archival audio, and comedy to unearth the absurdity and revelation of our sameness.
Photo by Carlos David
Saymoukda (she/her) is an award-winning Lao American poet and playwright born in a Thai refugee camp and raised in Rondo, Saint Paul, Minnesota. She is the author of the children’s book When Everything Was Everything, several plays, and currently serves as the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s Playwright in Residence with Theater Mu.
Fellowship Statement
It’s an honor to be awarded a Jerome Hill Fellowship for my work in theater. In my bones, I feel that I’m more than a playwright. I’m a creative legacy-architect. The Lao are not often part of public discourse. I believe that my plays are roadmaps for people to further engage with the histories, experiences, and stories from the Lao diaspora.
During the fellowship, I’ll be taking classes to hone the technical side of playwriting, read scripts, attend virtual performances, and be in conversation with my peers. I’ll also use my time to develop Motherland Orphans, a play about the generation of Southeast Asian Americans who were not born in their “motherland” but are tethered to her through stories, song, food, language, and refugee-love languages.
Thank you, Jerome Foundation. This former refugee’s heart is screaming with joy!
Photo by John Schlaider
Chamindika Wanduragala is a Sri Lankan American puppet artist/stop motion filmmaker with a visual arts background, and a DJ (DJ Chamun). She loves transporting people to another world where you believe inanimate objects are alive and you feel the sense of joy that comes from having your imagination expanded.
Wanduragala is the founder and Executive/Artistic Director of Monkeybear’s Harmolodic Workshop. She’s inspired by creating a platform for other Native, Black, IPOC artists to explore puppetry, where they get funds, mentorship and studio access to develop creative and technical skills in contemporary puppetry. Wanduragala’s work has been supported by the Henson Foundation, Jerome Foundation, MRAC and MN State Arts Board, and her last puppet theater production was presented by Pillsbury House Theatre. You can see her work (and hear some playlists!) at www.chamindika.com
Fellowship Statement
Puppetry’s surreal nature gives me a sense of freedom to explore without fear. It’s also pure magic/joy when audiences feel that the puppets are truly ALIVE! Bringing the objects to life is really important to me, so I’m grateful for the support of other Native, Black, IPOC puppeteers I’ve gotten to know through Monkeybear.
My first puppet piece was a few years ago, so I’m excited to focus on artistic development in the next few years, moving towards an interdisciplinary practice: embedding stop motion animation into live puppet performance, learning sound design for my work by diving into modular synths (I’m excited by its sense of play, which connects so well with puppetry), creating puppet films and honing my directing skills so I can take the performative aspect to the next level. I’m currently working on my second short film, which incorporates stop motion animation and puppetry (live action).
Photo by Sarah White
Whitney White is an Obie Award and Lily Award-winning director, writer, and musician originally from Chicago. She is a believer of alternative forms of performance, multi-disciplinary work, and collaborative processes. Her original musical Definition was part of the 2019 Sundance Theatre Lab, and her five-part musical exploration of Shakespeare’s Women, Reach for It, is currently under commission with the American Repertory Theater in Boston. Past fellowships include the New York Theatre Workshop’s 2050 Fellowship, Ars Nova’s Makers Lab, Colt Coeur Theater and the Drama League. White received an MFA in acting from Brown University/Trinity Rep, and a BA in Political Science and Certificate in Musical Theatre from Northwestern University. Her recent directing includes The Amen Corner (Shakespeare Theatre Company), Our Dear Dead Drug Lord (WP Theatre and Second Stage, NYT Critic’s Pick), Aleshea Harris’ What to Send Up When it Goes Down (The Movement Theatre Company, Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company, American Repertory Theatre, The Public Theater, NYT Critic’s Pick).
