Upcoming Fellows


Bogliasco Fellowship Recipients
Fall 2023-Spring 2024


ARCHITECTURE

Joseph Heathcott

Joseph Heathcott – Professor of Urban Studies and Design at The New School in New York – United States

Joseph Heathcott is Professor and Chair of Urban and Environmental Studies at The New School, where he teaches in Parsons School of Design and the School for Public Engagement. His work has appeared in a wide range of venues, from scholarly books and articles to exhibits and juried art shows. He has held visiting positions at the London School of Economics, Princeton School of Architecture, Sciences Po, and the CUNY Graduate Center.

DANCE

Sigal Bergman
Photo Franzi Kreis

Sigal Bergman – Choreographer, dancer, and Alexander Technique teacher – United States/Israel

Sigal Bergman is a choreographer, dancer, and Alexander Technique teacher based in Tel Aviv, Israel. She was educated in Israel, Holland, and NYC in various physical and psychophysical techniques, including Release Technique, Contact Improvisation, Tai Ji (Yang), Yoga (Iyengar), and Alexander Technique. Her recent choreographic work includes Revert to Manual #2 (2022), Red Bitter (2020), Revert to Manual (2018), and Pale Fire (2016), all works that mix speech and movement. Her choreographies were supported by multiple grants from Mifal HaPais, the Israeli Council for Culture and Arts, the Rabinowitz Foundation for the Arts, and by many residencies.

Ann Carlson

Ann Carlson – Independent Artist and Adjunct Professor at UCLA, Dept of World Arts, Culture and Dance – United States

Ann Carlson is an interdisciplinary artist whose work involves solo performances, large-scale site-specific projects, ensemble-stage-based dances, and performance video. Her awards include a Creative Capital Award, a Doris Duke Award for Performing Artists, two American Masters awards, a USA Artist Fellowship, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, and a Fellowship from the Foundation for Contemporary Art. She also has had numerous awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and was the first recipient of the CalArts/Alpert Award in dance.

Moriah Evans
Photo Alex Beriault

Moriah Evans – Choreographer – United States

Moriah Evans positions choreography as a speculative and social process. Recent works include Remains Persist (Performance Space New York,’22), REPOSE (Beach Sessions,‘21), Be My Muse (Pace Live,‘21), Configure (The Kitchen,‘18), and Figuring (SculptureCenter,‘18). She was Editor-in-Chief of Movement Research Performance Journal (‘13-’20), Tanzkongress Curatorial Advisor (‘17-’19), and Dance & Process Curator (The Kitchen, ‘16-’23). She is a ‘22 Guggenheim Fellow and ‘23-’24 Hodder Fellow at Princeton University.

Sandra Parker

Sandra Parker – Choreographer and interdisciplinary artist – Australia

Sandra Parker is a choreographer and interdisciplinary artist based in Melbourne, Australia. Recent work includes the development of a new project, Safehold, through the inaugural The Australian Ballet residency, and Yield to Resistance (a 4-hour performance installation), the result of a 2019 residency at the Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris. Sandra has presented her work across Australia, Asia, Europe, and the US.

József Trefeli

József Trefeli – Choreographer – Switzerland – Fondation Gianni Biaggi De Blasys Special Fellow

József Trefeli is an Australian born of Hungarian origins and naturalized Swiss in 2017. József graduated from the University of Melbourne VCA with a BA in Dance in 1992. After working with many Australian choreographers, József embarked on a journey to explore dance around the world before settling in Switzerland, where he has since been based. József has achieved critical acclaim and multiple awards for his many and varied dance performances and numerous choreographic works that have toured the globe.

Netta Yerushalmy

Netta Yerushalmy – Choreographer and Guest Faculty at NYU – Israel/United States – Van Cleef & Arpels Bogliasco Special Fellow in Dance, Bogliasco and Baryshnikov Arts Joint Fellow

Netta Yerushalmy’s research-based dance-making is propelled by a passion for, and trust in, the body as a site of ineluctable knowledge - aesthetic, visceral, emotional, and political. She’s been recognized with numerous prestigious honors such as a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Princeton Arts Fellowship, an award from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts. She grew up in Galilee, Israel, and received her BFA in Dance from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, where she is currently on faculty.

