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Melding Indian folk traditions with large-scale sculptural installation, her work challenges notions of peace, gender, violence and literacy. She is founder of the Shanti Foundation for Peace, an award-winning nonprofit supporting non-violence through arts education, and her sculptural work is represented in collections around the world - including the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, Mobile Museum of Art, and the High Museum of Art. In , Indira was the first visual artist to be named Chicagoan of the Year following her public art initiative Ten Thousand Ripples, which employed one-hundred giant emerging Buddha head sculptures to spark conversation and celebration around peace in neighborhoods throughout Chicago. A graduate of Central State University, Dr. But not even an Ohio upbringing and a well-worn passport could sever Dr. In , she founded the Gullah Festival in Beaufort, which would celebrate Gullah culture of the South Carolina Sea Islands and preserve its many traditions, and by she had formed the Hallelujah Singers. Mayor Riley's vision for arts in South Carolina led him to establish the Charleston Office of Cultural Affairs; the annual MOJA Festival that showcases African-American and Caribbean arts and artists; City Arts for Kids, a program that ensures access to the arts and arts education; and a nationally-acclaimed architectural design model for beautiful public housing. His leadership paved the way for the Spoleto Festival - a sister festival of Italy's world-renowned arts festival that has stimulated an artistic renaissance in Charleston and throughout South Carolina. Mayor Riley has won numerous awards for his arts leadership and was named one of the 25 most dynamic mayors in America by Newsweek. Jumaadi is an Indonesian sculptor, shadow puppeteer, and installation artist currently dividing his time between Australia and the Netherlands. Working across mediums, Jumaadi's work has been described as 'having an other-worldly feeling, as if the figures and landscapes are from a barely remembered dream. Laura Amador began working at Djerassi in , hosting artists in residence and workshop attendees. She started the Volunteer Docent Program there in , which brings in volunteers from the surrounding community to lead Public Sculpture Hikes. Christie Angel serves as Mayor Michel B. She brings extensive knowledge and experience in local government, legislative affairs, and community relations to city government. She is a Leadership Columbus graduate. He studied fine arts and accounting at Auburn University and as an artist he documents commercial and civic messaging. As a public accountant and CFO, he has helped organizations through various lean and mean times. An adventuresome world traveler, he now totes two toddlers. Becca has done extensive work creating traveling exhibitions - including being a member of the team that created the sixty-foot Mamenchisaurus for 'The World's Largest Dinosaurs'. In , she moved to Charleston to work for the South Carolina Aquarium and was a lead fabricator in the Madagascar Journey exhibit. Shana Berger is an artist, writer, and curator who lives and works in York, Alabama. Driven by the idea that art can play an integral role in realizing positive social change, her work blends modes of art, activism and organizing. She is a founder of Pop Start, a creative social and economic laboratory in downtown York. She currently works as Co-Director of the Coleman Center for the Arts, where she and collaborator Nathan Purath have developed an architecture for creating participatory projects and maintaining a relational framework through which artists and community members collaborate. Beth M. Beth Bienvenu is the Director of the Office of Accessibility at the National Endowment for the Arts, where she manages the NEA's technical assistance and advocacy work devoted to making the arts accessible for people with disabilities, older adults, veterans, and people in institutional settings. She provides guidance and support to state arts agency staff and professionals working the fields of arts access, creativity and aging, arts and health, universal design, and arts in corrections. Beth has master's degrees in sociology and arts administration and a doctorate in organizational leadership. Dan Brawley is the executive director of the Cucalorus Film Festival - a creative gathering that takes place in historic downtown Wilmington, North Carolina, every year in November. Dan is the chair of the board for Atlanta-based nonprofit Alternate ROOTS, an organization that supports artists working for social justice. In , Dan founded Wabi Sabi Warehouse and Jengo's Playhouse, a creative compound in downtown Wilmington's Soda Pop District with 12 studios, a microcinema, and a residency program for emerging artists. Founded in , Sitka hosts residencies and workshop in the areas of visual and literary arts, as well as music and ecology. Prior to moving to Oregon, Caroline worked in the museum field in New Mexico for 8 years as the Assistant Director at the Roswell Museum and Art Center where among her programming and curatorial projects she coordinated exhibitions in collaboration with the Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program. She also served on the board of the New Mexico