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

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inVisual Arts, Multi-disciplinary

Sequoia Hauck

2023
Film and Video
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Sequoia Hauck (they/them) is a queer, non-binary, trans, Anishinaabe and Hupa multidisciplinary artist creating film, poetry, and performance art that decolonizes the process of art-making. Their work weaves together Indigenous epistemologies, queer and trans identity and the exploration and possibilities of Indigenous futurism. They make art surrounding the narratives of continuation and resiliency among their communities. Their films have been in the Minnesota International Film Festival and the Minneapolis–Saint Paul International Film Festival. They are a Saint Paul Neighborhood Network (SPNN) New Angles 2020-2021 Fellow, as well as a recipient of the SPNN Fresh Vantage Post Production grant supporting their upcoming documentary series They Didn't Deserve to Die. www.sequoiahauck.com

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I am finishing my upcoming film They Didn’t Deserve to Die, a six episode documentary about six Native families across Turtle Island sharing their heart-wrenching stories of loved ones lost to police brutality. Through memories, stories, and home videos these families honor the lives their sons and brothers lived, not just the day they died. I plan to tour the film to the communities who contributed and shared their stories. This will be the first audiences of the film as a way to honor and celebrate the lives of those we have lost. I believe filmmaking is a powerful form of storytelling. I will take this time during my fellowship to intentionally further my artistic practices. To weave and connect more with ancestors and relatives. Learning from my queer, trans, indigiqueer, two-spirit kin to honor what they have to share and soak up the knowledge they are willing to gift.

Film and Video
Sequoia is a 25-year-old queer, non-binary, trans, Native (Anishinaabe and Hupa) artist wearing overalls, a black Adidas tank top, a white bucket hat, gold septum and nose rings and sweetgrass hoops. Standing in front of a rock background looking into the camera with a slight head tilt and grin.

Photo by Sam Malm.

Tahiel Jimenez Medina

2023
Film and Video
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Tahiel Jimenez Medina (he, him his; they, them, theirs) is a Colombian first-generation immigrant director. In dedication to his mother and immigrant mamas who escape generational violence, he presents Colombian immigrant identity through a lens that celebrates ever-evolving emotional and ancestral journeys, memories, and dreams. His visions about immigrant and Colombian identity are culture catalysts to decolonize, remember, and heal ancestral cycles. Medina has premiered films at national and international film festivals including Palm Springs International Short Film Festival, New York Latino Film Festival, and Provincetown International Film Festival—and in local parking lots for his community to gather and imagine new worlds. His documentary about Colombian immigrants in Minnesota, Día a Día 2020: One Day at a Time, is available on PBS online channels (pbs.org, PBS Video App). Recent recognition includes The TPT PBS 2020 Project, The Next Step Grant, The Apichatpong Weerasethakul PlayLab Workshop, and The McKnight Artist Fellowship.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

For this fellowship, I will tend to my creative spirit and relationships to family, friends, and collaborators. It will be a time to be radically honest about what kind of films my soul yearns to create and with who I co-create this path forward. I will rest, focus, and reflect in preparation to develop my first narrative feature film. This film will bring to light the stories of my community and ancestors who shine through me.

For part of my fellowship, I will collaborate with my aunties and my mother to record and make films of the stories of our lives. Their magical journeys tell of spicy romance, unbroken courage rooted in love, and unfathomable lived tragedies. Their narratives will inspire generations far into the future. I dedicate this fellowship to them, in all their undeniable beauty, in their profound wisdom, and unparalleled presence.

Film and Video
Tahiel Jimenez Medina, a late-twenties light brown skin person with soft freckles, medium short curly hair, looking at the camera with a relaxed expression.

Photo by Adja Gildersleve.