FILM/VIDEO

Louis Cherry

Louis Cherry – Architect and Principal at Louis Cherry Architecture – United States

Louis Cherry is an architect, artist, filmmaker, and musician. He is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects and recipient of many art and architecture awards. Louis co-directed three award-winning short documentaries, Nesting (2020), All the Possibilities… (2019), and Ren-dered Small (2017). Louis leads the architecture firm Louis Cherry Architecture in Raleigh, NC, designing residential and diverse community-based environments.

Abigail Child

Abigail Child – Filmmaker, poet, writer, and Professor Emerita, SMFA at Tufts University – United States

Abigail Child has been at the forefront of experimental writing and media since the 1980s, having completed over 50 film/video works and written six books. An acknowledged pioneer in montage, Child addresses the interplay between sound and image to create, in the words of LA Weekly, “…a political filmmaking that’s attentive to form.” Winner of a Rome Prize, Radcliffe, Guggenheim & Fulbright Fellowships, and a participant in two Whitney Biennials (89/97), Child has had numerous retrospectives worldwide.

Lucrecia E. Frassetto

Lucrecia E. Frassetto – Audiovisual maker and animator – Argentina

Lucrecia E. Frassetto is an audiovisual maker and animator. She studied Cinematography and New Media at the Patagonian University Institute of Arts and received a Master's in Creative Writing at Tres de Febrero University, Buenos Aires. She works in digital animation in documentaries, movies, series, stop motion, and show lighting. She has taught audiovisual language and photography workshops for teachers, teenagers, and children for the Kine Cultural and Educational Foundation, financed by AECID and BID. She is a member of the research groups Palimpsestos (UNTREF) coordinated by María Negroni, and Las raras, an Argentine poetry magazine from the 90s (UNTREF) coordinated by Jorge Monteleone.

Marsha Gordon

Marsha Gordon – Professor of Film Studies at North Carolina State University – United States

Marsha Gordon is a Professor of Film Studies at North Carolina State University, a past Fellow at the National Humanities Center, and a National Endowment for the Humanities Public Scholar. She is the author of numerous books and articles, and co-director of three award-winning short documentaries, Nesting (2020), All the Possibilities… (2019), and Rendered Small (2017). Her latest book is Becoming the Ex-Wife: The Unconventional Life & Forgotten Writings of Ursula Parrott (2023).

Alexandra Halkin

Alexandra Halkin – Documentary filmmaker, producer, film distributor, and Director of Americas Media Initiative – United States

In 1998, Alexandra founded the Chiapas Media Project, an award-winning bi-national organization that trained over 200 indigenous men and women in video production in Southern Mexico. In 2004, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship and in 2007 was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship. In 2010, she founded the non-profit Americas Media Initiative which works with Cuban filmmakers living in Cuba. In 2021, she co-founded the Center for the Preservation of Community Audiovisual Archives in Chiapas, Mexico.

Liu Hsiao-Hui

Liu Hsiao-Hui – Artist and curator – Taiwan

Liu Hsiao-Hui was born in Taipei, Taiwan, and graduated from the Department of Mass Communication at Chinese Culture University. After graduating, she moved to Hualien and established an art studio where she taught art for twenty years. She has also been engaged in photography and the art of landscape film. Liu has been working as a PR and curator in Good Underground Art Space since 2020.

An van. Dienderen

An van. Dienderen – Filmmaker – Belgium

An van. Dienderen is a filmmaker who graduated in audiovisual arts (Sint-Lukas, Brussels), obtained a Ph.D. in Comparative Cultural Sciences (Ghent University), and was a visiting scholar at UC Berkeley. She made several documentaries screened worldwide, which were awarded with (inter)national prizes. She publishes and lectures internationally on documentary, film, and visual/performative anthropology. She is affiliated as a tenured professor and senior researcher at KASK & CONSERVATORIUM School of Arts Ghent.

HUMANITIES SCHOLARSHIP

Hila Amit

Hila Amit (Literature-Scholarship) – Writer and Hebrew Director at the Masorti International School, Berlin – Israel/Germany

Hila Amit’s work appeared in Emrys Journal, The Washington Square Review, The Sycamore Review, Granta, and elsewhere. Her short stories collection, Moving on From Bliss (2016), was awarded the Israeli Ministry of Culture Prize for a debut. Her non-fiction book, A Queer Way Out (Albany: SUNY, 2018), was awarded the 2019 AMEWS Book Award. Her novel The Town Below was published in Hebrew in September 2022. She has received fellowships MacDowell and the Vermont Studio Center.