Fellowship Statement
As a creator, I am a believer of alternative forms of performance, multi-disciplinary work, and collaborative processes. I aspire to use performance across mediums to challenge understandings of blackness, femininity, and much more. I currently have two works in progress to which this funding, in addition to professional development and support, would go to: Macbeth In Stride and Definition. Both challenge musical theatre as a genre, and radically defy traditional structures. One is a look at the process of adaptation, while the other is completely original. Definition is being developed with The Bushwick Starr, and Macbeth In Stride is part of a five-part series with the American Repertory Theatre. Thank you again, and I look forward to the next two years.
Photo by Melissa Bunni Elian
Nathan Yungerberg is a Brooklyn-based Afrosurrealist and storyteller whose plays have been developed or featured by The Cherry Lane Theatre, JAG Productions, LAByrinth Theater, Lorraine Hansberry Theater, The National Black Theatre, The Fire This Time Festival, 48 Hours in Harlem, The Lark, Roundabout Theatre Company, The Playwrights’ Center, Crowded Fire Theater, and The Bushwick Starr. He is one of seven Black playwrights commissioned by The New Black Fest for HANDS UP: 7 Playwrights, 7 Testaments published by Concord Theatricals, and adapted by BBC radio. Nathan’s play Esai’s Table was featured in The Cherry Lane Theatre’s 2017 Mentor Project (Mentored by Stephen Adly Guirgis). Awards, honors, and residencies: 2021 National Black Theatre of Harlem I AM SOUL residency, Blue Ink Playwriting Award (Finalist), 2019 Djerassi Resident Artist, The 2016 O’Neill National Playwrights Conference (Semifinalist), Ken Davenport 10-Minute Play Festival (Winner). Nathan is also a writer for Sesame Street.
Fellowship Statement
My work is driven by my journey of creating a black identity. I was adopted at two weeks old and raised by white parents in Wisconsin. My innovation is rooted in investing less in what hasn’t been done before and more into what is not done enough. For generations, the negative portrayals of black bodies have demonized and desecrated a culture filled with light. I seek to share the radiance and the heart of the Black soul in a way that is aspirational and illuminating. I am currently working on a play called Sweetwater: The Gospel of Iman for a residency at the National Black Theatre in Harlem. Sweetwater follows a brotherhood of six Black gay men through the 1980s AIDS crisis in New York City who call themselves the New Apostles, and their god is a god called joy, or resilience, a god of tactics, a god called tomorrow.
Photo by Robert Feliciano
Alternates and Finalists in Theater, Performance & Spoken Word
In recognition of COVID, finalists received $5,000 grant awards and alternates received $7,500 grant awards. Finalists in theater, performance & spoken word included:
Justin Allen, Salty Brine, Shayok Misha Chowdhury*, Kyle Dacuyan, Diane Exavier, Dylan Fresco*, Casey Llewellyn, Kyoung H. Park*, Piehole (Tara Ahmadinejad, Alexandra Panzer, Ben Vigus, Jeffrey Wood), Max Vernon, Kit Yan and Melissa Li*
* indicates recommended Alternates (panels recommended Alternates in the event that anyone recommended as a Fellow not be able to accept the Fellowship)
Leslie Barlow (she/her) is an artist and educator working in Minneapolis, MN. Barlow uses figurative oil painting to share stories that explore the politics of representation, identity, otherness, and race. Barlow earned an MFA from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design (2016) and BFA from the University of Wisconsin- Stout (2007). Recent support of Barlow’s work includes: 2019 20/20 Springboard Fellowship, 2019 McKnight Visual Artist Fellowship, and several Minnesota State Arts Board grants. She currently teaches at the University of Minnesota, helps run the organization MidWest Mixed, is a member of the mural collective Creatives After Curfew, and she also supports emerging artists as the Director of Studio 400.
