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

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1,354
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720
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3
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298
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606
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inVisual Arts, Multi-disciplinary

Kelley Meister

2019
Visual Arts
Minnesota
Jerome@Camargo
$6,000

Kelley Meister (pronouns: ze/hir/hirs) received an MFA from Minneapolis College of Art and Design in 2008 and continues to live and work in Minneapolis. Kelley’s work has been shown throughout the US, including at the Contemporary Art Museum in Saint Louis; Counterpulse Festival in San Francisco; and Anthology Film Archives in New York City. Hir work has been supported by the Minnesota State Arts Board, the Jerome Foundation, and the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council. Kelley also works as a teaching artist in schools, libraries, museums/cultural production centers, and community centers throughout Minnesota with COMPAS and the Science Museum of Minnesota.

Kelley is a multidisciplinary artist whose work combines drawing, sculpture, video, and performance into multimedia installations and films. Kelley’s body of work investigates and calls attention to this moment in geological history where the planet is shifted by the indelible touch of humans. This work centers on a search for empathy for those whose lives have been irreversibly impacted by climate change, war, famine, and other challenges. Kelley utilizes the process of scientific observation of the world around us, yet as a queer artist, ze chooses to infuse this observation with the emotional responses that come up rather than stifle them to present a neutral position. Hir work interrogates the cultural acceptance of our trajectory and raises questions about our effects on our ecosystems and future generations.

During Kelley’s Camargo residency, ze will spend time synthesizing hir research and developing new work as part of the multi-part project Last Vacation Before the End of the World. Utilizing the research from hir Jerome Travel and Study trip to nuclear test sites and waste depositories in Nevada and New Mexico last spring, this new work is a multimedia response to our ongoing nuclear arsenal, questions of containment and disposal of nuclear waste, and the tourism industry that surrounds our nuclear production and history. A site visit to France’s International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor nearby will be a part of hir residency at Camargo.

Visual Arts
The Atomic Tourist stands facing left, looking out, dressed in assorted neon yellows, holding a Geiger counter

Minnesota Council on Foundations

2019
Misc
Minnesota
Convenings, Research & Memberships
$17,750

Minnesota Council on Foundations, Minneapolis, MN, received a $17,750 two-year grant for 2019 and 2020 membership.

Misc

Migiwa Miyajima

2019
Music
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Composer/Pianist/Producer Migiwa Miyajima’s (she/her) career path began on a very different trajectory from composing music—she worked as a director of real estate ads, an IT engineer, and an editor-in-chief of a travel magazine in Tokyo. But in 2004, at the age of 30, she decided to become a musician. Five years later, the Vanguard Jazz Orchestra, a historic New York-based ensemble, invited her to join their team. She was the associate producer for two Grammy Award-nominated albums by the orchestra in 2011 and 2014. In 2012, having received a Japanese government scholarship as a composer and a Japan-US Friendship Commission Fellowship, Migiwa made her move to New York. Her ensemble Miggy Augmented Orchestra’s debut album Colorful was released by ArtistShare in 2018. She is one of the recipients of the 2020 New York City’s NYC Women’s Fund For Media, Music and Theatre.

 

Fellowship Statement

Experiencing the massive 2011 earthquake in Japan transformed my approach to my life’s work as a composer. I witnessed the inconceivable ability music has to speak to us as a people during chaotic times. Since then, I am most interested in music as a language that speaks to our emotions directly. After moving to the United States and seeing fear and lack of happiness turned into hatred and division, it feels that this is the time for me as a composer/musician to cultivate what I learned in Japan. In my upcoming project, I am practicing how to make my music work on fear or insecurity and how to cultivate positive energy through it. I am delighted to be inspired by this amazing community while I am tackling this profound theme.

Photo by Hayato Sakurai.

Music
Migiwa Miyajima, composer, pianist, producer

Alicia Hall Moran

2019
Music
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Alicia Hall Moran’s (she/her) critically-acclaimed albums (Heavy Blue, Here Today) embrace Opera, Soul, Jazz, Theatre, and Visual Art. Shows/explorations include “the motown project”; “Black Wall Street: Tulsa Race Riot of 1921”; and “Breaking Ice: Battle of the Carmens.” Further collaborations live inside the artworks of Carrie Mae Weems, Adam Pendleton, Joan Jonas, Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, Simone Leigh/Liz Magic Laser, Carl Hancock Rux, and Ragnar Kjartansson, and are exhibited worldwide.

