Sariyah Bonnita Jaser Abuzant is a producer and project manager. She joins the program from Palestine by way of Maryland, United States. Sariyah’s research interests focus on conflict resolution in the context of Palestine and community building.
Sariyah Bonnita Jaser Abuzant is a producer and project manager. She joins the program from Palestine by way of Maryland, United States. Sariyah’s research interests focus on conflict resolution in the context of Palestine and community building.
Sarah Al Yahya is a creative technologist and researcher. She joins the program from Amman, Jordan. Sarah’s research interests center on the decolonial and other sociopolitical potential of new media art, Palestine, and the SWANA region. Most recently, her interactive installation YOU ARE NOT HERE showed at the 2023 Ars Electronica Festival in Linz.
Elie Arden is a sound designer, installation maker, and performer. She joins the program from the United Kingdom by way of London. Elie’s research interests focus on the relationship between sound and diasporic memory, artificial intelligence, and ecology.
Pyae Phyo Aung is a journalist, researcher, and digital content creator. He joins the program from Myanmar. His research interests include community-based ethnography, storytelling, authoritarian regimes, and digital rights.
Mona Benyamin is a filmmaker and audio-visual artist. She joins the program from Palestine. Mona’s research interests include media theory, semiotics, phenomenology, and personal and collective cultural memory in Palestine. She most recently created the short films Tomorrow, again (2023); Moonscape (2020); and Trouble in Paradise (2018).
Miguel Angel Castaneda is an activist and researcher who works with indigenous and peasant communities. He joins the program from Colombia. His research focuses on south-south dialogue, southern epistemologies, cultural studies, community work, communities of life, and re-indigenization.
Leil Zahra Mortada is a filmmaker, political organizer, curator, and researcher. Born and raised in South Lebanon, they join the program by way of Berlin, Germany. Leil’s research interests include colonialism, nationalism, migration, transfeminism, and abolition.
Arina Pshenichnaya is a researcher, art historian, and learning experience designer for adult online education. She joins the program most recently from Saint Petersburg and Yekaterinburg, Russia. Arina’s research focuses on artistic representation of repressive practices and their legacies in post-Soviet countries.
Tara Rodríguez Besosa (they/them/elle) is an interdisciplinary designer and organizer. They join the program from Borikén and came here with their dog Pulpa. Tara’s interests center around the non-human, rights of nature, food sovereignty, the Caribbean, and QTBIPOC liberation. Tara is co-founder and creative director of the collective El Departamento de la Comida and resident of OtraCosa Jaragüal Cuir (queer land project).
João Felipe R. Ferreira is a researcher and cultural producer. He joins the program from Campinas, Brazil. João’s research interests focus on forced displacement, humanitarianism, media art, and curatorial studies. He most recently cofounded the project Rede ArteRefúgio (ArtRefuge Network).
Nabil Salih is a writer and photographer. He joins the program from Baghdad, Iraq by way of Washington DC. Nabil’s research interests include Iraqi politics and psychogeography. His work has appeared in Al Jazeera English, Jadaliyya, Middle East Eye and LeftEast and has been translated into French, Italian, and Spanish.
Mauro Tosarelli is a designer and researcher. He joins the program from Italy, by way of Dublin, Ireland. Mauro’s research interests center around detainees and former prisoners as well as the ethics and politics of representing prison life.
Selo is a carpet weaver and former political prisoner. They come to us from Anatolia (of Yörük lineage) via Berlin. Selo’s research interests focus on weaving, handicraft, and poetry. They were most recently an initiator of both the Autonomous Zone and the Tatreez Circle at Bard College Berlin.
Nádia Yracema is a performance artist. She joins the program from Angola by way of Lisbon (Portugal). Nádia’s research interests focus on memory, ancestrality, migration, blackness and the process of dreaming and re-writing futures. She is cofounder of Aurora Negra theater company, the KILOMBO Festival, and the União Negra das Artes (Black Art Union, UNA).