Robert Clines

Robert Clines (History) – Associate Professor of History and International Studies at Western Carolina University – United States

Robert Clines (he/him) is an Associate Professor of History at Western Carolina University. His first book, A Jewish Jesuit in the Eastern Mediterranean, was published in 2019. His essays and public pieces have appeared in postmedieval, Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, and The Washington Post. He has received research support from the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, The American Academy in Rome, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and the US-Italy Fulbright Commission.

Emily Allegra Dreyfus

Emily Allegra Dreyfus (Visual Arts-Scholarship) – Cultural historian of Cinema and Media and Postdoctoral Researcher at the Film University Babelsberg – United States/United Kingdom/Germany

Emily Allegra Dreyfus is a cultural historian of Cinema and Media and a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Film University Babelsberg. Her 2020 PhD (University of Chicago) considered the political and aesthetic dimensions of music in Nazi-era cinema. Integrating analytical approaches from Film, Literary Studies and Musicology, her work addresses the aesthetics of feeling in visual culture, the unfolding of music and images in time, and the cultural and historical contingencies of emotional self-understanding. Beyond academia, Emily is an active freelance musician.

Stephanie Malia Hom

Stephanie Malia Hom (History) – Writer and Associate Professor of Transnational Italian Studies at the University of California – United States

Stephanie Malia Hom is an Associate Professor of Transnational Italian Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She writes and lectures on modern Italy and the Mediterranean, mobility studies, colonialism and imperialism, migration and detention, and tourism history and practice. She is the author of Empire's Mobius Strip: Historical Echoes in Italy's Crisis of Migration and Detention (2019) and The Beautiful Country: Tourism and the Impossible State of Destination Italy (2015).

David Levin

David Levin (Literature-Scholarship) – Alice H. & Stanley G. Harris Jr. Distinguished Service Professor of Germanic Studies, Cinema & Media Studies, Theater & Performance Studies - University of Chicago – United States/Germany

David J. Levin is the Alice H. and Stanley G. Harris Distinguished Service Professor of Germanic Studies, Cinema and Media Studies, and Theater and Performance Studies at the University of Chicago. His work focuses on the aesthetics and politics of performance in opera, theater, and cinema. In addition to his scholarship and teaching, he has worked extensively as a dramaturg and collaborator for opera, theater, and dance productions in Germany and the United States.

Christia Mercer

Christia Mercer (Philosophy) – Historian of Philosophy – United States

Christia Mercer is the Gustave M. Berne Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University, general editor of Oxford Philosophical Concepts, co-editor of Oxford New Histories of Philosophy, and director of Just Ideas, an educational program in a maximum security prison in Brooklyn, New York.

Ernest Mitchell

Ernest Julius Mitchell (Literature-Scholarship) – Assistant Professor of English and Humanities at Yale University, United States– Natalie and Richard Jacoff Special Fellow in Literature Scholarship

Ernest Mitchell studies literature, philosophy, and religion — how they converge, shape one another, and fashion our sense of being modern. Methodological insights from black studies guide him in this research. His literary focus is the Harlem Renaissance, viewed expansively as integral to transatlantic modernism. Ernest’s philosophical writing centers on aesthetics and phenomenology, mainly on German thinkers from Kant to Benjamin. His interest in religion ranges from the ancient Mediterranean to the contemporary Caribbean.

Irina Podgorny

Irina Podgorny (History) – Historian of science, permanent research fellow at CONICET – Argentina

Irina Podgorny of the Argentine Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas (CONICET) works on the history of natural history collections in Argentina and Europe, contributing to making visible the Latin American production of knowledge and its transnational entanglements with the wider world. In addition to her academic research, she collaborates with Argentine cultural weeklies and Latin American artists. Current work includes the History of Paleontology, historic extinctions and animal remedies.