Residencies/commissions include Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, National Sawdust, MoMA, ArtPublic, Brooklyn Youth Chorus, The Kitchen, and River to River. Her contemporary sensibilities were tapped for Broadway’s Tony-winning Porgy and Bess, starring as Bess on National Tour. Her artistry with husband/pianist Jason Moran has yielded Bleed/Whitney Biennial, Work Songs/Venice Biennial, Two Wings: Music of Black America In Migration/Carnegie Hall; and the Ford Foundation’s Art of Change fellowship. Ongoing, Alicia balances composition with solo vocalism in symphonic works: through 2020 in Gabriel Kahane’s emergency shelter intake form and Bryce Dessner’s Triptych.

 

Fellowship Statement

As a mezzo-soprano and composer, my sense of harmony, evidenced in film, recorded output and stage performances, both entices and subdues established notions of Performer and Performance. Profound historical divisions are the jump-off points for my previous musical investigations. Class difference in the review and catalogue of Black Music is another interest. My practice is non-hierarchical and plainly observes the music of the West.

In my forays, textual and sonic, Voice itself is an embodiment. My aim has been to find a new harmony inside of my work between Performance, Performer, and Practice. The Jerome Fellowship enables deeper exploration of venues previously off limits, collaborations too impractical to previously entertain, and visual realms that were technically unavailable. Traveling to Natural settings will sharpen specificity in my work. I will re-engage my recent work on ice to continue the investigation: metaphors for expressions of fragility and civility in critically trying Times.

Photo by Charles Roussel/Prototype Festival.

Music
"Breaking Ice: Battle of the Carmens" by Alicia Hall Moran, performed live on ice at Bryant Park, 2018.

Patricia Park

2019
Literature
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Patricia Park (she/her) is the author of the acclaimed novel Re Jane, a modern-day reimagining of Brontë’s Jane Eyre set in Queens. She has received fellowships from Fulbright, The Center for Fiction, American Association of University Women, and others. Her nonfiction has appeared in the New York Times, Guardian, Salon, and others. She is at work on a second novel which explores the Korean community in Argentina during the Dirty War. She is Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at American University. A native of Queens, she lives in Brooklyn.

 

Fellowship Statement

I write about minorities within minorities. I was born here but have family from Korea and Argentina. When I was growing up, mainstream America always lumped me into the “Asian” category. But ironically enough, within the Korean community in Queens, I didn’t always feel that I belonged. In my fiction, I challenge our assumptions of the “monolithic minority.” I give voice to anyone who has felt that same loneliness; to anyone who has similarly occupied a culturally confused space.

My first novel, Re Jane, is the story of a mixed-race Korean American orphan from Queens that uses Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre as a loose template to raise questions of identity and “homeland.” My second novel-in-progress, El Chino: A Novel in Four Movements, is about a boy named Juan Kim who falls in love with jazz, and the music becomes his freedom of expression during the backdrop of the Argentine Dirty War.

Literature
Patricia Park in the studio of WNYC

Leslie Parker

2019
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Leslie Parker is a dance artist, performer, director, maker, improviser and educator holding a BFA from Temple University in Choreography and Modern dance technique and a MFA from Hollins University in partnership with the Künstlerhaus Mousonturm, The Frankfurt University of Music and Performing Arts and The Dresden Frankfurt Dance Company in Frankfurt, Germany. Leslie is a 2017 Bessie award winner and a Jerome Hill Foundation Artist Fellow 2019 -2021. She has a rigorous research and practice in dance forms derived of the African Diaspora. She designed “Moving Dialogue for Non-Violence” using dance art as a platform for Broadway Women’s House Shelter in Brooklyn, New York and at The Family Place in Saint Paul, MN. She is currently a member of the collective, Skeleton Architecture based in New York. Her director credits include co-director and choreographer for IHOTB MayDay Tree of Life Ceremony; choreographer for Jimmy & Lorraine: A Musing by Talvin Wilks; and Ping Chong and Talvin Wilks for Collidescope 4.0.