Raven Johnson

2023
Film and Video
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Raven Johnson is an award winning, Liberian-American filmmaker from Minnesota. Her work deals with the realities of Black experiences in predominantly white spaces around the American Midwest. Raven graduated with her MFA from NYU’s Tisch Graduate Film program and is the current filmmaker-in-residence at Augsburg University in Minneapolis. Raven is a 2022 Locarno Film Festival resident in Switzerland, a recipient of Jerome Foundation’s 2021 MN Artist Development Grant, a 2021 Jerome Emerging Artist-in-Residence at the Anderson Center at Tower View, and a 2019-2020 Cinéfondation resident in Paris. Johnson is currently in development with her debut feature film, RUBY: PORTRAIT OF A BLACK TEEN IN AN AMERICAN SUBURB which has received support from SFFILM and the Kenneth Rainin Foundation.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

As a filmmaker, I am deeply committed to telling stories of the African diaspora that focus on Black Joy and Black Liberation as its central source of healing. My goal is to create films that are thought-provoking, emotionally resonant, and which tackle complex issues about the intersectionality of race, gender, and class with profound nuance and astute sensitivity. My hope is that my work will provoke deep and meaningful discourse for a worldwide audience.

Film and Video
Raven Johnson, a thirty-something Black woman standing in front of a multi-colored wall.

Photo by Raven Jackson.

Tish Jones

2023
Theater
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Founder & Executive Director of TruArtSpeaks, Tish Jones is a writer, educator, organizer and cultural producer from Saint Paul, MN, with a deep and resounding love for Black people, arts & culture, youth development, and civic engagement. As a performance artist her work has been shared in venues throughout the United States. Her writing can be found in We Are Meant to Rise (University of Minnesota Press, 2021), A Moment of Silence (Tru Ruts and The Playwrights Center, 2020), the Minnesota Humanities Center’s anthology entitled, Blues Vision: African American Writing from Minnesota (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2015) and more.

Jones has been awarded fellowships from the Arts Matters Foundation, Springboard for the Arts, The Intercultural Leadership Institute, and more. She is grateful for the grants & awards that have allowed her the space to continue her creative and community practices, respectively. For more on her personal praxis, see Jones’ TEDxMinneapolis Talk on “Spoken Word as a Radical Practice of Freedom.”

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I will utilize my time as a Jerome Hill Artist Fellow to research, write, produce and publish my first poetry manuscript.

Theater
Tish Jones seated before a golden backdrop in a blue turtleneck and tan coat, smiling.

Photo by Roosevelt Mansfield.

Lea Kalisch

2023
Theater
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Lea Kalisch is a Swiss Jewish singer, actor, entertainer and creative producer. Lea makes multi-cultural, multilingual art that brings together music, dance, drama, and comedy, on stage and on screen, always leading with Yiddishkayt (Jewishness). Some know her as the Eshet Chayil of Hip Hop, others as Rebbetzin Lea with her Yiddish comedy skits.

Lea had multiple appearances in the US and Switzerland with her one woman show In love with a dream! Lea released her first solo album of the same name in 2022. She’s performed solo concerts in NYC, Boston, Munich, Zurich and Vienna and has played leading roles in various Off-Broadway productions and regional theaters such as The New Yiddish Rep, The Six Points Theater, National Yiddish Theater Folksbiene, HERE Arts Center. Lea is also the 2020 recipient of the Omanut-Zwillenberg prize which awards Swiss Jewish artists.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

It is my mission to share the rich Jewish culture with ALL people by creating new, deep and entertaining Jewish content that CLASHES with other cultural traditions. As a Swiss polyglot living in the US for many years, I see myself as a citizen of the world, building bridges across different groups of people connecting Europeans and Americans, Jews and non-Jews.

The stories I tell are rooted in reality. I focus on Judaism, women, sexuality, the female body, the roles of men and women. My work often questions beliefs, religion, identity, sexuality, and dreams.

I will dive into my project Tango- A Prayer For Two, a film and/or a stage play, that brings together Yiddish and Tango. Through music, dance, and dialogue I will tell the incredible, tragic, and true story about Zwi Migdal, a Jewish mafia who brought women from Eastern Europe to brothels in South America. Where do I fit in the story? You will see…

Theater
Lea Kalisch, a 28-year-old white woman wearing a Shtreimal (Jewish fur hat), a black coat over one shoulder and colorful jewelry.

Photo by Sy Chounchaisit.

