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Past
Grantees

Kayla Farrish, Spectacle, BAAD!/Pepatián Dance Your Future, 2018.

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New Music Gathering (fiscal sponsor Exapno New Music Community Center)

2021
Music
New York City
Convenings, Research & Memberships
$7,000

One-time grant of $7,000 in support of the 2021 New Music Gathering, co-presented by American Composers Forum and New Music USA, to support early career composers to participate in the 2021 in-person national gathering in Minneapolis, Minnesota and online.

Music

Atlas O. Phoenix

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Filmmaker Mentorship
$7,000

Atlas O. Phoenix (they/them/theirs) is a director, writer, producer, actor, and editor. “At this point in my filmmaking journey, as I embrace becoming trans-masculine, at 50, I want to create films that not only explore the darkness of the soul; I want to examine its flight to the light.

Queer filmmakers are an enormous inspiration to me because our stories are powerful and are about overcoming obscene social obstacles based on our sexual orientation and gender expression. For some, this includes a radical bias towards the color of our skin. If we are vigilant about rejecting tropes, cliches, and tokenism, queer cinema will continue to evolve into a powerful and inspiring force for good in the world.”

 

Project Statement

Beautiful Boi is an experimental, narrative documentary. This genre-bending film is about Phoenix’ transition at 50 and their mental health journey over 34 years. As Phoenix transitions, they have many questions that range from being seen by men as a potential threat to questioning their spirituality. Their experience with the surgeries and hormone replacement therapy are part of the journey, but not the whole journey. Phoenix shares their gender transition to create a legacy of this mental, physical, sexual, and spiritual journey. This legacy may be someone else’s survival guide.

Film
Atlas O. Phoenix, Biracial, 50. An close up of them staring directly into the lens. The photo has shades of blue/black.

Photo by Atlas O. Phoenix.

Maribeth Romslo

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Filmmaker Mentorship
$7,000

Maribeth Romslo (she/her/hers) is a director, cinematographer, and producer who believes that well-told stories have the power to change the world. Her films have played at festivals from Toronto to Mumbai. Recent projects include an original documentary series (Handmade*Mostly) for Reese Witherspoon’s new media platform called Hello Sunshine; a conceptual dance film (Kitchen Dance) about the work of women; a historical fiction content series (Spark) to inspire girls interested in STEM; and a documentary about student free-speech in America (Raise Your Voice).

 

Project Statement

Growing Up In A Pandemic is a multimedia storytelling project that focuses on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on youth. The project pairs audio stories told by youth with animation that supports and enhances the content of the stories.

Film
Maribeth Romslo, a woman filmmaker, working with a cinema camera.

Photo by Spencer Nelson.

Rafael Samanez

2021
Film
New York City
New York City Film Finalist Award
$5,000

Rafael Samanez (he, him, his) was born in Brazil to Peruvian parents. He resides in Queens, NY. His previous work as a community organizer inspires his films which delve into the intersections of gender, race, migration, and class. He graduated with a Master of Fine Arts from the City College of New York in 2019 and received a 2018 Princess Grace Award/Honoraria. Rafael was a John Grist Documentary/BAFTA New York Scholar and a top finalist for the Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship in 2020. His film Out of the Shadows won Best Documentary in the 2019 Cityvisions Film and Video Showcase. It appeared in nine film festivals, including the Urbanworld Film Festival and the New York Latino Film Festival. Alongside filmmaking, Samanez teaches media production at the City College of New York.

 

Project Statement

My Existence is Resistance is a verité-style docuseries covering the life and work of three influential transgender women of color who break down barriers in New York City. Amidst a global pandemic, they lead their communities in the fight for equal housing, healthcare, jobs, political representation, and lives free of violence. Having learned early how to survive the trials life threw at them with quick wit, creativity, and boundless resiliency, these heroines are poised to carve a new path for trans people. We follow their journeys closely as they make bold moves to lead their lives in their truths, harness internal strength during hard times and overcome setbacks on their paths to greatness.

Film
Rafael, a Latino man in his early 40's, looking through the camera lens on a tripod in front of the US/MX border. A bird is seen flying over the barb-wired border fence.

Photo by Leilani Clark.

Suneil Sanzgiri

2021
Film
New York City
New York City Film Production
$30,000

Suneil Sanzgiri (he, him, his) is an artist, researcher, and filmmaker whose work spans experimental video and film, essays, and installations and contends with questions of identity, heritage, culture, and diaspora related to structural violence. He graduated from MIT with a Masters of Science in Art, Culture and Technology in 2017. Sanzgiri’s films have screened extensively around the world, including the New York Film Festival, International Film Festival Rotterdam, Hong Kong International Film Festival, Chicago International Film Festival, Sheffield Doc Fest, IndieLisboa International Film Festival, Punto de Vista International Documentary Film Festival of Navarra, The Viennale International Film Festival Vienna, LA Film Forum, e-Flux, 25 FPS Festival, and won awards at BlackStar Film Festival, Open City Documentary Festival, VideoEx Festival, and Images Festival. Sanzgiri has participated in residencies and fellowships, including SOMA, MacDowell, Pioneer Works, and was named in Filmmaker Magazine’s 2021 “25 New Faces of Independent Film.”