Additional credits include, crystal, smoke n’spirit(s) presented by Momentum: New Dance Works at Frey Theater St. Catherine’s University; Crossroads/Gateways pt 2. at the Walker Art Center’s Choreographer’s evening; Bone Womyn Traces in Black at Hollins University (Roanoke, VA) and at Southern Theatre; Ripen: Forbidden Truth In da Flesh Pt.2 at Pillsbury House Theatre “Mama Laurie’s Late Nite Series”; Center for Performance Research's Fall Movement Series (NY, NY); and New York Live Arts. Parker choreographed an original work, In Search of Colors, as faculty for University Dance Theater (UDT) at U of MN Theatre and Dance dept. Currently, Leslie Parker Dance Project, is in residence for Spring 2021 at Pillsbury House Theater and Pangea World Theater.

 

Fellowship Statement

I am a dance artist, performer, dance maker, educator and improviser, trained in and experimenting with an aesthetic rooted in the Black experience. I make dances that explore spirituality, identity and social justice to spark questions and conversations with and between people.  As an improviser, I invite observers to a real-time exchange through movement, sound, space and the body. Described by choreographer Bill T. Jones as “haunting,” former Director of Quixote Foundation, June Wilson describes the experience of “watching Parker’s work is like being a voyeur; the intimacy and emotional energy of her movement makes you want to look away and yet it’s impossible to stop watching.”

Photo courtesy of Leslie Parker.

Dance
Photo of Leslie Parker in Prospect Park, Brooklyn NY

Pedra Pepa

2019
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Pedra Pepa (they/them) is a Venezuelan, queer Latinx performance artist, as well as a teaching artist with Pillsbury House Theatre and Upstream Arts. They have performed and produced over ten Drag Story Hours at multiple Twin Cities locations, supported by a Minnesota Center for Humanities grant. Doña Pepa, Pedra’s drag/burlesque persona and choreographic lens, has graced stages locally (First Avenue Mainroom, Minneapolis Burlesque Festival, Lush, Gay 90’s, University of Minnesota) and in Puerto Rico. Noche Bomba, which incorporates Doña Pepa, was presented by 20% Theatre’s Q-STAGE and will tour to Winona State University in April 2019. Solo-versions were performed at Walker Art Center’s Choreographers’ Evening and at Galería Oro in Vieques, Puerto Rico. Pedra’s newest work, Holy Doña, will premiere at Red Eye Theatre’s 2019 New Works 4 Weeks Festival. Initial research for this project has been shared at 1er Coloquio sobre Hombres+ y Masculinidades in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

 

Fellowship Statement

I am Pedra Pepa. I am a queer, gender-fuck, Venezuelan immigrant, Latinx, brown performance maker in Minneapolis.

My choreographic work is deeply personal, it is about my everyday experience, the coexistence of my oppressions and my identities. I create work that denounces current injustices. The work begins within me, then I transfer it to and cultivate it with other performers. I play with movement expression, singing, sound-making, draglesque, and visual media to create specific imagery, supported by costumes and props. I am interested in facilitating emotional journeys for audiences to ride with me and the performers.

“Draglesque” is my current solo research, a larger-than-life expression/explosion of gender, where my body transcends all social parameters. A space of radical freedom and self-love. This process is how I finesse and craft my skills as I mold my character(s). It is both a celebration and a transgression

Photo by Nic LaFrance.

Dance
Pedra Pepa stands in a studio as they're being photographed

Philanthropy New York

2019
Misc
New York City
Convenings, Research & Memberships
$2,400

Philanthropy New York, New York, NY, received a $2,400 two-year grant ($1,200 per year) for 2019 and 2020 membership.

Misc

Ronny Quevedo

2019
Visual Arts
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Ronny Quevedo (he/him) was born in Guayaquil, Ecuador and now lives in the Bronx. He works in a variety of mediums including sculpture and drawing. Quevedo has had several solo exhibitions including no hay medio tiempo / there is no halftime, Queens Museum (2017); Home Field Advantage, Casita Maria Center for Arts & Education, Bronx, New York (2015); and Ulama, Ule, Olé, Carol Jazzar Gallery, Miami (2013). In 2018, Quevedo was included in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s group exhibition, Pacha, Llaqta, Wasichay: Indigenous Space, Modern Architecture, New Art. Quevedo received his MFA from the Yale School of Art in 2013 and BFA from The Cooper Union in 2003. He is currently artist in residence at Smack Mellon.