Adam HajYahia is Assistant Curator at CHRA and Studio Manager as part of the Mellon Foundation Award to Bard College to support the work of Tania El Khoury. Adam is a researcher, writer, and curator from Palestine. His research and writing focus on images and performativity in the revolutionary context of Palestine and the region, psychoanalysis and labor, as well as the negative economic speculation within contemporary art. His curatorial and pedagogical work has been presented in various galleries, museums and educational institutions, such as The Mosaic Rooms, The James Gallery at the CUNY Graduate Center, Mophradat, The Berlin Biennale 12, MoMA PS1, the Harvard Law School, and Wolfson College, and University of Oxford. Adam is a graduate of the MA in Human Rights & the Arts at CHRA.
Adam HajYahia is an independent writer, curator, and culture producer. He joined the program from Palestine. Adam’s research interests revolved around images and performance in the revolutionary context of Palestine, psychoanalysis and capitalism, and negative speculation for new economic orders within contemporary art. His thesis project is titled “Carnal Politics: Sex, Desire, and Anti-Colonial Deviance in Mandate Palestine.” It took the form of a hybrid output combining an article-length essay and a speculative photo exhibition.
Ali Hussein Al-Adawy is a critic, curator, and researcher. He joined the program from Alexandria, Egypt. Ali’s research interests centered around representations of labor in film and art, the shifting dynamics of art spaces in times of permanent catastrophe, and the relationship between the circulation of images, human rights, and financialization. His thesis project is titled “Purity Is A Matter of An Effective Sewage System: Human Rights and Contemporary Art from Institution to Infrastructure.” It took the form of a written academic thesis.
Majd Al-Rafie is a graphic designer, illustrator, and activist. She joined the program from Amman, Jordan. Majd’s research interests included Arab queer politics, Palestinian liberation, and art in activism. Her thesis project is titled “Tassako’: The Politics of Street Art Culture in Amman.” It took the form of a written academic thesis.
Anas Alkhatib is an architect, dancer, and spatial researcher. He joined the program from Palestine. Anas’s practice focused on spatial violence documentation, architectural visualization, and cartography. He is the founder of Architect In Camps” (Me’mar) collective, a multidisciplinary architectural studio. His thesis project is titled “Designed by Our Hands.” It took the form of a hybrid output combining an article-length essay and an architecture design manual.
Tâm Liêu Âm is an artist.
Nour Annan is a writer, photographer, and inter-disciplinary artist. She joined the program from Lebanon. Nour’s research interests included collective cultural memory and contemporary revolutionary politics. She is a former editor at Rusted Radishes: Beirut Literary and Art Journal. Her thesis project is titled “The Golden Age Is Out of Joint: Photography, Catastrophe, and the Politics of Nostalgia in Lebanon.” It took the form of a hybrid output combining an article-length essay and a lecture performance.
Raneem Ayyad is a multidisciplinary researcher, architect, and visual artist. She joined the program from Palestine. Her research focused on the intersections between the built environment and heritage, with an interest in colonial relations and gender dynamics in Palestine and post-colonial contexts. Raneem is a co-director for the Architect In Camps (Me’mar) collective. Her thesis project is titled “Where Do We Meet The Sun?.” It took the form of an interactive performance.
Luka Gotsiridze is a researcher, documentarian, and digital content creator. He joined the program from Georgia, by way of Budapest, Hungary and Vienna, Austria. His research interests included religion and human rights, gender and sexuality, and storytelling and social cohesion. His thesis project is titled “ვითომ-ვითომ [Vitom-Vitom].” It took the form of an interactive performance.
Isabella Indolfi is an independent curator living between New York City and Maranola (Italy), and working between Western Europe, Russia, Armenia, and the United States of America. Her curatorial research is focused on public art, site-specific, and community-based practices. Since 2009, she has been collaborating with artists, institutions, festivals, museums and universities. Currently she is an independent researcher for Opere Vive, art director at SEMINARIA Biennial Festival of Environmental Art, and co-curator for Cyland Media Art Lab. Her thesis project is titled “Leave the Community Alone: The Ethics of Curating Contemporary Art in Villages.” It took the form of a a lecture performance.