Association of Museums for 5 years with a focus on increasing communication and networking amongst New Mexico's over museums and cultural organizations. She has recently re-engaged her studio art practice and started a community ceramics studio with her husband, Ben. Michaela Pilar Brown Artist. Michaela Pilar Brown is an image and object maker. She studied sculpture and art history at Howard University, though she has always been a maker of things. Born in Bangor, Maine, and raised in Denver, Colorado, she cut her teeth in the halls of a museum where her mother worked as a security guard and has been immersed in the culture of objects, their making and interpretation ever since. Her current practice explores the body through the prisms of age, gender, race, sexuality, and history. She considers memory, myth, ritual, desire, and the spaces the body occupies within these vignettes. The narratives move between past, present, and surreal projections of the future, sometimes occupying these spaces simultaneously. She makes her home in Columbia, South Carolina. David Bruce is a founding board member, current secretary, and long time stateside liaison for the Skopelos Foundation of the Arts. Having spent seventeen years working with satellites, he has recently come down to Earth now consulting as a project manager installing large-scale terrestrial repeaters for wireless connectivity. David also flexes his photographic muscles whenever he is able - including in support of skopART: documenting the location, various artists, programs and workshops, the growing collection of artwork, and SIFFY: the Skopelos International Film Festival for Youth. Jennifer S. As Founding Director of MANCC , Jennifer developed the nation's first choreographic center, the only such center in the world situated within a research university. Partnering with artists, presenters, residency sites and funders, the Center became a catalyst, model, and acknowledged anchor for contemporary dance makers across the US during a time of great economic uncertainty. Artists who received subsidized research and developmental residencies at MANCC have gone on to present work to communities across the globe and have received widespread recognition. Jennifer is a founding partner of the Hatchery Project, a multi-year, multi-site developmental residency initiative. Jennie Carlisle oversees the residency program and supports artistic process, project production, ideation, and conceptual development at Elsewhere Museum in Greensboro, North Carolina. Additionally, she acts as a liaison between artists and communities and oversees the production of public programs at the museum. She is a curator and art historian focusing on situational aesthetics and radical ampersanding. Christina brings a strong grounding in both art and science with experience in environmental studies, hydrogeology, experiential education, arts management, and modern dance. Prior to the Schuylkill Center, she was a physical scientist for the U. Christina has over a decade of experience in creating and managing the performing arts in many contexts. She is the creator and choreographer of many modern dance works, and has performed extensively in the Philadelphia region. She independently produced a modern dance performance in the Philadelphia Fringe festival in inspired by avant-garde visual art movements, and is also a founding member of Nova Dance Company Wilmington, DE. Sara Coffey is the Founder and Director of Vermont Performance Lab VPL and has been working in the performing arts field as a manager, programmer, producer, and fundraiser for nearly 25 years. She has managed the dance companies of David Rousseve and Bebe Miller, and performance projects for various artists. Donna Cooper Hurt Multi-media Artist. Her art focuses on such themes as history, memory, power structures, and the body. Donna has been involved with many social justice initiatives and worked with communities throughout Charleston, South Carolina. She collaborated with The Phillips Community in Mt. She is an educator and is currently on sabbatical pursuing her art. She formerly served as the Museum's chief curator. She has also worked as a gallery director and university instructor. Julie has a doctorate in contemporary art history, a master's degree in arts administration, and bachelor degrees in fine arts and journalism. She has authored numerous publication on the art and architecture of the North. Anna Drozdowski Director, Neighborhood House. Anna Drozdowski is the Director of Neighborhood House, a secular program of Christ Church in Philadelphia which builds community through live performance on an intimate and historic campus. With Thirdbird, Anna co-curates contemporary composers and choreographers and facilitates global exchanges. She is a facilitator for Artists U, a critical part of her world built on undertakings in cultural production and organizational development. She enjoys cross-stitching obscenities, dancing tango, and grocery shopping slowly and thinks that showing up and speaking up are important. Mellon Foundation. She holds a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Southern Queensland, and worked as an actor and ensemble member in theater, film, and television in Australia. She is a graduate of the Radcliffe College publishing course. Much of her work has