Fellowship Statement
I am interested in examining and reimagining our relationship to our racial identities through healing our collective understanding of belonging and what it means to be family. My life-size oil paintings serve as both monuments to community members and explorations into how race entangles the intimate sphere of love, family, and friendship. Working within the tradition of figurative painting provides a platform and space to challenge the norms and hierarchy of who is painted, what stories are amplified, and by whom. The work is created from places of vulnerability, nuance, community conversation, and personal experience. What results from my work is not the desire to simply have dialogue, but to manifest the power of images. My current body of work-in-progress is 3 years in the making. Titled Within, Between, and Beyond, it combines painting and video documentary and will be exhibited in 2021 at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
Photo by Ryan Stopera
Joseph Buckley (he/him) is a Black British Sculptor living and working in New York City. Recent solo shows include Letter from the Home Office at Lock Up International in London; Cousin Table at Cuchifritos, NYC; Traitor Muscle at Art in General, NYC; and Brotherhood Tapestry at The Tetley in Leeds, England. Recent group projects include I don't Know Whether The Earth is Spinning or Not... at the Museum of Modern Art, Moscow (for the VII Moscow International Biennale for Young Art); and Cellular World: Cyborg-Human-Avatar-Horror, at the Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow (for Glasgow International Festival of Visual Art 2018).
Fellowship Statement
I have found myself preoccupied with the mechanics of objectification and dehumanization, and with a continuum I perceive that goes ‘corpse—slave—human—statue—sculpture’ and back again.
I am interested in the way that systems of abuse replicate themselves, at different scales, across our society. On the topic of replication, I am heavily invested in mold-making and plastic casting: I am interested in the connotations of industrial production, and the violence such industry implies.
Of late, I have been trying to work towards the topics of fascism and its contemporary manifestations. Some of my sculptures are of fascists and are ‘about’ fascism but, gendered as they are, they have also served as a way to focus my thinking surrounding the eternal font from which fascism metastasizes: a swollen, toxified, and entitled masculinity... a boil on my soul’s ass I must continuously lance and drain.
Photo by Jenny Hung
Lizania Cruz is a Dominican participatory artist, designer, and curator interested in how migration affects ways of being and belonging. Through research, oral history, and audience participation, she creates projects that highlight a pluralistic narrative on migration. Cruz has had her work supported through Create Change fellow at the Laundromat Project (2018-2019), Agora Collective Berlin (2018), Design Trust for Public Space (2018), Recess Session (2019), IdeasCity:New Museum (2019), Stoneleaf Retreat (2019), Robert Blackburn Workshop Studio Immersion Project (SIP) (2019), A.I.R. Gallery (2020-2021), BRIClab: Contemporary Art (2020-2021), and Center for Books Arts (2020-2021).
Fellowship Statement
For the past two years, I’ve been conceptualizing a piece titled Citizen Clock that looks at the path to citizenship, as well as, work around the legal process of migration. The Jerome Foundation fellowship will provide the support to develop this work and to collaborate with fabricators to bring this idea to life. It will also provide a space to expand my participatory practice into more conceptual objects that archive these processes. I’m excited to be part of this community and learn from all the different fellows.
Photo by Manolo Salas
Ayana Evans is a New York City-based visual performance artist. All of her video, lithography, screen-printing, watercolor mono-prints, installations, and projection extends from her performance work. She received her MFA in painting from Temple University and her BA in Visual Arts from Brown University. Evans has performed at El Museo del Barrio, The Barnes Foundation, The Bronx Museum, Newark Museum, Crystal Bridges Museum, The August Wilson African American Cultural Center, the Queens Museum and countless public locations for her guerilla-style performances. Her international work includes shows at FIAP performance festival in Martinique, Tiwani Contemporary in London, and Ghana’a Chale Wote festival. Evans was a 2018 Fellow at EFA’s Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop, 2017-2018 awardee of the Franklin Furnace Fund for performance art, 2018 NYFA Fellow, and 2019 Savage Lewis Fellow with Art on the Vine. Her recent press includes The New York Times, Bomb Magazine, ArtNet, New York Magazine’s The Cut, Hyperallergic, and CNN. Evans is currently an adjunct professor at Brown University.