Lyndsey Stonebridge
Photo Catherine Shakespeare Lane

Lyndsey Stonebridge (Public Humanities) – Scholar, Professor of Humanities and Human Rights at the University of Birmingham – Ireland/United Kingdom

Lyndsey Stonebridge is a Professor of Humanities and Human Rights at the University of Birmingham and a Fellow of the British Academy. Her books include Placeless People: Writing, Rights, and Refugees;The Judicial Imagination: Writing after Nuremberg, and the essay collection Writing and Righting: Literature in the Age of Human Rights. We Are Free to Change the World: Hannah Arendt’s Lessons in Love and Disobedience will be published in January 2024. A regular media commentator and broadcaster, she lives in London and France.

Carolyn White

Carolyn White (Archaeology) – Professor of Anthropology at the University of Nevada, Reno – United States

Carolyn White is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Nevada, Reno, where she holds the Mamie Kleberg Chair in Historic Preservation. Her research and teaching focuses on the intersection of art and archaeology, the archaeology of ephemeral spaces, the materiality of individual lives, and active site archaeology. Her most recent books are The Archaeology of Burning Man (University of New Mexico Press) and Distant Voices: On Steven Seidenberg’s Architecture of Silence (Contrasto Press).

LITERATURE

Andy Chen
Photo Jess X Snow

Andy Chen – Poet and Assistant Director of Diversity, Equity, Inclusivity & Engagement at John Burroughs School – United States – John Burroughs Bogliasco Special Fellow

Andy Chen was born and raised in the pretty part of New Jersey. The recipient of a Kundiman fellowship and a Pushcart Prize, he holds an MFA from Washington University in St. Louis. His poems appear in Ploughshares, New England Review, The Offing, and elsewhere, and his reviews appear in Hong Kong Review of Books, Hyphen, and Colorado Review. He teaches at John Burroughs School in St. Louis.

Susan Choi
Photo Larry Canner

Susan Choi – Novelist and Professor of The Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University – United States – Arthur F. and Alice E. Adams Charitable Foundation Bogliasco Special Fellow in Literature

Susan Choi is the author of five novels, including Trust Exercise, which received the 2019 National Book Award for Fiction. She has also been the recipient of the Asian-American Literary Award for fiction, the PEN/W.G. Sebald Award, a Lamba Literary award, the 2021 Sunday Times Audible Short Story Award, and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation. She serves as a trustee of PEN America.

Elaine Vilar Madruga

Elaine Vilar Madruga – Poet, playwright, and novelist – Cuba – Bogliasco and Ludwig Foundation Special Fellow

Elaine Vilar Madruga is a poet, playwright, and novelist considered one of today’s foremost literary voices in Cuba and the Caribbean. She also works as a creative writing instructor, editor, multidisciplinary artist, and literary coach. She has received over one hundred national and international prizes. She is the author of over fifty books, and her work has been published in the U.S., Canada, the Dominican Republic, Spain, Chile, France, Panama, Denmark, Brazil, and Mexico.

Sigrid Nunez
Photo Marion Ettlinger

Sigrid Nunez – Writer – United States

Nunez has published eight novels, including A Feather on the Breath of God, The Friend, and, most recently, What Are You Going Through. Her new novel, The Vulnerables, will be published in November 2023. Nunez is also the author of Sempre Susan: A Memoir of Susan Sontag. The Friend, a New York Times bestseller, won the 2018 National Book Award and was a 2020 International Dublin Literary Award finalist. Her work has been translated into more than thirty languages.

Elena Penga

Elena Penga – Writer/Playwright/Teacher, Advisor at the Graduate Program for Creative Writing Hellenic Open University – Greece – Van Cleef & Arpels Bogliasco Special Fellow in Poetry

Elena Penga is one of Greece’s most dynamic and most produced playwrights. She also writes fiction and directs for the stage. She received the Greek Academy of Letters award for her book Tight Belts and Other Skin. Her work is in Best European Fiction 2017. She has published three books of short fiction, one novel, and nine books of plays. Her work has been translated and published in English, German, Spanish, French, Italian, Swedish, Dutch, and Bengali. She teaches at the Hellenic Open University.

Chris Price
Photo Robert Cross

Chris Price – Poet and essayist – United Kingdom/New Zealand

Chris Price is a poet and essayist from Aotearoa New Zealand whose work ranges across themes including music, science, and biography. She convenes the MA Workshop in Poetry and Creative Nonfiction at the International Institute of Modern Letters, Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington. Her three poetry collections include Husk (Best First Book of Poetry, 2002 New Zealand Book Awards), The Blind Singer (2009), and Beside Herself (2016), a collection of riddling poems which plays with character, language, and the way they interrelate.