 

Project Statement

Two Refusals (working title) is a personal journey through ancestry, anti-colonialism, and harbingers of dissent across India and Africa, inspired from the myths of an unlikely source—Portugal’s oldest work of epic poetry Os Lusíadas, or The Lusiads—repositioning key elemental and mythological figures to ask the question, “How can one refuse an empire?” The film weaves together personal reflections of Sanzgiri’s family history as freedom fighters against the occupying Portuguese forces in Goa with stories of liberation and resistance across the Goan diaspora. This film focuses on the bonds of solidarity that developed across India and Africa against the Portuguese Empire.

Film
Suneil Sanzgiri, a light-skinned Indian American male, staring into the camera on a brightly lit street corner at night.

Photo by Arin Sang-urai.

Nova Scott James

2021
Film
New York City
New York City Film Finalist Award
$5,000

Nova Scott-James (she, her, hers) is a filmmaker, artist, and creative coach from Harlem, NYC. Her childhood experiences of being flooded with the sounds and culture of jazz have impacted her creative aesthetic greatly as her work honors improvisation, altered states of consciousness, ritual, and collaboration. Scott-James is also a reiki practitioner and dedicated intuitive worker—she uses these abilities to serve people as a director and creative coach by guiding them in honoring their creative genius.

 

Project Statement

Wild Darlings Sing The Blues (And it’s a Song of Freedom) is a feature-length documentary following the Wild Darlings, a queer healing arts collective of black women and non-binary activists, as they embark on an epic road trip from New York to a former slave plantation in Virginia. The Darlings are tasked with harnessing their “healer within” to bless the plantation land, honor their ancestors and explore their experiences of racial and gender-based violence. They create a performance art homage to The Blues.

Film
Nova Scott James, outside in a field with trees in the background, looking at the camera.

Illya Szilak and Cyril Tsiboulski

2021
Film
New York City
New York City Film Production
$30,000

Illya Szilak (she, her, hers) is a writer, artist, director, and creative producer. Shaped by her experiences as a physician, her richly collaborative, multidisciplinary art practice explores mortality, embodiment, identity and belief in an increasingly virtual world. Her longtime artistic partner is Cyril Tsiboulski (he, him, his). Their first virtual reality piece, Queerskins: a love story (2018), received a Peabody Futures of Media Award for transmedia. Their second, Queerskins: ARK, which features live dance performance was developed at The Venice Biennale College V.R. Lab. Their most recent work, In My Own Skin (2021), premiered at CPH:DOX festival. It combines handmade textiles, photography, wearable avatars, and virtual architecture. Szilak continues to work as a doctor, currently caring for inmates at Rikers Island, NYC.

 

Project Statement

Fly Angel Soul is a short experimental narrative film shot within virtual reality. It tells the story of Sebastian, a young gay physician estranged from his rural Catholic Missouri family, who, having moved to Mali to heal the sick, is diagnosed with AIDS. Inspired by a quote from Meister Eckhart “(let us) rejoice in the everlasting truth in which the highest angel and the soul and the fly are equal,” Fly Angel Soul is shot in real-time, from the unique points of view of three networked virtual cameras adopting the “roles” of the eponymous characters. The “human” p.o.v. will be that of a live cinematographer moving through the virtual set. Thus, in Fly Angel Soul, “liveness” resides in the “embodied” cameras even more so than in the actors in the story. Finding commonality with video games and live performance, Fly Angel Soul explores the potential for virtual production techniques to expand 2-D cinematic language.

Film
Illya Szilak and Cyril Tsiboulski on the volumetric capture stage at Intel Studios during the shoot of Queerskins: ARK VR (2020).

Jingjing Tian

2021
Film
New York City
New York City Film Production
$30,000

Jingjing Tian (she, her, hers) is a Chinese American filmmaker based in NYC. Born in Northeast China, she immigrated to Texas at the age of nine, where she learned to speak with a twang, wore a belt buckle, and discovered her Asian American identity. Tian explores these identities and the themes of autonomy and oppression in her work and her life. Writing and directing are therapy for her. A Sundance Uprise Grantee, she is working on her first feature film, Kid C. Her short films have been screened at Nitehawk Cinema with MoMA, Cleveland International Film Festival, Bentonville Film Festival, Seattle Asian American Film Festival, and Museum of the Chinese in America. Her work has been profiled in Paper Magazine, AM New York, BuzzFeed, High Country News, South China Morning Post, and more.