Crystal Kayiza

2023
Film and Video
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Crystal Kayiza was raised in Oklahoma and is now a Brooklyn-based filmmaker. Named one of Filmmaker Magazine’s “25 New Faces of Independent Film,” she is a recipient of the Sundance Ignite Fellowship, Creative Culture Woman Filmmaker Fellowship and Sisters in Cinema Documentary Fellowship. Kayiza is the recipient of the 2022 Documentary Development Initiative grant in partnership with HBO Documentary Films and The Gotham. Her film, Edgecombe, was an official selection of the 2019 Sundance Film Festival and was distributed by POV. Her short, See You Next Time, was an official selection of the 2020 Sundance Film Festival and released by The New Yorker. Crystal was the winner of the 2020 Tribeca Through Her Lens grant with her film Rest Stop, which premiered at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival and was selected for the 2023 Sundance Film Festival. She is currently working on her first feature film, which received a 2021 Creative Capital Award.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

As a filmmaker, my work has been defined by exploring the in-between. The space between scripted and non-fiction cinema, the western world and the African Diaspora, all of the lines separating communities in my hometown in Oklahoma, the interior of my home as a child of immigrants and my access to space as a US citizen. The emphasis on location, memory and time in my work is largely rooted in a desire to define this gap and to make this nuance more legible. I am interested in how all of these things intersect with the most mundane elements of our lives. The everydayness that we often overlook, particularly within the inner lives of Black folks, is what I find most compelling. During the fellowship period, I plan to continue to work on my first scripted and non-fiction feature projects as well as pursue joy and rest in the most unremarkable and quiet parts of my daily life.

Film and Video
Crystal Kayiza, 29-year-old Black women film director, outside, standing in front of large plant, looking into camera.

Sam Kebede

2023
Theater
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Sam Kebede is a first-generation Ethiopian/Eritrean-American writer/actor/comedian. He's performed at/had his works presented at venues including The Public, Ars Nova, Chicago Shakespeare Theater, and the Venice International Film Festival. His award-winning play ETHIOPIANAMERICA premiered at Victory Gardens Theater in Chicago (produced by Definition Theater Company), and he currently writes for the show Tough Bobas, an anti-CCP series shot and produced in Taiwan. Sam also loves to perform stand up, and has an hour long set titled I’m Ostracized because I'm Ostrich-Sized. You can also stream his solo show Lack History through Ars Nova Supra, or catch a production at Caveat on the LES.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

The goal of my fellowship period is to further develop my show Lack History, which is a comedy variety game show about the history we ignore and ramifications of that ignorance. Through a combination of games and stand up, I bring the audience on a journey to confront the ills of our past through comedy. They are asked to complete tasks/answer questions to earn money for non-profits that attempt to address those ills. The long-term goal for this development is to make three tiers of shows. The first form would be a complete non-profit model that creates a set production that can be performed continuously. The second is a form of the show that is freshly made on a regular basis that examines our current historical moment for schools or communities throughout NYC/the tri-state area. The third form would be a for-profit version of the show that markets itself to corporations as a DEI event. Companies could pay for an in-office show that would include a talk-back afterward to unpack how their company can do more to benefit their immediate communities.

Theater
Sam Kebede, a young fresh faced black man with a large black afro, smiles to camera in a headshot with a black henley shirt in an auburn-colored headshot space.

Photo by Sub/urban photography.

Tali Keren

2023
Visual Arts
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Tali Keren is a multidisciplinary artist and educator born in Jerusalem and based in Brooklyn. Her videos, installations, and performances center on the formation of political ideology, historical mythologies, and the ongoing legacies of settler colonialism. Through poetic intervention into archival sources and legal documents, her work seeks to unsettle foundational national myths. Her practice is grounded in collaboration, and cross-disciplinary dialogue, as a way to forge new forms of collectivity and political imaginaries.

Keren’s work has been shown at the Queens Museum, New York; Yerba Buena Center for The Arts, San Francisco; Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit; Eyebeam, New York; The James Gallery, New York (forthcoming); The Center for Contemporary Art, Tel-Aviv; Goethe Institute, New York, and Socrates Sculpture Park among others. Her projects received support through fellowships and awards from Artadia, Rema Hort Mann Foundation, Artis, Socrates Sculpture Park, A-Z West, ISCP, and the Wexner Center for the Arts.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

In this ongoing moment of crisis, I ask myself what it means to be a cultural producer? How can re-telling of history and collaborative artmaking counter hegemonic narratives while having a transformative potential?

