Tuesday-Sunday, 10am-4pm (Dec-May)
Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-4pm (Jun-Nov)
Visitors can find us, tour our galleries and studios, and visit the rooftop at 533 Eaton Street.
Admission to our galleries and campus is always free of charge. As a non-profit, community organization, we offer discounted fees for classes, performances and events to members of The Studios. If you are interested in the benefits of membership learn more here!
From rooftop parties to business gatherings, The Studios offers a host of unique spaces to make your event one for the ages! Learn more here.
David Aloi
Writer
Los Angeles, CA
Patrick L. Jaimes
Visual Artist, Photographer, Architect
Puebla, Mexico
Tipper Newton
Filmmaker, Actor
Los Angeles, CA
Nataliia Nosyk
Plein Air Painter
Stamford, CT
Megan Mosholder
Visual Artist
Atlanta, GA
JB Burke
Visual Artist, Professor
Charlotte, NC
Thomas Strayhorn
Singer/songwriter
Portland, ME
Jee Sim
Multidisciplinary Artist
Berlin, Germany
Ram Murali
Writer
London, England
Brody Condon
Interdisciplinary Artist
Berlin, Germany
Electric Blue Yonder
Multimedia Artists, Songwriters, Performers
Montgomery, AL
Diana Shpungin
Interdisciplinary Artist
Brooklyn, NY
Suzy Sureck
Multimedia Artist
New York, NY
Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan
Novelist, Memoirist
New York / Chicago
Ransome
Image Artist
Rhinebeck, New York
Becca McCharen
Textile Artist, Fashion Designer
Miami, FL
Scott Ponemone
Figurative Watercolor Artist
Baltimore, MD
Ariel Delgado Dixon
Writer, Farmer
Philadelphia, PA
Allegra Hyde
Author
Oberlin, OH
Jeffrey Colvin
Writer
New York, NY
Timothy Goldkin
Print Maker
Portland, ME
Derek Lassiter
Vocalist, Composer, Producer
Oakland, CA
Dana Al Rashid
Architect, Visual Artist
Kuwait
John Mark Powell
Novelist
Sugar Grove, NC
Debra Hill
Narrative, Figurative Painter
Manhattan, NY
Paloma Vianey Martinez
Painter, Interdisciplinary Artist
Ciudad Juárez, Mexico
Rachael Allen
YA/Children’s Book Author
Atlanta, GA
Denise Burge
Painter, Fiber Artist
Cincinnati, OH
Ajuan Mance
Visual Artist, Author, Professor
Oakland, CA
Marianne Vogel
Fiber Artist
Englewood, FL
Garrard Conley
Writer
Atlanta, GA
Tina Fakhrid-Deen
Theater Artist, Writer
Chicago, IL
Nonney Oddlokken
Artist, Author, Storyteller
St Rose, LA
Rebecca Dale
Composer
London, UK
Lavett Ballard
Mixed Media, Collage Artist
Willingboro, NJ
Jennifer Basile
Printmaker, Installation Artist, Professor
Miami, FL
Stephen Grossman
Sculptor, Painter, Architect
Hamden, CT
Dianne Hebbert
Painter, Printmaker, Installation Artist
New York, NY
Kristen Arnett
Writer
Orlando, FL
Dionne Irving
Writer, Professor
South Bend, IN
Michael Shi
Photographer
Shanghai, China
Ana Dopico
Scholar, Director Hemispheric Institute NYU
New York, NY
David Aloi is a writer living in Los Angeles. He received his MFA in fiction from California College of the Arts and has worked at Grindr, Medium, ScholarMatch, and McSweeney’s. His writing has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, Joyland, The Rumpus, Chicago Review, Flaunt, Water~Stone Review, CutBank, Foglifter, and The Offing. He has received support and fellowships from MacDowell, Lambda Literary Foundation, Willapa Bay AiR, Martha’s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing, Tin House Summer Workshop, and Sewanee Writers’ Conference. David is currently completing his debut short story collection, Loverboy.
Thomas Strayhorn is a singer-songwriter originally from North Carolina who writes with an earnest attempt to understand sense of place. “His simple melodies draw from folk but veer toward alt-country, likely thanks to Strayhorn’s brassy twang. They’re adorned with little more than bare-bones arrangements (think: Joe Pug or Langhorne Slim). But Strayhorn’s songs tell stories that unfold poetically and genuinely…” — Patrick Wall (INDYWEEK). His music has been featured on both American Songwriter and IndyWeek.