 

Project Statement

A character and emotionally driven film, Kid C is a narrative feature that follows Lee during her first year as a Chinese immigrant in a small town in Texas during the late 1990s. Cracking under the pressures of volatile parents, Lee, a rambunctious 10-year-old, attempts to reclaim a sense of childhood with her best friend John, an African American boy. But when she accidentally reveals a secret that he shares, their friendship is threatened and life begins to collapse. Drawing from field research and personal experiences, Kid C explores a child’s agency in the face of parental abuse and intergenerational trauma.

Film
Jingjing Tian, a Chinese American filmmaker based in NYC, behind the camera.

Kazua Melissa Vang

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Filmmaker Mentorship
$7,000

Kazua Melissa Vang (she/her/hers) is a Hmong American filmmaker, photographer, teaching artist, and producer based in Minnesota. Vang production-managed Nice, an independent pilot, and official selection for the Indie Episodic Category at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival. She co-founded the Asian Pacific Island American Minnesota Film Collective (APIA MN Film Collective). Her first short film, Rhaub, was an official selection at the 2018 Qhia Dab Neeg Film Festival in Saint Paul, MN. Vang received the Forecast Public Art Early-Career Artist Project Grant and developed a short experimental film, Hmong Ephemera, as a writer/director. She is a producer for Hmong Organization, a comedic web series.

 

Project Statement

The Chaperone is a semi-autobiographical comedic short film that follows Ghia Na, a teen who must accompany her older sister Hlee Anne when they are out of the house. Ghia Na serves as the chaperone while Hlee Anne rendezvous with her boyfriend in the park. Set amidst the backdrop of the mid-90s and the strict rules that governed Hmong girls’ bodies, this film follows Ghia Na as she befriends other “younger sister” chaperones.

Film
Kazua Melissa Vang, Profile/Headshot photo.

Photo by Katherina Vang.

Taryn Ward

2021
Film
New York City
New York City Film Finalist Award
$5,000

Taryn Ward (he, him, his) is a filmmaker and writer currently working and living in Brooklyn, New York. His often deadpan-centric narrative-based filmmaking tends to revolve around the quotidian and the idiosyncrasies of the everyday layabout. Ward’s films have been screened in the Fast Forward Film Festival, NewFilmmakers at Anthology Film Archives and Atlanta Film Festival.

 

Project Statement

Ward’s upcoming comedic film Broken Goods follows the story of an aloof man named Vincent who, in addition to struggling with a sugar addiction, becomes a full-time test subject for clinical drug and product test trials in lieu of working a steady nine to five. Despite the risk, there’s a small fortune to be made when donating one’s body to experimental research—and instead of working more hours at his retail position, Vincent finds this risk worth the reward. Driven mostly by its satirical tone and existential character study, Broken Goods also underscores the relationship between mind and self as well as one’s relationship to both state and labor.

Film
Taryn Ward, 25 years old, embracing a man with a weedwacker on Coney Island.

Deacon Warner

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Film Finalist Award
$5,000

Deacon Warner (he, him, his) is a documentary filmmaker and youth media instructor. In 2020 he joined the COMPAS roster of teaching artists. Warner has made numerous short documentaries, including Bee-Sharp Honeybee, 56, and Peaceful Warriors: on the road with Vets for Peace. The Co-op Wars, his first feature film, premiered in May 2021. In addition to his independent film work and teaching, Warner was the Youth Programs Director at FilmNorth for twelve years, developing the media program to include in-school residencies, summer camps, and after-school programming. Before working at FilmNorth, he was a social studies teacher in the Minneapolis Public Schools.

 

Project Statement

Rethinking Security is a documentary film about a community creating a nonviolent model for safety. With the guidance and expertise of Nonviolent Peaceforce (N.P.), community groups and social justice organizations in the Twin Cities are actively creating a force of community members trained in nonviolent strategies to provide community protection. This effort was set off by the protests and conflicts following George Floyd’s murder amidst a global pandemic. N.P. and local partners in the Twin Cities are developing trained volunteers and a communication system allowing rapid responses when violent situations emerge. This film will use verité style footage, following the efforts of the lead organizers, along with news reportage as context for events. Rethinking Security offers a look at a possible future where mutual protection and nonviolence replace our current model of armed protection.

Film
Deacon Warner in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area.