focused on the intersection of arts and science, including participation in the Clear Creek Water Monitoring group, leading an exhibition focused on coalbed methane development and the facilitation of special projects with faculty from the University of Wyoming, University of New Mexico, and Yale University's School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. Linda Earle is the Executive Director of the New York Arts Program NYAP , an off-campus study program for undergraduate and post-baccalaureate students in the visual, performing, and media arts, writing, and journalism. She was a senior Program Director at the New York State Council on the Arts where she served in several discipline areas in the performing and visual arts. She has taught media and cultural studies at Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University, Hunter College, and Barnard College and has served on numerous grants and commissioning panels and artist advocacy groups. Linda has worked on independent film, theatre, and film and visual arts curatorial projects over the years. As a writer, she has had residencies at Hedgebrook and the Writers Room. He spends most of his time harvesting vegetables for artists and building compost piles with food scraps from artist meals! In his free time, Pablo enjoys going on hikes with his wife Esther and two boys, because this is what you do in Vermont. Dave was raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and graduated from West Virginia University with a degree in Puppetry, after which he spent years traveling the United States looking for a practical application for a Puppetry BFA. In he moved back to Pittsburgh to find an evolved cultural community and supportive living opportunities for artists. With a foundation in puppetry, animation, live performance, and media The Schmutz Company developed into an art education and childhood media firm by Omari Fox is a painter, poet, and educator. Fox has developed his own unique style of visual art which he has coined HOP Art short for Hip-Hop Art - a hybrid of images and text mixed with quotes from public figures, celebrities, and his own detailed rhyme schemes. For Fox, the form is the protest, the activism is the content, but never content with message alone. David J. Fraher Executive Director, Arts Midwest. He has been active as a panelist and trustee for numerous arts organizations over the past twelve years, including terms on the boards of Western States Arts Foundation, BOA Publishing, Inc. She has held this position since and has been with the program as a senior staff member since its inception in She has served as an advisor to several other foundations on implementing programs to support artists directly. With an eye to the future ACA is exploring national artistic partnerships and long term lease agreements. They have created participatory art and education programs in partnership with a refugee organization. In , their work 'I still don't get it: why do they want to be rich without us,' a piece on gentrification, was presented at Space One Eleven in Birmingham, Alabama, and the City Gallery in Charleston, South Carolina. With 'The Future is on the Table 3' project they assembled artists from different parts of the world and created large-scale installations and events, collaborating with Charleston artists, educators and institutions. The outdoor event offers more than free performances by the San Francisco Opera, the San Francisco Ballet and more for an audience of , attendees. She joined the Foundation 37 years ago as a Program Associate, and has served as its Executive since She was Chair of Grantmakers in the Arts, a national affiliation of grantmakers interested in arts philanthropy. She is also President of the Camargo Foundation, an operating Foundation that supports scholarly and artistic work through subsidized fellowship residencies at a work-study center in Cassis, France. Beth Gill has been making contemporary dance and performance in New York City since Her body of work critically examines issues within the fields of contemporary dance and performance studies, through a focused exploration of aesthetics and perception. In Dance Magazine named her one of the top 25 artists to watch. Ain Gordon Artist. He is currently a Resident Artist at The Hermitage. These partnerships have resulted in the first environmental art installations within the acre BrightWalk campus, public art being slated for the Statesville Avenue Corridor and a renovation of Anita Stroud Park. Kim holds a BA from Johnson C. Jamie Gregory - an arts organization insurance underwriter for Markel Corporation - began his career in Los Angeles at the tender age of 25 by insuring high-value artworks and movie stars wearing borrowed jewelry to award ceremonies. Ten years, several continental moves, and one child later, he has developed a grounded expertise in all areas of risk that nonprofits devoted to the arts encounter. Esther Grimm's lifelong career in the arts spans administration, museum education, arts education, and philanthropy. She is the Executive Director of 3Arts, a nonprofit grantmaking organization dedicated to supporting women artists, artists of color, and artists with disabilities working in the performing, teaching, and visual arts in Chicago through unrestricted grants, residency fellowships, project