Fellowship Statement
I am a NYC-based performance artist, who grew up on the South Side of Chicago. The sensibilities of both locations heavily influence my work with the body, race relations, and gender bias. My on-going performances/public interventions include: Operation Catsuit, I Just Came Here to Find a Husband, and a new series of collaborative works with artists of diverse backgrounds. These performances map how my body is perceived and treated as it operates in artistic and social spheres. Roberta Fallon, co-founder of Artblog, describes me as, “One part Wonder Woman, one part agent provocateur.” And writer Seph Rodney of Hyperallergic and The New York Times wrote: “I have seen [this] artist actually stop traffic on the Bowery in downtown Manhattan in 2016, where, in a floor-length lace gown, a dollar-store tiara and full makeup, she placed a chair in the street to do chair dips — risking her life. She survived. The halted drivers honked in confusion, consternation or encouragement.” During this residency I will continue the Operation Catsuit series via experimental film and costuming.
Photo by Makonnen
Miatta Kawinzi is a multi-disciplinary artist and educator of Liberian and Kenyan heritage. Raised in the southern U.S.A. and based in New York City, her work engages themes of hybridity, diaspora, and belonging. She received an MFA in Studio Art from Hunter College and a BA in Interdisciplinary Art & Cultural Theory from Hampshire College. Her work has been presented in spaces including the Studio Museum in Harlem, BRIC, MoMA PopRally, the Museum of the Moving Image, and IFC Center. Past residencies include POV Spark in partnership with the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History & Culture (NYC, DC, and Venice, Italy), Red Bull Arts Detroit (Detroit, MI), the Cité internationale des arts (Paris, France, with Lower Manhattan Cultural Council), Beta-Local (San Juan, Puerto Rico), the Bag Factory (Johannesburg, South Africa), and the Bemis Center (Omaha, NE). She received the 2018 Barbara Hammer Lesbian Experimental Filmmaking Grant administered by Queer|Art.
Fellowship Statement
Born in Nashville, TN to a Liberian mother and Kenyan father, I grew up moving through various geographic, cultural, and linguistic spaces, which informs my interest in hybridity and layered imagery and content. I work with still and moving images, the voice and body, language, objects, space and sound to explore practices of re-imagining the self, identity, and culture through abstraction and poetics. Recent work traces a performative and experimental impulse through sculptural sound and video installation.
During the Fellowship, I will expand my ongoing research and creative production though historical, contemporary, and speculative relationships between the U.S. and Liberia - the West African republic founded in the 1800s with formerly enslaved Black people returning to the continent from the Americas and newly occupying positions of power. This project explores questions around hierarchy, Indigeneity, multiplicities and complexities of Blackness, cultural fragmentation, and the deep and steady yearning for the reparative.
Photo courtesy the artist
Catherine Meier creates drawings, animations, and large-scale installations of earth, sky, and horizon – of vast, open landscapes. Large in scope, her projects develop through time spent deep listening and giving attention to specific locations. She holds a BFA from the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, and an MFA from the University of Michigan Ann Arbor. Her work has been shown in museums, galleries, and film festivals as well as in the very land that gives rise to her work. Meier’s project Standing Witness, site: Sage Creek, a hand-drawn animation that records the temporality and vastness of the land, was a featured project in Creative Capitals’ online web forum On our Radar. She has held place-oriented residencies at Badlands National Park and Cedar Point Biological Station. Meier received a McKnight Visual Artist Fellowship, Minnesota State Arts Board and Arrowhead Regional Arts Council grants, and the Jacob K. Javits Fellowship for graduate study. Meier lives with her family near the North Shore of Lake Superior.
Fellowship Statement
I work to describe in visual artistic form the human encounter with vast, open landscape. My drawings, animations, and installations speak to the intricate, beautiful, and unseen understandings of land and place.