 

Fellowship Statement

The effect of relocation and displacement generates works about adaptation, memory and transformation. The movement and action within sports is a metaphor for an insistence on survival and constant adaptation. This use of play is a subversive transformation to the rules and capabilities placed upon people when the conditions of a society become oppressive. By incorporating these games, I invoke an architectural and narrative space—where boundaries are malleable, limits are negotiable and competition is a generative force for evolving identities.

The parallels between play and migration generate from indoor soccer leagues in New York City. Played on weekends at local public schools, these leagues are coordinated and operated by migrant Latin American and Caribbean communities. The questioning of inheritance and memory are conceptual markers in my practice. The act of passing—passing down, passing on, passing the ball—offers generative contemplations of my points of origin.

My focus for the fellowship is the dialectic of nomadism and cultural production as complemented by Edouard Glissant’s Poetics of Relation. He emphasizes the influence of the periphery onto central forms of culture. He claims that the margins offer a new understanding of the center. It can be more creative in determining meaning than a static position based on an essential form. I relate to this concept of being having been born in Ecuador, raised in The Bronx (a pre-dominantly Caribbean and Black community at that time) and determining my own identity as a migrant in relation to those who have similar experiences of displacement.

Photo by Argenis Apolinario.

Visual Arts
Ronny Quevedo in front of ULAMA-ULE-ALLEY-OOP

Preeti Kaur Rajpal

2019
Literature
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Preeti Kaur Rajpal (she/her) is a poet and nonfiction writer. She first began writing as a student of June Jordan in her “Poetry for the People” program. Preeti’s work can be found in The Sikh Review, qarrtsiluni, Memoir Journal’s I Speak From My Palms Anthology, American Public Media’s On Being Blog, Spook Mag, Jaggery Lit, Blueshift Journal, Tupelo Quarterly, Popula, Lantern Review, and others. She is a recent Loft Literary Mentor Series Poetry Fellow, Voices of Our Nations Arts Fellow, Poetry Foundation’s Poetry Incubator Fellow, and Writing By Writers Fellow.

 

Fellowship Statement

I am working on my first collection of poems, tentatively titled O! How We Escaped! My poems explore issues of colonialism, post-colonialism, immigrant status in the US, patriarchy, post-9/11 Islamophobia specific to the effects on Sikhs in the US, human rights issues in India, India’s Partition, my family’s journey as refugees during that time, and my understanding of Sikh philosophy.

Photo by Anna Min.

Literature
A photo of a woman smiling.

Ashwini Ramaswamy

2019
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

As an independent choreographer and Choreographic Associate with Ragamala Dance Company, Ashwini Ramaswamy’s (she/her) work references ancient myths and ritualistic practices, global literature and poetry, and the mixed media contemporary culture she has absorbed for over 30 years. Her work draws from myriad influences to express a personal identity with universal resonance. Celebrated for her ability to “[weave] together, both fearfully and joyfully, the human and the divine” (New York Times), Ashwini has studied Bharatanatyam since the age of five. She has toured extensively with Ragamala, performing throughout the U.S. and in Russia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Japan, the U.K, and India. Ashwini's choreographic work has been presented by the Cowles Center, the Yard, and the Joyce Theater, among others. Her work is supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Jerome Foundation, the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation’s US Artist International, and the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, among others.

 

Fellowship Statement

I have spent decades steeped in the south Indian classical dance form of Bharatanatyam. I am committed to maintaining the beauty, technique, rigor, and values embedded in the form as it has been taught to me, while creating my own personal vision of women’s representation in performance. Like a phantom limb, my Indian ancestry lingers within me, informing my artistic work and daily interactions; my upbringing in both India and the U.S. has encouraged an aesthetic perspective with a hybrid internal compass. As an artist of diaspora, I am a cultural carrier with an instinct to move within ancestral patterns. There is a continuum between what we perceive as real/tangible and what we accept as unknown/unknowable; this gravitation between the human, the natural, and the metaphysical—which are forever engaged in sacred movement—is a focal point in my work.

Photo by Ed Bock.