I often think about these questions from a comparative, transnational lens. I moved to New York from Jerusalem in 2014 at moment of rising populism and ethnonationalism in the world. This geographical shift allowed me to look at the overlapping messianic political power structures and settler-colonial imaginaries which connect Israel and the United States. Through immersive and participatory environments, I try to render how state-violence is often disguised under a veil of beauty and mythology. Each project sends me on years of archival research and filming, resulting in an exhibition that becomes a space of collective inquiry, counter-narratives, resistance, and an investigation of political imagination.

Visual Arts
Tali Keren, a forty year old white woman with long brown hair standing against a background of trees and looking at the camera.

Halee Kirkwood

2023
Literature
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Halee Kirkwood is a poet, teaching artist, and bookseller living in Minneapolis. Kirkwood earned their MFA from Hamline University. They are an inaugural Indigenous Nations Poets (In-Na-Po) fellow, a Loft Mentor Series Fellow, a recipient of a Minnesota State Arts Board grant, and a recent artist-in-residence at the Anderson Center in Red Wing, MN. Kirkwood is the winner of the 2022 James Welch Prize for Indigenous Artists, published with Poetry Northwest. Their work can be found in Poetry Magazine, Poem-A-Day, Water~Stone Review, and elsewhere. Kirkwood is the faculty editor of Runestone Journal, a national undergraduate literary annual. Originally from Superior, Wisconsin, they are a direct descendant of the Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

My primary concern as a writer is to radically redefine nature and place-based poetry. Rather than poetry that presents a static, passive portrait of nature and place, I am invested in writing that embodies living ecologies and histories, poetry that necessitates deep attention, specificity, humility, justice, and action. I am currently focused on two landscapes in my work that I plan to continue work on during my fellowship period. First, I plan to continue my poetry manuscript-in-progress on collisions of class within manufactured ecologies, braiding my experience as a life-long retail worker from a low-income background with a sense of scientific observation. Second, I plan on advancing my writing on the Lake Superior region by beginning a lyric essay manuscript, tracing the Ojibwe migration path along the shores of the Great Lakes and St. Lawrence river areas. Through this nascent project, I want to explore what it means to be a mixed white & Ojibwe traveler through prose, inviting in periods of research, interview, and lyric immersion.

Literature
Halee Kirkwood, a 29 year-old Ojibwe and Swedish-American poet, smiles amongst autumn leaves on a trail at The Anderson Center in Red Wing, MN.

Michael Kleber-Diggs

2023
Literature
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Michael Kleber-Diggs (KLEE-burr digs) (he / him / his) is a poet, essayist, literary critic, and arts educator. His debut poetry collection, Worldly Things (Milkweed Editions 2021), won the Max Ritvo Poetry Prize, the 2022 Hefner Heitz Kansas Book Award in Poetry, the 2022 Balcones Poetry Prize, and was a finalist for the 2022 Minnesota Book Award. Michael’s essay, “There Was a Tremendous Softness,” is forthcoming in A Darker Wilderness: Black Nature Writing from Soil to Stars, edited by Erin Sharkey (Milkweed Editions, 2023). His poems and essays appear in numerous journals and anthologies. Michael is married to Karen Kleber-Diggs, a tropical horticulturist and orchid specialist. Karen and Michael have a daughter who is pursuing a BFA in Dance Performance at SUNY Purchase.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I will use the fellowship term to explore possibilities for layering sound, integrating graphics and text into literary readings, and imagining new possibilities for venues where literary readings take place. I am interested in how technology and other approaches can expand access to live performance. My interests are inspired by a desire to connect with audiences in a more meaningful way and by my recent work focused on thinking about the potential uses for paper and the physical page.

Literature
A Black man with black eyeglasses, short hair, and a fluffy black and gray beard is seen smiling with his arms crossed. He's wearing a red, white, and blue patterned shirt.

Photo by Ayanna Muata.