A settler descendent, I grew up in a small town at the eastern edge of the Nebraska Sandhills, and for seven years I worked as a truck driver hauling cattle throughout the Great Plains. While my personal and family history is tied to the Plains, my work is not based in nostalgia—it originates from a deep physical, mental, and emotional need to move in and through open land. My interest extends beyond visceral, personal need into a deep and abiding engagement with the history, culture, and environmental concerns of these large but delicate grasslands. I am deeply rooted in rural working class experience, and I find inspiration and guidance from contemporary Indigenous scholars, artists, and activists, the study of place and language, and environmental activism.
My work has become the story of time told through the language of place.
Joiri Minaya (1990) is a Dominican-United Statesian multi-disciplinary artist based in New York City, who focuses on destabilizing historic and contemporary representations of an imagined tropical identity. Minaya attended the Escuela Nacional de Artes Visuales in Santo Domingo (2009), Altos de Chavón School of Design (2011) and Parsons the New School for Design (2013). She has participated in residencies at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Guttenberg Arts, Smack Mellon, the Bronx Museum’s AIM Program and the NYFA Mentoring Program for Immigrant Artists, Red Bull House of Art, the Lower East Side Printshop and Art Omi. She has received awards, fellowships and grants from Artadia, the BRIC’s Colene Brown Art Prize, Socrates Sculpture Park, the Joan Mitchell Foundation, the Rema Hort Mann Foundation, the Nancy Graves Foundation, amongst other organizations. Minaya’s work is in the collection of the Museo de Arte Moderno and the Centro León Jiménes in the Dominican Republic.
Fellowship Statement
My work is a reassertion of Self, an exercise of unlearning, decolonizing and exorcizing imposed histories, cultures and ideas.
It’s about reconciling the experience of having grown up in the Dominican Republic with living and navigating the U.S.A. and the global North, using gaps, disconnections and misinterpretations as fertile ground for creativity. I’ve learned there is a gaze thrust upon me which “others” me. I turn it upon itself, mainly by seeming to fulfill its expectations, but instead sabotaging them, thus regaining power and agency.
Through various visual disciplines, my work questions historic and contemporary representations of black and brown womanhood in relation to an imagined tropical nature, questioning ideas projected onto these identities and spaces from a feminist and decolonial position. I’m interested in the body, landscape, discourse, framing, (in)visibility, opacity, hybridity.
Witt Siasoco (he/him) is a community-based visual artist living and working in Minneapolis, MN. His work actively engages the intersection of the arts and civic process through a variety of roles—as artist, graphic designer, and arts educator.
In recent years Siasoco was awarded a Minnesota State Arts Board Arts Access grant and the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council’s Next Step Fund. He has had residencies at the Kulture Club Collaborative, Pillsbury House and Theater, and Minnesota Museum of American Art. Siasoco was selected as a CreativeCitymaking artist, a collaboration between artists and urban planners to develop innovative approaches for addressing the long-term transportation, land use, economic, environmental, and social issues facing Minneapolis.
Fellowship Statement
My studio practice is rooted in creating art in public space that catalyzes civic dialogue and collective action. Throughout my career, I have created many community-engaged projects including This Home is Not for Sale, a collaboration with Poetry for People and recipient of an Americans for the Arts' Public Art Award; Drawing on Rice Street, a large-scale painting installation distilling over 200 conversations with Frogtown residents; and Carry On Homes Northeast, an installation focused on immigrant participation in the Census 2020. With my experience as a public artist and lifelong skater I brought together Juxtaposition Arts and City of Skate to create JXTA's Skateable Art Plaza, a youth designed, multi-purpose public space in North Minneapolis. Recently, I finished a large-scale mural for the Creative Enterprise Zone and created a new work for the City of Minneapolis’ Public Service Center.