support, and advocacy. Esther has worked as a freelance writer, researcher, and editor since , with reviews and features in a variety of magazines, exhibition catalogues, book projects, and gallery guides. In , she founded the Local Artist Funders Group, an active cohort of ten Chicago funders who support individual artists. Esther is also a flute player. Camela Guevara is a studio artist at Redux Contemporary Art and a seamstress. She enjoys adding tiny beads to fabric and sewing thoughtful garments. She also contributes to the fashion and art blog, Gemsounds. Gia Hamilton was named Director of the Joan Mitchell Center - an artist residency and community space in New Orleans under the umbrella of the Joan Mitchell Foundation - in after serving as a consultant since She worked in the northeast before returning to her native city in , when she established a consulting group, the Gris Gris Lab, and worked with nonprofit organizations as a trainer, organizer, facilitator and independent curator. Al earned his undergraduate degree from Troy State University in art history and aesthetics, and his Master of Liberal Arts, with a concentration on Southern literature, from Auburn University at Montgomery. He has served two terms on the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies board participating in a wide range of committee work. He has been a member of the South Arts board for 37 years and presided as its chair In he received the Gary Young Award presented by the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies for his leadership and achievements in promoting the arts nationally. Al is the only state arts director to start folk arts programs in three states: Florida, Louisiana, and Alabama. He is a native of Troy, Alabama. Passionate about the arts, she has worked in non-profits for more than ten years. She started working at A Studio in the Woods in and enjoys finding new ways to bring the arts to the Greater New Orleans community and to students of all ages. A Studio in the Woods is committed to supporting artists engaging the public in critical dialogue about the environment. Part of Cammie's job is to facilitate access to the resources and contacts that artists need to create risk-taking new work during their residencies. Makoto Hirano is an award-winning Philadelphia-based choreographer, writer, and performer as well as a facilitator for Artists U. Lisa oversees programs and strategic initiatives, community engagement, and the flagship Environmental Program at McColl Center. Honored for her dedication in connecting children and families to the natural world, she is also committed to place-based education and the improvement of schools in marginalized communities. Holding an MS degree in Biology and a BS degree in Botany from Howard University in Washington, DC, Lisa is dedicated to social practice and the convergence of art and science as a vehicle to improve lives and effect systemic change. She served as Vice President of the Board of Redux for a year-and-a-half before joining the Redux team full time. Originally from New Bern, North Carolina, Stacy moved to Charleston in to attend the College of Charleston, where she studied art history and dance. Ra Joy Executive Director, Arts Alliance Illinois Ra Joy is a civic entrepreneur who views community and economic development through an arts and culture lens. As Executive Director of Arts Alliance Illinois, a statewide arts advocacy network, Ra sets and implements the organization's strategic goals, manages its operations, and serves as the principal spokesperson. Representative Jan Schakowsky, specializing in community and economic development issues. Known for promoting cross-sector collaboration and civic engagement, Ra serves on numerous advisory boards and commissions at the local, state, and federal level. Brad Kik's life has been a campaign against specialization. Pursuing film study, environmental activism, graphic design, community organizing, woodworking, chicken raising, music, ecology and permaculture, Brad found a way to focus his multiple interests by adding a new one. Kinsel is a creative entrepreneur and arts administrator based in Pittsburgh, PA. He expresses his creativity through the mediums of painting, installation, curating, action-painting, and social media. Since , D. He works with youth, community artists, and community partners to identify ways for youth to express issues of social justice through drama, dance, music, visual art, and technology. He regularly provides training to non-profits on best practices around utilizing social media to become a stronger presence within the community. His career in both education and practice is focused on architecture as community development and advocates social responsibility, craft, and innovation. Ken's research focuses on social histories of housing projects. Claudia founded thePerformanceClub. A book of her selected writings will be published by Badlands Unlimited in Fall Helene Larsson Pousette currently serves as the Head of Events Units at the Swedish Institute's Department for Intercultural Dialogue, where she is responsible for promoting Swedish culture abroad and developing international exchange programs. Between she served as the Cultural Counselor at the Embassy of Sweden in Belgrade, Serbia, working with public and culture