Simone LeClaire

2023
Film and Video
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Simone LeClaire is a queer woman director and editor whose work spans genres from parabolic feminist fairy tales to grunge comedies. Her seven narrative shorts have screened at over 30 festivals around the midwest and world, including the Indianapolis LGBT Festival, the Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Fest, and Festival de films féministes de Montréal. Their latest film Bathroom Break received awards for writing, acting, and comedy on its festival circuit before being distributed by Tello Films in February 2022. LeClaire has edited three narrative features, including the hit queer romcom Merry & Gay, and edited the 2018 Our Space is Spoken For documentary. Locally, she has been interviewed on Film in Minnesota and Where To From Here, and invited to teach her approach to life-affirming filmmaking at Moonplay Cinema, Film North, and various educational institutions. LeClaire’s creative lineage also includes countless childhood movies made with her sister in northern Minnesota.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

My most effective films to date have all used a minimalist, observational cinematography, ultimately inspired by the Danish filmmaking approach of the Dogme 95 manifesto. But, there’s an ongoing tension in my practice between an attraction to the intimacy and organic spontaneity that minimal crews can achieve, and my love for highly composed imagery and elaborate production design. I aspire to now explore more expansive visuals by working with more complex camera and lighting setups and experienced production crews. The fellowship presents the space to take all that I’ve learned and taught myself in my eight years of short-form, indie film directing, and support my transition to more elaborate production processes, longer-form storytelling, and new-to-me genres. Current works-in-progress include two narrative shorts and a documentary feature in post-production, and my debut narrative feature, Pat & Glo Save the World (Sort Of), a queer, sci-fi rom-com set 100 years in the future.

Film and Video
Simone LeClaire, a thirty-something white person with dark shoulder-length hair, dark eyes and wearing a white button-down looks at camera against a jade green background.

Photo by Trista Marie McGovern.

Yo-Yo Lin

2023
Technology Centered Arts
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Yo-Yo Lin (林友友) is a Taiwanese-American interdisciplinary artist who explores the possibilities for self-knowledge in the context of emerging, embodied technologies. She often uses animation, live performance, and lush sound design to create meditative “memoryscapes.” Her recent body of work reveals and re-values the complex realities of living with invisibilized chronic illness, investigating ideologies of healing, resilience, and care.

Refusing the Western medicalization of the crip body, she works towards a “soft data” archive that holds space for illness in its wholeness. Her practice often facilitates sites for community-centered abundance, developing into physical and virtual installations, workshops, accessible nightlife parties, and artist collectives.

Lin was a 2019 artist-in-residence at Eyebeam and a 2020 Open Call recipient for the Shed. She teaches at NYU Tisch ITP/IMA as the 2021 Red Burns fellow. Her work has been featured in NOWNESS, Art in America, and Surface.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

Over the years of building my interdisciplinary art practice, I have committed myself to making work that expands dominant notions of what filmmaking, technology, or space-making can be. Some of the questions I asked and continue to ask include: How do we tell cinematic stories spatially, physically and virtually? Can we reclaim data-gathering as daily practice for soft knowledge? What are the ways we can reframe the body as a technology? How do we build care and community-building into how we work with and develop technology? I am interested in how we continue to practice ways of working with technology that deepens and strengthens our relationship to our bodies, our communities, and the earth. This fellowship will allow me to expand and deepen my artistic practice in a research-oriented manner while simultaneously offering me the space to continue to create care-focused, tech-driven performances, tools, and spaces with and for disabled, chronically ill, POC communities.

Technology Centered Arts
A selfie of Yo-Yo, a Taiwanese-American femme, sitting outside on her fire escape. It’s a sunny day, her hair is blonde and slightly wavy, she gazes serenely at the camera. Basil leaves frame the photo. Behind her is a window reflection of a tree and blue sky.

A.P. Looze

2023
Combined Artistic Fields
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

A.P. Looze is a transgender multi-disciplinary artist whose creative practice supports them to turn toward the history of pain in their family and this nation in order to end lineages of violence and open up portals to love. Their original solo performances have included The Ways I Wished to Love Her at Pillsbury House + Theater, Foray Softly at The Guthrie, The Grief Experiments through 20% Theatre Company, A Dream of Brightness at the Red Eye Theater, God Made Me Crooked at Queertopia, and Finding Loaded Guns in Weird Places at Pleasure Rebel. Their tennis-inspired music video musical C’Mon Baby Stroke It premiered at Trylon Cinema in 2021. They were a 2016 20% Theatre Q-Stage Fellow, a 2018 Pillsbury House + Theater Naked Stages Fellow, a 2019 Northern Lights Artist on the Verge Fellow, and part of the 2022 Red Eye Theater Isolated Acts Cohort.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I will use this fellowship to deepen my contemplative practice and continue to explore decoloniality, making interdisciplinary work inspired by spiritual/economic/political liberation. For the past ten years, I have explored questions of embodiment as a trans person. As my gender’s boundaries dissolve, I am more interested in surrendering to the vast pluriverse of non-human wisdom. This fellowship will support my work with the Akashic Records, a realm of consciousness that holds unconditional love for all souls. The Records have provided insights through music, poetic words, and imagery that I have integrated into recent performance and installation work. I will continue to open the Records, holding pressing questions related to whiteness, embodiment and decoloniality. I will follow the inspiration of what emerges to create new multi-disciplinary work in collaboration with my creative process and spiritual explorations.