Shen Xin

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Film Production
$30,000

Shen Xin (she, her, hers; they, them, theirs) creates moving image installations and performances that empower alternative histories, relations and potentials between individuals and nation-states. They seek to create affirmative spaces of belonging that embrace polyphonic narratives and identities. Shen Xin’s most recent solo presentations include Swiss Institute, New York (forthcoming 2022) and Brine Lake (A New Body) (Walker Art Center, 2021). Their recent group exhibitions include Language is a River (Monash University Museum of Art (MUMA), Melbourne, 2021), Minds Rising, Spirits Tuning (Gwangju Biennale, 2021), Sigg Prize (M+ Museum, Hong Kong, 2019), and Songs for Sabotage (New Museum Triennial, New York, 2018). They received the BALTIC Artists’ Award (2017) and the Rijksakademie residency in Amsterdam (2018-19).

 

Project Statement

A relational film, Solar Wheels of the Steppes (working title), presents a science fiction narrative of wild horses in North America/Turtle Island and Xinjiang, China. The horses’ relationships with technologies, ecosystems, humans, and land reveal sustainable interrelationships between culture and ecology across geography.

Film
Shen Xin, a thirty-something Asian and multi-ethnic non-binary artist smiling in the sun.

Photo by Erin Gleeson.

Dan Yang

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Film Finalist Award
$2,500

Dan Yang (he, him, his) is a filmmaker, teacher, and community activist. He believes that films have an active influence on the social-cultural issues that surround our everyday lives. He is a proud 2016 graduate of Columbia College in Chicago, where he studied directing. Yang has produced short films such as Rice Street and Spirits Dawn. He hopes to continue creating films that challenge social norms, speaking to issues such as cultural dysphoria and identity issues. Yang is a member of InProgress, where he mentors students on video production. He is a recipient of the Cultural Stars Grant as well as the Minnesota State Arts Board Grant.

 

Project Statement

Currently, Yang is working on an untitled film based on the unfortunate and true events of Fong Lee and his encounter with officer Jason Anderson on July 22nd, 2006. It begins like any ordinary day within a Hmong household, Fong the middle child in a family of 6, is a reserved and quiet teen. Like any other day, Fong and his friends bike to the local elementary school where he is approached by Officer Anderson. This encounter leads to a foot chase and the eventual shooting of Fong Lee.

Film
Dan Yang, 28, a Hmong-American filmmaker based out of Saint  Paul, Minnesota.

Rhiana Yazzie

2021
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Film Production
$30,000

Rhiana Yazzie (she, her, hers) is a director, filmmaker, and the Artistic Director of New Native Theatre. Her first feature film, A Winter Love (writer/director/producer/actor), will premiere at festivals in 2021/22. Yazzie is a 2021 Lanford Wilson and 2020 Steinberg Award-winning playwright. She was a 2018 Bush Foundation Leadership Fellow and was recognized with a 2017 Sally Ordway Award for Vision. A Navajo Nation citizen, her work has been presented from Alaska to Mexico, including Carnegie Hall’s collaboration with American Indian Community House and The Eagle Project. She is a graduate of the University of Southern California’s Masters of Professional Writing, where she produced events featuring Stephen Hawking, Madeleine Albright, Paula Vogel, Herbie Hancock, and Spalding Gray.

 

Project Statement

Grant funds will begin the production process of Yazzie’s second feature film, Wounspe Wankatya: A College Education. Co-adapted from a play of the same name by Alex Hesbrook Ramier, it is the story of two Lakota women, Tiffany and Tashina, the only two from their reservation high school to make it into college. Tiffany is a math and physics genius who sabotages her gifts by partying too much, while Tashina is indigi-genius at being true to her Lakota traditions when she isn’t suffering from depression. To get an education, they embark on the creation of a sacred dress that will bring the enlightenment they need to get through school.

Film
Photo of grantee, Rhiana Yazzie, smiling at the camera.

Jay Afrisando

2021
Music
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

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.

Music
Jay Afrisando, a thirty-something Asian man composer/sound artist, with his right index and thumb on his chin as he pauses his speech during a concert opening.

Photo by Kakia Gkoudina

Kashimana Ahua

2021
Music
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

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.

Music
Kashimana Ahua a thirty-something has a flower in her afro hair and is smiling behind glasses in front of green trees.

Ephrat Asherie

2021
Dance
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

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.

Dance
Ephrat Asherie, a thirty-something white woman laughing during a rehearsal with one foot up on a radiator.

Photo by Claudia Celestino

Catina Bacote

2021
Literature
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

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.

Literature
Catina Bacote, a Black woman writer, stands outside her studio at the Djerassi Resident Artist Program.

Leslie Barlow

2021
Visual Arts
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

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.

Visual Arts
A headshot of a thirty-one year old Black woman in her studio smiling at the camera.

Photo by Ryan Stopera

Lexie Bean

2021
Literature
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

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.

Literature
Lexie Bean, a late-twenties gender fluid white person in an embroidered brown shirt, has the sun cast on their face with a slight smile.

Photo by Llewellyn Nuñez

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