Thomas has recorded songs with James Phillips (Bombadil), Alex Bingham (Magic AL, , The Dead Tongues), Kate Rhudy, and Ford Garrard (>Boy Named Banjo) & has shared stages with Esme Patterson, Dee White, Cale Tyson, Boy Named Banjo, Bombadil, Kate Rhudy, Holly Arrowsmith, Diane Cluck and other lovely souls. He released “Long Johns” in the spring of 2023, proudly singing: “I’ve been busy for so damn long // I do not know just what I did, but I think I had to get it done // but now it’s pitch black at 6pm // & I have to put my long johns on before I go outside again”. Thomas currently lives in So. Portland, Maine and owns many pairs of long johns.
Patrick L. Jaimes’s work focuses mainly on the territory and the dichotomy nature/culture, with a heavy focus on the animal issue and our relationship with other species, examining concepts of coexistence, power, control and domination. While mainly photography-based, his work incorporates maps, digital constructions, illustration, intervened images, text and video. He has been selected twice at the Photography Biennale in Mexico (2018 & 2023), received the Culture & Animals grant (2023), the FONCA Jovenes Creadores Grant (2012- 13 & 2018-19), the SACPC grant for cultural projects (2021), and has received 2nd prize at Plataforma Puebla 2019, honorific mention at Premio IILA Roma (2013), among others. His work has been exhibited in Mexico, Spain, Italy, Chile & El Salvador in venues such as Polyforum Siqueiros (Mexico City), el Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Roma (Rome, Italy), Casa América (Madrid, Spain), Centro de las Artes de N.L. (Monterrey, Mex), Centro Cultural Estación Mapocho (Santiago de Chile), Biblioteca de México José Vasconcelos (Mexico City), Museo Internacional del Barroco (Puebla, Mex). It has also been published in L’architecture d’aujourd’hui (France), Baumeister (Germany), Arquine (México), C3 magazine (South Korea), Menelique (Italy), i.a.
Tipper Newton is an actor, filmmaker, and musician living in Los Angeles. Her recent short film, Wild Card, played festivals worldwide and received a Special Jury Award for Best Midnight Short at Palm Springs ShortFest. Her short film The Dangerous Type took home the 2021 “Best Shorts With Legs” prize at Fantastic Fest and premiered online as a Vimeo staff pick. As an actor, Tipper has had recurring roles on The Mindy Project and The Guest Book. When she’s not busy working in film and television you can find her being the frontwoman for her powerpop band Color TV.
Nataliia Nosyk is a Ukrainian-born artist, who settled in the United States after the start of the war in Ukraine. She paints in an impressionistic style and likes to explore the themes of light and shadow, reality and abstraction, simplicity of composition and layers of perception. She is inspired by sunlight, nature, and the happiness of life.
Nataliia studied painting at Dnipro State University in Ukraine and Saint Petersburg Academic Institute of Painting and Sculpture in Russia. Her art has been exhibited in Ukrainian art galleries, and she is now establishing herself as an artist in the United States. Her works have most recently been shown at a group exhibition in Greenwich, Connecticut. A few years ago, Nataliia created an online school, where she designs and teaches courses in drawing and painting.
Visual artist Megan Mosholder reacts to the social-political landscape through site-responsive installations. Her three-dimensional drawings, often enhanced by light, emphasize obscured elements within recognizable places correlating symbolism with lived experience.
A graduate of the Savannah College of Art and Design with an MFA in painting, Megan boasts numerous awards from institutions such as the Foundation for Contemporary Arts and the Hambidge Center for Creative Arts and Sciences. She is commissioned by leading corporations and included in public art programs, museum exhibitions, and art fairs. Interest in her installations led to international interest in her work, evidenced by her inclusion within the European Cultural Centre’s 2022 Personal Structures exhibition presented during the Venice Biennale and a public art space in Sydney, Australia (2017). These works speak to the power of site-specific work to make a lasting impression upon the viewer.
Her large-scale installations also express her tenacity. Following a September 2018 car accident where the gas tank ruptured and ignited, trapping her inside, she endured burns to over sixty percent of her body. While the event left indelible marks, it also provided new heights for her to reach.
Megan continues to create installations that relay her devotion to her work and the communities she engages. Currently, she is based in Atlanta, GA and has been working as a consultant to RangeWater’s Artist-in-Residence (AIR) Program, an opportunity that has allowed her to advocate for fellow artists.