Maurice Riordan
Photo Urszula Sołtys

Maurice Riordan – Poet, translator, editor, and Emeritus Professor of Poetry – Ireland/United Kingdom

Maurice Riordan’s poetry collections from Faber are A Word from the Loki, Floods, The Holy Land, The Water Stealer and Shoulder Tap. He edited The Finest Music, a selection of early Irish poetry in translation. Other books include A Quark for Mister Mark: 101 Poems about Science and, with Jocelyn Bell Burnell, Dark Matter: Poems of Space. He taught at Imperial College and Goldsmiths College, and is Emeritus Professor at Sheffield Hallam. He lives in London and teaches for the Faber Academy.

MUSIC

Patricia Alessandrini

Patricia Alessandrini – Composer, Sound Artist, and Assistant Professor of Composition at Stanford University – United States

Patricia Alessandrini is a composer and sound artist. Her interactive, intermedial compositions have been presented in the Americas, Asia, Australia, and over 15 European countries. She studied at the Conservatorio di Bologna, Conservatoire de Strasbourg and IRCAM, and holds PhDs from Princeton University and the Sonic Arts Research Centre (SARC). She teaches at Stanford University/CCRMA, and performs research on immersion, interaction, creative AI and instrument design for inclusive performance.

Lembit Beecher

Lembit Beecher – Composer and animator – United States

Estonian-American composer and animator Lembit Beecher writes “hauntingly lovely and deeply personal” music (San Francisco Chronicle) that stems from a fascination with the ways memories, histories, and stories permeate our contemporary lives. Recent premieres include Tell Me Again for cellist Karen Ouzounian and the Orlando Philharmonic, Sky on Swings, an opera tracing the relationship of two women diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, and string quartets for the Juilliard, Aizuri, and Lydian quartets.

Alec Hall

Alec Hall – Composer – United States – Edward T. Cone Special Fellowship in Music

Born in Toronto in 1985, Alec Hall lives and works in New York City as an independent composer. His music is centered on the nature of acoustic materials in the post-Avant-Garde musical landscape. His work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Fromm Foundation, Arts Council Norway, the New York State Council on the Arts, New Music USA, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and Das Land Steiermark. Alec holds a DMA from Columbia University and an MA from UC San Diego.

Amelia Huff

Amelia Huff – Multidisciplinary artist, thinker, and educator – United States – Aaron Copland Bogliasco Special Fellow in Music

Amelia Huff is a multidisciplinary artist, thinker, and educator with a goal of mastering sound to express, articulate, and codify knowledge, empowering others to express themselves more freely through sound.

Jeremy Thurlow

Jeremy Thurlow – Composer – United Kingdom

Jeremy Thurlow is a composer. Henri Dutilleux described his music as ‘seductive, innovative, full of freshness.’ He was awarded the George Butterworth Prize (UK). Inspired by the natural world and by the sharp, sensitive gaze of Woolf, Bonnefoy, Keats, Burnside, Miró, he has worked with the Fitzwilliam and Kreutzer Quartets, Schubert Ensemble, Sequitur (New York), Norrbottens Kammarorkester, BBC Philharmonic and BBC Singers. He is a Fellow of Robinson College, University of Cambridge.

Martin Wistinghausen
Photo Christian Palm

Martin Wistinghausen – Composer and singer – Germany

Martin Wistinghausen studied singing, German literature, and composing in Cologne, Mannheim, Düsseldorf, and Salzburg. He has been awarded many prizes and scholarships as both a singer and composer. He is an experienced performer in the field of Lied and Contemporary music. His compositions have been heard in many festivals and broadcasts in Europe (SWR, Deutschlandradio Kultur, Espace 2) and have been performed by noted ensembles, such as Chorwerk Ruhr and Neue Vocalsolisten Stuttgart.

THEATER

Walter Byongsok Chon

Walter Byongsok Chon – Dramaturg, critic, translator, educator, scholar, and Associate Professor of Dramaturgy at Ithaca College – South Korea/United States

Walter Byongsok Chon is a dramaturg, critic, translator, educator, and scholar from South Korea. He is an Associate Professor of Dramaturgy at Ithaca College in the US and is currently a Visiting Professor at the Korean National University of Arts. His work has been played at the Yale Repertory Theatre, Eugene O’Neill Theatre Center, and the New York Musical Festival. He is the co-author of Dramaturgy: The Basics (Routledge, 2023, with Anne M. Hamilton). He received the 2022 Daesan Foundation Translation Grant and received his D.F.A. from the Yale School of Drama.