diplomacy, building long-term relationships and mutual exchange within culture and arts. For several years she was curator and project manager at the Swedish Travelling Exhibitions and at the Historical Museums in Stockholm, creating interdisciplinary exhibitions combining culture heritage and contemporary arts. She holds a BA in Ethnology and her practice focuses on contemporary society and the relationship between art performance, history and memory. Wayne P. Lawson has been a pivotal figure in arts leadership across the state of Ohio. For nearly 30 years, Wayne served as the fourth executive director of the Ohio Arts Council. Following his retirement in , he continued his fervent support for the arts by serving as a professor of public policy and arts administration at The Ohio State University, advising the Greater Columbus Arts Council on strategic initiatives, and volunteering on a number of arts and cultural boards. He has been on many program panels for the National Endowment for the Arts, served a three-year term as chairman of the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, and completed three terms as chairman of Arts Midwest. He has also received the Gary Young Award for outstanding leadership in arts administration from the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, and was honored by the Association of American Cultures for leadership and commitment to the development of cultural diversity in the arts. In , Wayne was the first American to be recognized by the Chilean National Council for Culture and the Arts with a Medal of Arts for his professional commitment to cultural collaborations between Ohio and Chile. Catherine Lee has been the assistant director of Bamboo Curtain Studio since After she received her Masters degree in Museum Science Program at Texas Tech University, she served as the project manager on community museums at the National Development Initiative Institute , Taipei and as the executive secretary at the National Science and Technology Museum , Kaohsiung. Since then she has collaborated with curators, artists, designers, researchers, historians, scientists, ecological experts, environmental activists, and community groups who are dedicated to environmental issues through cultural actions. Working for ACC - an organization that creates exchange opportunities for artists - is genuinely rewarding and she enjoys her relationships with grantees, helping them to realize their program goals, and connecting them with specialists in and beyond their fields. Cultural exchange factors deeply in her personal and professional lives, as she has lived and worked across five continents, as well as in diverse disciplines such as audit, book conservation and poetry. Beth Malone is Founding Executive Director of Dashboard Co-op, an award-winning curatorial venture that activates raw space with immersive art. Beth holds a Masters degree from the University of Glasgow. He has been a panelist and site-visitor for the National Endowment for the Arts; a panelist, presenter, consultant, and facilitator for national, state, and local arts organizations; and a guest lecturer in the arts administration programs at the College of Charleston and Winthrop University. Prior to his long sojourn in the realm of day jobs, Ken worked as a professional musician. Susan Meier Principal, Meier and Associates. From to , Susan served as the vice president of consulting and training for BoardSource. She has spent more than 23 years in governance and nonprofit work, working collaboratively with nonprofit executives and board members to identify governance challenges and opportunities and to implement proven strategies to address a broad array of governance issues. Specifically, she engages boards in a deeper understanding of roles and responsibilities, strategic and generative thinking, concrete ways to maximize board meetings, and addressing culture and dynamics in the boardroom. In addition, Susan has served on a number of boards of directors and currently serves on the Ripon College Board of Trustees. She graduated cum laude from Ripon College. Her work there involved managing the artist-in-residence programs, as well as all Public Programs interns. Dana's work focuses on artist residencies, incorporating the Maker movement into museums, and public participation in museums and galleries. Erin Glaze Nathanson is an arts director and curator. Erin is currently the co-founder and owner of Charleston Supported Art, LLC, which fosters relationships between buyers and artists while supporting the creation of new work. Previously, Orlove spent 19 years as senior program director for the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs. His tenure with the department led to nearly two decades of innovation, creativity and passion for public service with the City of Chicago. Orlove helped transform the Chicago Cultural Center into a prime downtown performing arts venue, as well as launched Chicago SummerDance and World Music Festival: Chicago, two staples in the summer festival season. Orlove also served as the director of music programming in Millennium Park since its grand opening in and helped establish many of the program series at that venue. Karen L. Paty has been working in the arts and community development for more than fifteen years and was hired as executive director