Jessica Burke (J.B.) is an LGBT+ artist and educator working in North Carolina. She is an Associate Professor of Art and Foundations Coordinator at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Working in both traditional and digital drawing media, she focuses on concerns at the intersection of identity, popular culture, and mass media. She has received numerous honors and awards for her creative research and her teaching. She has been invited to artist residencies in Oregon, New Mexico, France, Ireland, and Hungary. Her drawings have been published in Manifest’s International Drawing Annual (INDA) 13; Studio Visit Magazine; North Light Book’s Strokes of Genius 9: The Best of Drawing and Art for Everyone, a textbook from University Press. She was recently awarded a North Carolina Arts and Science Council Grant based on her recent digital media practice which reflects a dedication to drawing as a creative practice that is both innovative and responsive to cultural conditions.
Her work has been included in competitive group and solo exhibitions nationally and internationally that include the Mint Museum in Charlotte, North Carolina; the Florida State University Museum of Fine Arts in Tallahassee, Florida; the Toshima Gallery in Tokyo, Japan; the LuXun Academy of Fine Arts in Shenyang, Liaoning Province, China; the Élysees Modern and Contemporary Art Fair in Paris, France and the Kepco Plaza Gallery Museum in Seoul, South Korea. Her creative work is in private, public and corporate collections that include the City of North Charleston, South Carolina; Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough LLP; GLAAD, New York City; the City of Savannah, Georgia; Seminole State College, Florida and the National Living Treasure Museum in Yugawara, Japan.
Jee Sim is a Berlin-based artist working within the field of drawing, performance art, and music. Sim’s visual works and sound performances have been presented at venues including Seoul Museum of Art – Nanji in Seoul; Museum of Fine Arts Galerija Umjetnina in Split; panke.gallery and HAU 2 in Berlin; Arti et Amicitae and Steim in Amsterdam; The 4th Anyang Public Art Project in Anyang; Real Fine Arts, Park Ave Armory, and Brooklyn Museum in New York; Overgaden Institut in Copenhagen; The Center of Contemporary Art in Lagos; Museum of Contemporary Art in Cleveland; Hosfelt Gallery in San Francisco; and Orange County Museum of Art in California.
Sim’s music compositions were performed at Jump!Star, a project supported by a National Endowment for the Arts Our Town Grant. Sim composed original soundtracks for the film Small Bird and Mr. Pig, which screened at the DMZ International Documentary Film Festival and the Seoul Independent Film Festival. Sim’s vocal collaborations with Jee Day have been released on DFA and Beats in Space.
Ram Murali is a French-American writer of Indian origin. He was born in New York City.
After beginning his career as a lawyer in private practice in London and Paris, he subsequently worked for many years across all aspects of film and television development, production, and distribution.
Ram is a graduate of Dartmouth College and Columbia Law School. He has also pursued graduate studies in Filmmaking at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts.
His first novel, Death in the Air, will be published in June 2024 by Harper (HarperCollins) in the United States, Atlantic in the United Kingdom, Penguin Press in India, and Allen & Unwin in Australia.
Brody Condon (b. Mexico 1974) facilitates and documents game-like group encounters that explore dissociative phenomena. The work has been presented at venues such as MoMA/PS1, Los Angeles Museum of Art, New Museum/Performa, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Berlin Biennale, CCA Glasgow, and many others.
A traveling troupe of intrepid space folk explorers, Electric Blue Yonder (EBY) examines the mysteries of the universe and reports their findings through song. Described as “Real American Space Folk,” the band draws its inspiration from the psychedelic folk, surf, and cosmic country rock of the 60s and the Space Age prog/art rock explorations of David Bowie and Pink Floyd, all while shifting time to the early roots and parlor style guitar of the 20th century. The result is a genre-bending mix that captures a nostalgic familiarity while simultaneously transporting you into uncharted territory.
“We wanted to make timeless music that future generations will seek out,” said Beth about the band, describing their style as Space Folk. “We try to be genuine in our approach to songwriting and lyrics.”
MicroPARTY was initially conceived in the fall of 2019 while Beth and Johnny were on a cross-country tour as Electric Blue Yonder with their friend and collaborator Kimi Samson. They were performing at a small pub named “The Keg and I” in Chimacum, Washington. They’d played a long set and run out of rehearsed material when asked to do a final encore. Since it was getting on in the evening and the last song, Beth suggested “Little Jack,” the first ‘children’s’ song they had written for their nephew. After the show, Kimi very emphatically asked Johnny and Beth “What was that?,” and they explained that they’d written the song for their nephew but not sent the material to rehearse because they didn’t expect to perform it with Electric Blue Yonder. Later that evening while camping in the Olympic Peninsula, they discussed the possibility of writing more children’s oriented material. 2020 and the great shutdown was just around the corner and became an unfortunate blessing of time to develop the concept further.