David Cote

David Cote – Librettist, playwright, and theater critic – United States

David Cote is a librettist, playwright, and theater critic based in New York City. His current projects include an opera with Scott Davenport Richards about the life and activism of Paul Robeson; a chamber opera with Laura Kaminsky about music therapy and memory; and a one-act with Stefan Weisman for mezzo-soprano Hai-Ting Chinn about Greenland’s melting ice sheet. Previous work includes Blind Injustice (Cincinnati Opera), Three Way (Nashville Opera, BAM) and The Scarlet Ibis (Prototype).

Steph Del Rosso

Steph Del Rosso – Playwright, fiction writer, screenwriter, and educator – United States

Steph Del Rosso is a playwright, fiction writer, screenwriter, and educator. Her work has been produced or developed at Second Stage Theater, The Public, La Jolla Playhouse, the Kennedy Center, JACK, and others. She is a Core Writer at the Playwrights' Center, a New Georges Audrey Resident, and a winner of the Steinberg Playwright Award and the Mississippi Review Prize in Fiction. Residencies include: MacDowell (upcoming), The Headlands Center for the Arts, Willapa Bay, and SPACE on Ryder Farm.

Anne Hamilton

Anne Hamilton – Playwright and Founder of Hamilton Dramaturgy – United States

Anne Hamilton is a playwright and the Founder of Hamilton Dramaturgy, an international consultancy. Dramaturgy includes Andrei Serban, Michael Mayer, Lynn Nottage, NYMF, Niegel Smith, Classic Stage Company, and Tina Andrews. She was the co-author of Dramaturgy: The Basics (Routledge, 2023, with Walter Byongsok Chon) and the co-recipient of the 2022 Daesan Foundation Translation Grant. She is the Company Author of Winterlight Productions, a 1998 Bogliasco Fellow, and received her M.F.A. from Columbia University School of the Arts.

Wendall Harrington

Wendall Harrington – Professor at Yale School of Drama – United States

An award-winning designer of projected media for performance for Broadway, Opera, Dance and concerts since the late 70’s, Wendall is the head of the Projection Design Concentration at the Yale School of Drama.

Meisam Mozafari

Meisam Mozafari – Writer and Theater Director – Iran

Meisam Mozafari is an Iranian film director and screenwriter. He graduated from Arak University with a Bachelor of Industrial Design. He has also worked as an editor on short films and documentaries. His film, Drown Out was shown at the Seoul Short Film Festival in 2019 and Wexford Film Festival in Ireland in 2020. Morgellons Syndrome was shown at the Taiwan Three Minutes Competition Festival in 2020. The Gradual Melting of a Snowflake was shown at the Iconic Image Lithuania 2021 Short Film Festival, Italian Cinemagia 2021 Short Film Festival and Tehran Art is Alive Festival in 2021.

Molly Rice

Molly Rice – Playwright and musician – United States

Molly Rice is a playwright/musician who creates big, aspirational community collaborations and small, strange musicals. Her works include The Birth of Paper, a transcontinental theater work connecting Pittsburgh, PA and Beirut, Lebanon; Khuraki, a theatrical/ culinary experience created with Afghan refugees; Angelmakers: Songs for Female Serial Killers, a true-crime musical; and The Saints Tour, a site-specific enchantment. She is the Founder/Co-Artistic Director of RealTime Arts and has a MFA from Brown University.

Gina Athena Ulysse

Gina Athena Ulysse – Artist and scholar, Professor of Feminist Studies at University of California, Santa Cruz – United States

Gina Athena Ulysse is a Haitian-American artist-scholar and Professor of Feminist Studies at the University of California Santa Cruz. Her publications include the award-winning Because When God is Too Busy: Haiti, me & THE WORLD (2017) and copious articles, essays and creative works in journals and anthologies. In 2020, she participated in the Biennale of Sydney, Australia. Over the years, she has performed at The British Museum, Gorki Theatre, LaMaMa, Marcus Garvey Liberty Hall, and other venues.