Combined Artistic Fields
 A.P. Looze, a white 30-something transgender person in their studio smiling at the camera.

Angeline Meitzler

2023
Technology Centered Arts
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Angeline Marie Michael Meitzler is a Filipino American artist, writer and animator based in Brooklyn, NY. Her work and research have revolved around an interdisciplinary reflection on how legacies of empire inform social and economic value systems. She received her MFA through both the School of the Arts Institute of Chicago and Georgia Institute of Technology. Her work has been included in new media festivals and galleries including Natasha Singapore Biennial, Singapore (2022); SummerWorks Festival, Toronto (2022); The Human Terminal, Anonymous Gallery, NYC (2021); Initial Public Offering, Reddit, online (2019); Feminist Media Studio, Montreal (2018). Meitzler’s work has received support from HarvestWorks, New Artist Society Fellowship, MAAF NYSCA & Wave Farm.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

My work relates Filipino etiological myths to a sense of personal, economic and historical rupture. As the climate crisis continues to grow, I use the mythic, origin stories of tropical storms as a way to connect to the unresolved moments of the past and powerfully propel beyond them. A lot of the writing and storytelling that I do, interweaves colonial history and this climatic turbulence alongside my own personal experiences, which is as someone who grew up between the tension of two cultures deeply defined by Americanism. Currently, I am working on an animation that follows three Filipino nurses, inspired by my mother and her community, as they engage with Philippine etiological myths of earthquakes as a response to the embodiment of colonial debt.

Technology Centered Arts
Angeline Meitzler, a thirty-something Filipino American artist who is smiling at the camera.

Marcela Michelle

2023
Combined Artistic Fields
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Marcela Michelle is a transdisciplinary artist, educator, facilitator, and producer based in Minneapolis, Mni Sota Makoce. Her artistic practice spans mediums and genres, engaging dance, music, physical and scripted theatre, design, burlesque, literature, construction, performance, theory, composition, devising, and the culinary arts. Her work has historically been concerned with identity, simultaneity, im/mutability, euphemism, and expectations of “truth” in queer performance. She is the Executive Artistic Director of Lightning Rod - a leading QTGNC focused arts organism in the Twin Cities. Her original work as been presented by Walker Art Center (Choreographer’s Evening), Red Eye Theater (NW4W), Guthrie Theater’s Dowling Studio, Northern Spark, Right Here Showcase, The Minneapolis Burlesque Festival, Wanderlust Productions, and 20% Theatre Company, where she worked in many capacities from 2015 to 2021, ultimately serving as Artistic Director in its final years. She is a 2019 mentee of The National Institute for Directing and Ensemble Creation (Pangea World Theatre/Art2Action), and a member of Actor’s Equity.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I am arriving at this fellowship in my 31st year. Virgo Sun, Gemini Moon. Venus in Libra, Mars in Cancer. I know so much of Transition and am a new Student of Time. Southern child, eldest cousin. Self-named, Wed, I feed. Without apology, a new score. Autonomous entrances and exits. Available to possession and exorcism, avoidant of martyrdom and apotheosis. Curbed censor, encouraged teacher. Naming, creating, re-naming, re-creating. Of course there will be New Works Multi-Cross-Trans-Inter-Extra Disciplinary (eek). Of course the humor the wink the glint the cheek the nod the glance the smile the ode homage collage décolletage. An Icon in the making, hunny. Always gild the lily, why else be Gay? I'm over joy resistance rage. Down with meaning and conjuring and proselytizing didactics. Here’s to the dilettante the liar the raccoon the conduit the Transsexual aesthete. The charlatan dances and still we clap laugh cry eat come. It’s all in the making every second even now.