of Georgia Council for the Arts in Carla Peterson began as the new Director of the Maggie Allesee National Center for Choreography in May of , after more than 20 years of service and leadership in the New York dance and performance community. She has held numerous positions in freelance arts consulting, fundraising, and management working for national service organizations and for progressive artists, and for such foundations as the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and Surdna Foundation. Peterson continues to serve on numerous national panels. In , she was awarded a 'Bessie' New York Dance and Performance Award in recognition of her leadership of Movement Research and her dedication to the dance community. Craig T. Peterson has twenty years of experience as a curator, cultural organizer, and programmer of contemporary performing arts. After moving to Philadelphia in , Craig launched and directed the Live Arts Brewery LAB , a program of FringeArts, designed to support artistic research, development, and presentation. For three years he was the director and producer of the annual Philly Fringe Festival, a three-week city-wide festival featuring the work of more than performing artists and companies. Heather Pontonio is the Program Officer for Art at the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation where she oversees the Marketplace Empowerment for Artists grant program that supports professional practice training for visual artists across the nation through arts organizations and university MFA courses. Heather also manages the Emily Hall Tremaine Exhibition Award, supporting innovation and experimentation at the curatorial level. She began her career in New York City where she worked with The Irish Repertory Theatre and The Little Orchestra Society in a variety of roles including development, membership, marketing, and box office management. She joined Grin City in early to build the once summer program to a full-time residency. As a writer, Molly focuses largely on themes of the rural Midwest and collective living. Her work takes the form of mixed media installation, music, poetry, performance, and video. Shey is a founding member of the Latina feminist poetry collective Las Tenoras and her artwork has been featured in Puerto Rico, Boston, and throughout Rhode Island. Shey is the founder of Crudo , an independent arts and culture digital magazine focused on contemporary Latin-American art and culture. She specializes in arts management and is a strong advocate for artists as critical agents of change in society, as well as the value of artist-run organizations. Aurora Robson is an artist largely known for her transformative work intercepting the waste stream. Aurora was born in Toronto in , grew up in Hawaii, and has lived in New York for the past two decades. Aurora has exhibited internationally. He is a musician, writer, producer, playwright and author and his work has been produced at major regional professional theatres throughout the US and in Europe. He has been the Executive Director of the Hermitage since Ama Rogan is the Managing Director of A Studio in the Woods at Tulane University, an artist residency centered on creative and innovative responses to environmental themes. Ama earned a BFA in Painting from RISD in and had a professional art practice until working in a variety of media including printmaking, ceramics and mixed media. In she became Managing Director at the Studio and, recognizing the opportunity to focus residencies on pressing environmental themes, she spearheaded the transition of the program to the international recognized leader in ecological residencies that it is today. Ama is dedicated to supporting artists and facilitating creative projects that address environmental issues with imagination, power and resourcefulness. Brian Rogers is a director, video and sound artist. He is the Co-founder and Artistic Director of The Chocolate Factory Theater, which supports the creation of theater, dance, music, and multimedia performances at its 5,square-foot facility in Queens. In addition to his own work, Brian curates The Chocolate Factory's Visiting Artist Program which supports the work of more than theater, dance, music and multimedia artists each year. He presented his first solo exhibition of new video works in November at Ventana Gallery in Brooklyn; self-released an album of electronic music in September ; and is collaborating on a new performance by Irish dance artists Emma Fitzgerald and Aine Stapleton at the Project Arts Center in Dublin in September Margaret Shiu is the founder and director of Taiwan's Bamboo Curtain Studio - a residency program as well as an international cultural exchange research and international facilitation portal. The studio works on the promotion of public and private support for international exchange. As a residency leader, the studio manages the Ministry of Culture bilingual international residency portal, and Margaret serves as a regional representative of TransCulture Exchange. Her vision is to promote art and culture as vital components for global understanding and local sustainability, by sharing, collaborating and co-creating new practices. With Local Action: Global Connection as the mission for the past 19 years, Margaret has worked to discover and support artistic talents by providing