Dance
Ashwini Ramaswamy

Deneane Richburg

2019
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Deneane Richburg (she/her) grew up a competitive figure skater, spending time in spaces where she felt she had to check her racial/cultural identity at the door, as the predominantly white skating world excluded her ancestry’s truths. To quote Zora Neale Hurston, Deneane always felt “most colored when [she was] thrown against a sharp white background.” As an adult, she realized the need to carve out a space for her ancestral history, so she established Brownbody, a creative home for her artistic work that fuses theater, dance, social justice practice, and skating. Through Brownbody, she honors the complex narratives of Black diasporic communities. As a modern dance choreographer and skater, Deneane is interested in expanding creative expression on the ice by engaging ancestral narratives as a framework for movement exploration. Deneane is a grateful recipient of a 2017 McKnight Choreography Fellowship administered by the Cowles Center and funded by The McKnight Foundation.

 

Fellowship Statement

I fuse different movement worlds; a modern dance choreographer that presents works on and off of the ice. The themes of my work range from visual objectification through the story of Saartjie Baartman to issues of re-memory through a piece based on Toni Morrison’s Beloved. My latest on ice evening length work is Quiet As It’s Kept, which focuses on the Reconstruction era and rise of Jim Crow laws. I’m interested in ensemble work on the ice. As a dancer I’ve performed with companies in ensemble pieces and have learned to appreciate the intricacies and manipulation of group nuances—engaging many bodies to create a fully realized and unified statement. I am interested in exploring the power of these elements on the ice in telling stories relevant to my ancestral history. Currently I am working on an ice ensemble piece that explores American Black social dances of the 17th through 19th centuries.

Photo by Alice Gebura.

Dance
Deneane Richburg ice skating

Walken Schweigert

2019
Music
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Walken Schweigert (he/him) is a performer, composer and director from Saint Paul, MN. He is the founder and artistic director of Open Flame Theatre, an all queer/trans ensemble that creates surrealist and queer-centered work. Walken is a 2009 graduate of the Dell’ Arte International School for Physical Theatre, and a 2006 graduate of the Perpich Center for Arts Education (Theatre Major). He has worked with the Taller Xuchialt and Ronda de Barro in Leon, Nicaragua; toured with and been mentored by the internationally renowned Double Edge Theatre in Ashfield, MA; and has busked on the streets of 11 countries. A classically trained violinist, he has been part of over a dozen musical ensembles of varying genres, from klezmer to metal. Walken was recently the recipient of a JFund award from the Jerome Foundation via the American Composers’ Forum for the composition of his second opera, The Garden, to be produced by Open Flame Theatre and Philadelphia Community Farm.

 

Fellowship Statement

I see my role as an artist as someone who crosses, transgresses and thrives in between boundaries. My mission is to create original, multi-disciplinary performances rooted in the queer/trans experience. Through exploring the surreal and fantastic, I seek to liberate the imagination which I recognize as a vital part of the larger struggle for justice and freedom.

What is the relationship between ritual and performance? Between song and story? How do we celebrate together? How do we grieve together? How can we harness the power of story and song to liberate our imaginations and expand our creative potential? What new traditions/rituals/rites of passage can we make for and with each other that affirm and express who we truly are? This is what I hope to explore in my fellowship. I hope at the end of it I will have made an honest contribution to a transforming cultural fabric.

Photo by Connie Chang.

Music
Walken Schweigert as his character "Virgil" in Open Flame's "The Wastelands"

Kavita Shah

2019
Music
New York City
Jerome@Camargo
$6,000

Kavita Shah makes work in deep engagement with the jazz tradition while also addressing and advancing its global sensibilities. A lifelong New Yorker of Indian origin hailed for possessing an “amazing dexterity for musical languages” (NPR), Shah incorporates her ethnographic research on traditional musical practices from Brazil, Cape Verde, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Tanzania, Turkey, and India into her original compositions.

Her debut album VISIONS, co-produced by guitarist Lionel Loueke, was released in 2014 to great critical acclaim. Out of this project was born the Kavita Shah Quintet, a touring ensemble presenting Shah’s music and arrangements at clubs, concert halls, and festivals around the world. In 2018, Shah and bassist François Moutin released Interplay, a program of standards, originals, and improvised music with guests Martial Solal and NEA Jazz Master Sheila Jordan; it was nominated for a Victoire du Jazz (French Grammy Award) for Album of the Year.