Combined Artistic Fields
A 30 year old Black transgender woman with a short geometric haircut stands in front of a mirror staring at herself in moody lighting. She is holding a dress up to her body and a jacket to her side.

Photo by Steve Campbell (Locomotofx).

Angel Nafis

2023
Literature
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Angel Nafis is the author of BlackGirl Mansion (Red Beard Press/ New School Poetics, 2012). She earned her BA at Hunter College and her MFA in poetry at Warren Wilson College. Nafis was a recipient of the Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation and was awarded a Creative Writing fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts. Nafis is a Cave Canem fellow, the recipient of a Millay Colony residency, an Urban Word NYC mentor, and the founder and curator of the Greenlight Bookstore Poetry Salon. With poet Morgan Parker, she runs The Other Black Girl Collective, an internationally touring Black Feminist poetry duo. Facilitating writing workshops and reading poems globally, she lives in Brooklyn.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I am interested and compelled by communal memory, tall tales, and Black expressions of gender and divergence. Inspired by the Black American diaspora to which I belong, I am working on a book about the intersection of family, American surveillance, and Black radical faith. Following the life and lineage of protagonist Alphonso–descendant of a slave and slave owner in a small cotton town of Edgefield North Carolina–as he evolves and shape-shifts from petty criminal and womanizer to sober foot soldier and eventual minister of Islamic Temple No. 1 in New York City. BORN AGAIN is biomythography exploring the consequences of melanin, locomotion, and generational curses.

Literature
Angel Nafis, a thirty-something Black woman poet standing in front of a full bookshelf.

Photo by Justin J. Wee.

Christopher “Unpezverde” Núñez

2023
Dance
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Christopher “Unpezverde” Núñez is a Costa Rican/American artist working in the fields of choreography, film, installation, and sound. Núñez is a Mellon Foundation Grant Recipient 23′, a Princeton University Arts Fellow 22’, a Jerome Hill Fellow 22’, a Dance/USA Fellow 22’, and a Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art Fellow 18’. His work been presented by Abrons Arts Center, The Joyce Theater, Princeton University, The Kitchen, Danspace Project, Movement Research at The Judson Church, The Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art, CUE Art Foundation, Performance Mix Festival, and Battery Dance Festival, among others. His work has been featured in The New York Times, Art In America, The Brooklyn Rail and The Dance Enthusiast. He’s been an Artist In Residence at Loghaven Artist Residency, Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), The Kitchen, Danspace Project, Abrons Arts Center, Movement Research, and Center for Performance Research. In 2023, Núñez was selected by the Art In America as one of 20 New Talent artists on a global scale. The same year, he was nominated for a “Bessie,” The New York Dance and Performance Awards in the Best Performer category.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

My practice comprises three elements: physicality (named vortex), sound and audio description.

Vortex centers movement in circular motion supported by diaphragmatic breathing. It is born out of the principle that the human body is 70% water and has a 95% level of oxygen. By moving the body in circles, water and air rotate, causing internal whirlwinds and tornadoes that renew energy. Vortex teaches principles of proprioception to Visually Impaired dancers using the sagittal, transverse and frontal planes safely.

Music and sound are created with a frequency of 432 Hz, known as the frequency of the universe. It allows the body to re energize through the power of the creative source.

My Audio Description is manifested through storytelling, song and poetry as a form of resistance, preservation, cultural continuity, and perseverance of my indigenous identity.

Dance
Christopher, a mixed-race man with pale skin, brown eyes, and a salt-and-pepper beard, looks straight into the camera. He wears a black suit and hat and silver jewelry. Behind him, a mirrored dance studio.

Photo by Sam Polcer for Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM).

Margaret Ogas

2023
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Margaret Ogas is a choreographer, performer, and teaching artist based in the Twin Cities. Using an interdisciplinary approach rooted in dance and informed by Chicana cultural sensibilities, her works tell surreal everyday stories through a collage of movement, text and sound. Ogas has been presented by the Walker Art Center, Candy Box Dance Festival, Red Eye Theater, Center for Performing Arts, FD13, Mizna, Comunidades Latinas Unidas En Servicio and others. She was awarded a 2022 Next Step Fund grant by the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council and was a 2021 Naked Stages Fellow at Pillsbury House + Theatre.