VISUAL ARTS

Abigail  DeVille
Photo John Edmonds

Abigail DeVille – Artist – United States – Anonymous Was A Woman Bogliasco Special Fellow

Abigail DeVille's sculptures and installations often focus on themes of the history of racist violence, gentrification, and lost regional history. Her most recent solo exhibitions include In the Fullness of Time, The Heart Speaks Truths Too Deep for Utterance, but a Star Remembers, JTT NYC (2023); Original Night at Eric Firestone Gallery (2022-23); and Bronx Heavens, Bronx Museum of the Arts (2022-23). DeVille’s awards include a 2022 Anonymous Was a Woman Award, a 2022 Nancy Graves Foundation grant, a 2018 United States Artists Fellowship, and a 2017-2018 Rome Prize Fellow at the American Academy in Rome.

Sonya Clark

Sonya Clark – Artist and Professor of Art at Amherst College – United States

Sonya Clark creates installations and objects rooted in craft’s legacy. She employs the language of textiles politics of hair, and the power of text to celebrate Blackness while interrogating historical imbalances. She is a full professor at Amherst College in Massachusetts. She has received awards from many organizations including United States Artists, Pollock-Krasner, Art Prize, and Anonymous Was a Woman. Her work has been exhibited in over 500 venues worldwide.

Meera George

Meera George – Visual Artist – India – Helen Frankenthaler Bogliasco Special Fellow in Visual Arts

Born in Chennai, India, Meera George widely exhibits and performs internationally. Strongly autobiographical, Meera’s performances are also sensitive to cultural and feminist issues. Her mixed media works, however, comment on the impermanence of existence and the looming climate challenge. She is the recipient of nine international grants and residencies, including Fukuoka Asian Art Museum Japan, La Napoule Art Foundation France, and Fremantle Arts Centre Australia. Meera currently lives and works in Pune, India.

Cheng-Hsiang Liu

Cheng-Hsiang Liu – Artist and Director of Shawn Liu Studio – Taiwan

With "connection" as a core, Cheng-Hsiang Liu delves into new media art, photography, and technology, probing artificial-natural interplay while contemplating existence. By merging nature's generative logic, he explores human-machine synergy and AI creativity via algorithms. He founded "Shawn Liu Studio" '16, which offers cultural consulting. His global residencies since '21 (Hong Kong, France, Iceland) and exhibitions showcase the possibility of technology's influence on the human experience.

Steven Seidenberg

Steven Seidenberg – Artist and writer – United States

Photographer, poet, and philosopher Steven Seidenberg’s collections of photographs include The Architecture of Silence (Contrasto, 2023) and Pipevalve: Berlin (Lodima Press, 2017). He is the author of numerous collections of lyric, philosophical prose and poetry, most recently Anon (Omnidawn, 2022), plain sight (Roof Books, 2020), and Situ (Black Sun Lit, 2018). He has had solo exhibitions of his work in Japan, Italy, Germany, Mexico, and the United States, and his books have appeared in Swedish, Italian, and Portuguese translations.

Mary Ellen Strom

Mary Ellen Strom – Artist and Professor of Media Arts at Tufts University, Boston – United States

Mary Ellen Strom is a U.S.-based artist known for temporary public artworks and video/performance installations. Born in Butte, Montana, a hard rock mining town in the Rocky Mountain West, her research-based artwork is influenced by the culture and environment of this complex region. Strom’s artworks about place study the impacts of settler colonialism, extraction, and human-induced climate change. Projects are researched and produced in collaboration with Indigenous scholars, scientists, historians, environmentalists, and policymakers and have been exhibited on farms, cattle ranches, public pools, rivers, trains, grain terminals, and horse arenas in galleries and museums. She co-founded the public art organization Mountain Time Arts in Southwestern, MT, and is a Professor of Media Arts at Tufts University, Boston.

Yvonne Weber

Yvonne Weber – Visual Artist – Switzerland

Yvonne Weber, born in 1977 in Egliswil near Zurich, lives and works in Ascona and Berlin. She studied process and product design in the class of Interactive Systems at the University of the Arts Berlin (UdK) and then developed generative systems and interfaces for the return of the digital to the immediate reality. She has participated in European festivals such as ARS Electronica and received several scholarships, including that of “Swiss artists in-labs”.