In 2017, Kavita was invited by MacArthur genius winner Jason Moran to premiere a large-scale work at the Park Avenue Armory. She created Folk Songs of Naboréa, a contemporary song-cycle for seven voices that imagines the folk music of a futuristic, post-nuclear society. The interdisciplinary piece was named by Nate Chinen as a Top 10 Performance of 2017.

From her formal training at Manhattan School of Music and Juilliard, Shah draws a keen interest in complex arrangements and adventurous approaches to the voice as an instrument. Just as important to Shah is oral tradition, which she credits for grounding her vision of music as not just pursuit of virtuosity, but also cultural work. She won the ASCAP Herb Alpert Young Jazz Composers Award in 2013, and has received research grants from DRCLAS, Jerome Foundation, and Asian Cultural Council. In 2019, she will be a composer-in-residence at the Camargo Foundation in Cassis, France, where she will work on an ongoing research project about the migration of sounds and people in the Lusophone diaspora, with an emphasis on the Portuguese presence in colonial India.

Music
Kavita Shah Group Live at the Blue Note (NYC)

SMU DataArts

2019
Misc
Other
Convenings, Research & Memberships
$7,000

SMU DataArts, Dallas, TX, received a one-year grant of $7,000 for 2019 membership.

Misc

Dameun Strange

2019
Music
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Dameun Maurice Strange (he/him) is a sound artist, multi-instrumentalist, and award-winning composer whose conceptual chamber works, choral pieces and operas are focused on stories of the African diaspora, often exploring Afrofuturist themes. In 2011, he partnered with award-winning choreographer Erinn Liebhard to present Railing Forward, a suite inspired by the legend of John Henry. The following year he was commissioned by the contemporary dance ensemble Alternative Motion Project to compose music for their premier program, Prometheus, Fire bringer and Lost in My Mind. This relationship would last 5 years and include NTimeBeautyN, HeartBeatRed, Penumbra|Corona.

In 2013, Dameun presented his first composition recital of new works, New Constellations at the Baroque Room in Saint Paul. In 2015 he presented his third composition recital which featured a cantata for Chamber Choir, Poet and Soprano, Resonant Frequencies: Love and Revolution. Strange was awarded the Minnesota Emerging Composers Award by the American Composers Forum in 2015 which led to the development his first opera, Mother King.

 

Fellowship Statement

I am a sound artist, multi-instrumentalist whose conceptual chamber works, choral pieces and operas are focused on stories of the African diaspora, often exploring Afrofuturist themes. I am compelled to express through sound and poetry, the beauty and resilience of the Black experience, digging into a pantheon of ancestors to tell stories of triumph, while connecting the past, present, and future. While my sound experiments have many dimensions, I use West African polyrhythms, with classical music forms, contemporary jazz harmonic explorations, along with found sounds and historic recordings to create modern Afrofuturist performances that disrupt the notion of genre and what Black music is and can be and moreover what Blackness is and can be.

Photo by Jim Nihart.

Music
Dameun seated playing at his synthesizer rig.

Emily Strasser

2019
Literature
Minnesota
Jerome@Camargo
$6,000

Emily Strasser is a Minneapolis-based writer. She received her MFA in nonfiction from the University of Minnesota and work has appeared in Ploughshares, Guernica, Colorado Review, Catapult, The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, and Tricycle. Her essays have been listed as notable in Best American Essays 2016 and 2017, and she was a winner of the 2015 Ploughshares Emerging Writer’s Contest and a 2016 AWP Intro Award. Her work has been supported by the Minnesota State Arts Board, the W.K. Rose Fellowship from Vassar College, the Jerome Foundation, and the University of Minnesota Human Rights Program. She served as a 2018-19 Olive B. O'Connor Fellow in Creative Writing at Colgate University.

She is working on a book about the intersection of family and national secrets in the nuclear city of Oak Ridge, Tennessee. She is interested in the stories we tell about ourselves—personally, publicly, culturally—the stories institutions tell, and the intersections and fissures between them. In Cassis, she plans to research the ITER project, the world's largest experimental fusion reactor, which proposes to build a star on Earth, while meditating on the characteristics, causes, and consequences of brilliance, both literal and figurative.

Literature
The writer, smiling, sits cross-legged in a chair, laptop on her lap.