Margaret is a core collaborator and performer with the Taja Will Ensemble. She has also performed for Laurie Van Weiren, Chris Schlicting, Sequoia Hauck and others. Margaret is a teaching artist, specializing in modern technique, improvisation, and composition. She is currently a youth instructor at Young Dance. She holds a BFA in Dance from the University of Minnesota.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

I am a dancer and improviser who is interested in the way choreography can be used to tell stories and traverse the messy, layered nature of identity.

My dances weave personal narrative and thoughtful aesthetic choices to connect with audiences through humor and heartfelt storytelling, intentionally blending the everyday with the surreal. I am inspired by the political spirit of the Chicano art movement and the vibrancy of communities I find myself within and around.

During this fellowship, I will root into my choreographic practice, taking time to develop my voice and experiment in interdisciplinary modes. I will build on my connections with BIPOC and queer artists to develop and present a new ensemble work.

Dance
A twenty-something Latina woman smiling at the camera.

Photo by Caroline Yang.

Valerie Oliveiro

2023
Dance
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

Valerie Oliveiro is a dance and performance maker based in the Twin Cities and from Singapore. While they currently engage movement as their primary motor for expression, they also engage in other expressions, such as design, writing, drawing and photography, as generative, complexly relational proposals. Their choreographic work has been presented at Walker Art Center, Red Eye Theater, Hair+Nails Gallery and Bryant Lake Bowl and Cowles Center and has been supported by Minnesota State Arts Board, MRAC, Jerome Foundation and MAP Fund. Currently, they are a Co-Artistic Director at Red Eye Theater, ensemble member at Lighting Rod (QTBIPOC-led performance organism) and co-run a small performance incubator MOVO SPACE.

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

Valerie is creating new work in 2023/2024 and will foreground their own artistic research in North America and Asia.

Dance
Valerie Oliveiro, 46, mixed-race non-binary Southeast Asian in a blue, black and gray batik shirt with a mandarin collar. Surrounded by summer ferns, the image is a late evening portrait. They have their hands in their pockets looking calmly at the camera.

Photo credit: Valerie Oliveiro.

MX Oops

2023
Dance
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$50,000

MX Oops is a multimedia performance artist and educator whose work centers hybridity, encouraging ecstatic disobedience as a path toward embodied wellness. Their creative practice links urban arts [breaking, house, vogue femme, rap, dj, vj, fashion], somatic studies [yoga, thai yoga massage, energy healing, sound baths], media and gender studies. Through this transdisciplinary approach, their work questions whether consciousness itself is the primary medium.

A certified yoga instructor (500hr RYT) and practitioner of Thai Yoga Massage, trained in various forms of energy healing, they completed a BA in dance and religion at the George Washington University and completed an Integrated Media Arts MFA at Hunter College. They are currently an Assistant Professor of Dance, Multimedia Performance, and Somatic Studies in the Department of Music, Multimedia, Theatre, and Dance at Lehman College CUNY. www.mxoops.com

 

FELLOWSHIP STATEMENT

During this fellowship I will develop UnFiNiShEd aNiMaL, a party and multimedia performance that uses the vibrant aesthetics of queer nightlife culture to reveal how cognitive bias connects us all. This piece tells the story of humanity coming to grips with our collective inheritance, a ramshackle meshwork of cognitive processes evolved to survive, not for self-awareness. An interdisciplinary approach invites the audience to meditate on what might be unfinished about human cognition and how these biases keep us from building a better world together.

With support from the National Performance Network Creation Fun, this work will be developed in the Live Feed Residency at New York Live Arts toward a Spring 2024 premiere. Additionally, this fellowship period will incubate [NONFATAL_ERROR], a multimedia ensemble of artists engaged in collaborative world-building. Ensemble members work in dance, new media, interactive video projection design, sound design, voice, and costume, fashion, sculpture and more. These mediums come together to welcome party people into a lush world of queer becoming.

Dance
A mixed-race non-binary person looks directly into the camera. With asymmetrical hair in locs, cast to one side, framing a face featuring reflective make up.

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