K. is a social researcher, facilitator, and curator who works at the intersection of social sciences, activism, and arts. Her interests included participatory and community-based practices, post-socialism, mobility, citizenship, and urban studies. Her thesis project is titled “No One Has Stayed And No One Has Left.” It took the form of an audio-visual installation.
Iris Luo is a design researcher, storyteller, and educator. She joined the program from Shanghai, China. Iris’s research interests centered on pluriversal design, cultural ecology, community development, and indigenous epistemology. Her thesis project is titled “Weaving the Threads: Labor Protection of Maya Weavers in Guatemala.” It took the form of a written academic thesis.
Carol Montealegre is an artist working in performance, installation, and video. She joined the program from Bogota, Colombia. Carol’s research interests included experimental film and performance art as mediums for human emancipation. She is the Artistic Director at Liminal Art Collective. Her thesis project is titled “Howls in The Mountains.” It took the form of a documentary film.
Aya Rebai is an architect, scenographer, and a cultural manager. She joined the program from Tunisia. Having worked on a variety of artistic and educational projects in Tunisia, Aya’s research and practice focused on food politics and cooking as an artistic tool. Her thesis project is titled “Who Needs AI, We Need Potatoes.” It took the form of an interactive performance.
Jina Rishmawi is a peace activist and innovator. She joined the program from Palestine, Beit Sahour—the Shepherds Fields—in particular. Jina’s research interests included urban planning, nonviolent resistance, and peacebuilding. Her thesis project is titled “Behind the Tanks: The Politics and Aesthetics of Water Tanks in Palestine.” It took the form of a written academic thesis.
Nestor Rotsen is a fashion and multidisciplinary artist. He joined the program from Moscow, Russia. The main area of interest for Nestor’s work was based on the social and political problems of Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and other countries that were previously part of the USSR. His thesis project is titled “Shroud[ed]: MH17.” It took the form of an installation and live performance.
Garrett Sager (a.k.a. Melissabeth) is a multidisciplinary artist with roots in theater and cabaret. He joined the program from the Boston area by way of the Hudson Valley. Garrett’s research interests included pop culture and identity, queer time, and the creation of new genders via performance. His thesis project is titled “Breaking the Seal.” It took the form of an interactive performance.
Ciko Sidzumo has yet to adopt a discipline. She joined the program from Johannesburg, South Africa. Ciko’s research interests included period poverty, gender-based violence, and movements that work toward the eradication of both. Her project is titled “The Sanguinary Cradle: Cutha.” It took the form of an installation and live performance.
Hattie Wilder Karlstrom is a researcher and an activist. She joined the program from Amherst, Massachusetts by way of Annandale-on-Hudson. Hattie’s research interests centered on borders and the people they affect. Hattie was a 2020 participant in the Border Pedagogy Working Group and the recipient of a Watson Fellowship. Her thesis project is titled “We’re with the Church”: Religion and Humanitarian Aid along the U.S.-Mexico Border.” It took the form of a written academic thesis, intertwining academic and creative nonfiction writing.
Immanuel Williams is an interdisciplinary artist working across the mediums of painting, printmaking, performance, sculpture, drawing, and installation. They joined the program from Albany, New York. Immanuel’s research interests included how themes of fragmentation, alteration, and mythification manifest in memories and familial stories retold. Their work was recently featured in Baby Get Closer at Co-prosperity Catskill. Their thesis project is titled “In Search of Adonis_XXX.” It took the form of an audio-visual installation.
Margarita Kuchma was a video and music artist. She joined the program from St. Petersburg, Russia. Margarita’s research interests included sound and video in advocacy, criminal justice reform, and youth empowerment. She is the songwriter and performer on the EP titled What Did You Say.