artists with the time and space for creative incubation. She also works closely with the Taipei city government on cultural space policies - in particular, creative city policies for creative talents support. He served as co-directed and lead fundraiser for Headlong Dance Theater from to where he focused on immersive, intimate works. Andrew founded Artists U in offering free planning and professional development work for artists in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and South Carolina. He gives talks and workshops nationally, and is an artist leader with Creative Capital's Professional Development Program. The Halsey Institute is a multi-disciplinary, non-collecting contemporary arts museum, with an emphasis on emerging and mid-career artists from around the world. In his thirty-year career he has organized hundreds of exhibitions, ranging from contemporary Japanese installation art to 19th Century Baluchi tribal weavings. He has authored or co-authored fourteen books on subjects ranging from Russian conceptual art to early twentieth century circus life. Mark is also an active visual artist whose works have been exhibited, published, and collected internationally. John D. His curatorial emphasis is on contemporary art and society, with focus on works in social practice and video. Prior to his appointment at GCAC, he was Curator at the Arizona State University Art Museum where he led the residency initiative series Social Studies , which featured artist in residency solo social practice projects. Caitlin has served the Alliance since and was appointed Executive Director in During her tenure she has launched the Emerging Program Institute, conducted New Voices of Modern Arab Literature, was a writer and editor of 'Surviving to Thriving: Sustaining Artist Residencies,' and has authored numerous reports, essays, and articles about artist residencies and support for today's artists. Caitlin holds a BA in music performance from Columbia College Chicago and a Masters in musicology from Roosevelt University, where her research focused on music as a tool for building communities of resistance and social dissent. Brad Thomas has over twenty years of experience as a professional artist, curator, and writer. At the Mesa Refuge, writers focus on the pressing issues of our time, including the environment, the economy, and social equity. Susan is working with founder Peter Barnes to make the work of Mesa Refuge writers an important part of the national conversation on change and a vital part of the Bay-area cultural community. He has over twenty years experience working for community-based organizations and local arts agencies as well as cultural institutions on state and national levels. Artists and was a project manager for the design and construction of a national database of artists resources now known as NYFA Source www. In addition to program development, management, and fundraising, he facilitates accessibility initiatives at VSC. He currently serves as an editorial board member for Q Ave Press, makers of handmade chapbooks of poetry, translations, and visual art. While her concentration is in painting — traditional to contemporary — she loves experimenting in all media from printmaking to sculpture. Being Deaf, much of her work reflects the history, life and perspective of American Deaf Culture in a style often shared among minority artists. In partnership with The Anderson Center, she just completed hosting the first US Deaf Artists Residency Program, a projected funded by the National Endowment for the Arts, and is currently working on establishing the Deaf Arts Guild — a national professional development member organization by and for Deaf artists of all disciplines. Pamela Winfrey Senior Artist, Exploratorium. Pamela Winfrey is the Senior Artist for the Exhibit Environment at the Exploratorium, where she has worked since Skip navigation. What to Know Before You Go. Full Schedule. Board Track. Performing Arts Track. Upcoming Events. Home Events Conference Speakers. Bienvenu Director of the Office of Accessibility, National Endowment for the Arts Beth Bienvenu is the Director of the Office of Accessibility at the National Endowment for the Arts, where she manages the NEA's technical assistance and advocacy work devoted to making the arts accessible for people with disabilities, older adults, veterans, and people in institutional settings. Jennie Carlisle Production Curator, Elsewhere Artist Collaborative Jennie Carlisle oversees the residency program and supports artistic process, project production, ideation, and conceptual development at Elsewhere Museum in Greensboro, North Carolina. Anna Drozdowski Director, Neighborhood House Anna Drozdowski is the Director of Neighborhood House, a secular program of Christ Church in Philadelphia which builds community through live performance on an intimate and historic campus. Esther Grisham Grimm Executive Director, 3Arts Esther Grimm's lifelong career in the arts spans administration, museum education, arts education, and philanthropy. Margaret Shiu Founder, Bamboo Curtain Studio Margaret Shiu is the founder and director of Taiwan's Bamboo Curtain Studio - a residency program as well as an international cultural exchange research and international facilitation portal.

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