Darrius Strong

2019
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Darrius Strong (he/him) is a Twin Cities based choreographer, dancer, and educator whose creative work has been performed in Walker Art Center’s Choreographers Evening and Rhythmically Speaking. He was featured in the 2015 New Griots Festival as well as an American Standard Billboard advertisement in New York City Time Square in 2016. He was a 2017 Momentum New Works recipient. Strong has created works for Threads Dance Project, Flying Foot Forum, Alternative Motion Projects, and most recently was commissioned to create a new work for James Sewell Ballet. Strong developed his own dance company STRONGmovement in 2015. He is a faculty member at Saint Paul Conservatory Performing Arts High School, TU Dance Center. At Eleve Performing Arts Center, he teaches young dancers how to connect their identity to movement. Strong is also a company member of Stuart Pimsler Dance & Theater.

 

Fellowship Statement

I tell stories through movement. I feel that our bodies tell stories and it’s up to us as individuals to define those stories. As a child it was hard for me to communicate my feelings through words, so I began to rely on movement as an outlet in times of sadness, frustration, anger, and other emotions.

I created my own dance company, STRONGmovement, because I truly believe that movement empowers conversation between dancers and audiences. Conversation invokes community building, an aspect of my background in hip hop I center in my work. Through the movement I create, I desire to empower others, create communities, inspire people to invest in themselves and their stories.

Photo by Bill Cameron.

Dance
Darrius Strong

Mazz Swift

2019
Music
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Mazz Swift (she/her) is violinist, vocalist, composer and conductor working at the intersection of composition, improvisation, and performance. She engages audiences with her signature weaving of improvisation and composition, combining elements of classical, folk, rock, jazz, free improv and electronica to create a rich, unique and diverse musical experience. As a violinist, Mazz plays electric and acoustic instruments and has performed and recorded with a wide range of artists from Butch Morris to Bruce Springsteen and Idina Menzel, and with her own band, MazzMuse. As a composer, Mazz has received commissions from the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Banff Centre for Arts & Creativity, and others. As an improviser, Mazz plays with Nicole Mitchell, The Silkroad Ensemble, and her collaborative trio HEAR in NOW. She is active as a conductor and educator, and has performed and taught workshops in free improvisation and Conduction (conducted improvisation) on six continents. Mazz lives in Brooklyn.

 

Fellowship Statement

I believe fiercely in the power of improvisation to improve people's lives. As a violinist, vocalist, conductor, and composer, I incorporate improvisation into everything I create and have witnessed its transformational force in performances, workshops, conversations, and collaborations. Practicing, hearing, and witnessing improvisation creates profound human experience.

I revel in the art and craft of composition—conjuring textures and moods, generating vibes and grooves, constructing a whole from many parts. My practice of mindfulness and compassion through meditation—in music and in life—compels me to use whatever power I have to foster awareness: in myself, in my music, and in the world, with an aim toward radical change. I want to uplift anyone who is willing to listen. In every area of my life, I aspire to transform and be transformed.

Photo by Nisha Sondhe Photography.

Music
Mazz with electric

Michael Torres

2019
Literature
Minnesota
Jerome@Camargo
$6,000

Michael Torres was born and brought up in Pomona, California where he spent his adolescence as a graffiti artist. He earned his MFA in creative writing at Minnesota State University, Mankato. His poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, The Georgia Review, Water~Stone Review and as The Missouri Review’s Poem of the Week, among others. Torres has received awards and fellowships from the Minnesota State Arts Board, Jerome Foundation, CantoMundo and the National Endowment for the Arts. His work explores identity via examinations of masculinity and culture.

“All-American Mexican” is a series of poems that grapples with belonging and how, for a person of color living in the United States, the need for acceptance often encourages a kind of assimilation that causes tension between the assimilator and their hometown/culture. Torres is interested in the implications of the term “All-American”: a denotation of excellence (i.e. All-American Security Systems) and how a person (traditionally white, American males, i.e. Jack Armstrong, the All-American boy) can self-identify. Considering his cultural heritage, he is interested in how he himself is, can, and cannot be an All-American. And what does an All-American Mexican look like? Can one exist? In which contexts?

Visit him at michaeltorreswriter.com

Literature
Michael Torres, author photo

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