Photo by Dan Huseby
Delina White is a Native apparel designer, beadwork artist and Indigenous materials jewelry maker. She is a member of the Pillager Band of Minnesota Chippewa and resides on the Leech Lake Reservation in northern Minnesota. She mixes traditionally indigenous materials with her original designed fabrics, including fabrics from around the world found among the woodland peoples through centuries of trade. She uses her art to communicate the values and beliefs of the Anishinaabeg, as an intergenerational cultural knowledge learner from her grandmother. Delina was recognized as one of Six MN Star Tribune’s 2019 Artists of the Year, for her work with the Hearts of Our People, a landmark exhibition as the first major thematic show to explore the artistic achievements of Native women. Her Woodland Scarf placed 2nd in USA Today’s “10 Splurge-worthy Gifts of 2020,” and was named, “2020 Artist in Business Leadership Fellow” by the First Peoples Fund.
Fellowship Statement
Artists provide inspiration to make change, protect, and thrive in a better world. I use fashion as a narrative to assert rights for equity, protect our sacred sites and environment, and to show cultural pride as sovereign nations. We all use fashion to make a declaration of opinion, attitudes and outlook on life. My goal is to continue advocating the importance of arts programming throughout Minnesota and beyond, to tap into the talents and grow business skills of Native artists and work with families engaging the youth in creative placemaking for better, healthier communities. It is my responsibility to preserve the ancestral knowledge and share to advance what artists envisions for themselves and our communities. This fellowship will provide support that will allow me to study apparel as a catalyst to wider approaches of learning, research and creative exploration to truly become an asset of my community and nation.
Photo by Ivy Vainio
Rebekah Crisanta de Ybarra a.k.a. Lady Xøk (Maya-Lenca tribal citizen) is a Twin Cities-based multi/interdisciplinary artist, musician, and culture bearer whose work is rooted in Indigenous Futurisms. Performing as Lady Xøk, she creates multimedia light and shadow installations for immersive experimental storytelling mixing electric and Mesoamerican instruments. She co-founded Electric Machete Studios, a Latinx Art + Music cultural production house. Past works include Dimensions of Indigenous in 2016 at Intermedia Arts; Petroglyphs and Borders as part of the inaugural 2018 artist-in-residence at The M–Minnesota Museum of American Art; Star Girl Clan in 2018 at In the Heart of the Beast PuppetLab Fellow; Decolonial Maya Constellation Maps in 2019 at Minnesota Center for Book Arts as part of the Jerome Mentorship Fellow; and ongoing installation performances developed in part by Redeye Theatre, New Native Theatre, Monkeybear’s Harmolodic Workshop, Catalyst Arts, ArtShanty and current residency with New York-based theatre La MaMa. www.rebekahcrisanta.com
Fellowship Statement
My experimental interdisciplinary social practice (visual art, music, theatre, dance, literature, and puppetry) seeks to shift consciousness around immigration, borders, exodus and interconnectedness of Indigenous Peoples of the Americas and shared and erased ancient histories of collective liberation. Rooted in Indigenous Futurisms, Lenca cosmovision of Managuara, Latinx artesenias of Mesoamerica, and liberation theology of El Salvador, I am interested in the intersection of Low Art, High Art and the Nepantla in-between spaces where God, ancestors, timelessness, and dreams live. I explore the threads of connection between the seen and unseen worlds. I work from a generative space of meditation, ancestor whispers, play, and somatic response. I use transdisciplinary methods to reconstruct into living form Lenca archeology, to document and reimagine my people’s unwritten ancient history for a new future where Central Americans in exodus, First Americans, have a basic human right to migration on Turtle Island, a land travelled for millennia.
Photo by Valerie Oliviero
Alternates and Finalists in Visual Arts
In recognition of COVID, finalists received $5,000 grant awards and alternates received $7,500 grant awards. Finalists in visual arts included:
Golnar Adili, Onyedika Chuke, Pamela Council*, Moko Fukuyama, Gordon Hall, Tommy Kha, Heather MacKenzie*, Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya, Sunita Prasad, TJ Proechel, Kameelah Janan Rasheed*, Rowan Renee, Lindsay Rhyner, Naomi Safran-Hon, Kenneth Tam*, Chris Watts
* indicates recommended Alternates (panels recommended Alternates in the event that anyone recommended as a Fellow not be able to accept the Fellowship)