Diana Shpungin’s work is dedicated to challenging ideas of drawing through sculptural and time-based forms. Her works are led by a heart-strong conceptualism, involving obsessive processes while exploring themes of memory, failure, loss, and repair, –employing optimism in a quest for empathy across identity lines. The use of graphite pencil is often the foundation of the work. Born in Riga, Latvia, Shpungin emigrated as a child to New York City. She received her MFA from SVA, NY and has exhibited extensively in both national and international venues including: Bronx Museum; Brooklyn Museum; Invisible Exports; SculptureCenter NY; Smack Mellon, NY; Aldrich Museum, CT; Bass Museum, Miami; MASS MoCA; Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami; Museum of Contemporary Art, Tucson; SiTE:LAB; Futura Center, Prague; Galerie Zurcher, Paris; and Tomio Koyama, Tokyo. Shpungin was awarded the Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant and NYFA Fellowship in Sculpture as well as residencies from Art Omi, BAU at The Camargo Foundation, Bronx Museum AIM, MacDowell, and Yaddo. Shpungin’s work has been reviewed in Artforum, The Brooklyn Rail, Flash Art, Hyperallergic, New York Magazine,The New York Times among many other publications. Shpungin has been an Assistant Professor at Parsons: The New School for Design for over a decade.
Suzy Sureck is an internationally recognized multidisciplinary artist whose sculptural installations, video, writing, and drawing involve physical and metaphoric qualities of wind, water, light, shadow, and the poetics of luminosity. Suzy draws with light to create experiential ecologically considered immersive root projections, underwater installations, or aquatic interactive dance performances. Cross-pollinating disciplines, she merges technology and traditional media to bring nature’s wisdom to audiences experientially through audio, video, text, and image.
Suzy’s works have been exhibited in galleries, museums, sculpture parks, biennials, art foundations and alternative spaces in the U.S., Europe, the Middle East, Korea, Australia, and India. Recent works include projection performances under the night sky in the Hudson Valley, in Germany and in New York’s Lincoln Center. She has been awarded residencies at MassMOCA, Yaddo, Virginia Center for Creative Arts, Art Omi and Arts, Letters Numbers. Her works have been reviewed in the New York Times, Hyperallergic, Sculpture Magazine, World Art, Flash Art and. New Observations. Suzy received a Masters’ Degree in Sculpture from Cranbrook Academy in Michigan and a BFA from the Cooper Union, as well as studying at The Slade School of Art in London. She lives and works in New York City and the Hudson Valley, she is an educator at DIA and Pratt Institute.
Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan is the inaugural George R.R. Martin Chair in Storytelling at the Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications at Northwestern University. She is a New York-based Singaporean novelist, journalist, and the author of the novel “Sarong Party Girls” (William Morrow, 2016) and the memoir “A Tiger In The Kitchen” (Hyperion, 2011). Both books were international bestsellers. She is the co-creator and co-editor of “Anonymous Sex” (Scribner Books, 2022) and editor of the anthology “Singapore Noir” (Akashic Books, 2014). The National Arts Council of Singapore has awarded her multiple grants in support of her writing. She was a staff writer at the Wall Street Journal, In Style magazine and the Baltimore Sun. Her stories have also appeared in The New York Times, The Paris Review, Times Literary Supplement, The Washington Post, Bon Appetit, Chicago Tribune and The (Singapore) Straits Times among other places. Born and raised in Singapore, she crossed the ocean at age 18 to go to Northwestern University in Evanston, Ill.
Literature, music, social issues, and the African American experience of living in North America are the sources that shape the art practice of the artist known as ransome. In the making of abstract and figurative images he uses materials that are imbued with social, ancestral, economic, and historical language that precedes their artistic application. His colors, patterns, marks, and manipulation of space often recall the quilts created by the woman of Gee’s Bend, who are a major influence. While spontaneity is a large part of his making, there is also space for thoughtful observation in the ways in which acrylic paints, combined with an array of found, made, and purchased papers are arranged together to speak of the struggles and hope, pain and joy, and the soul of black folks in community.
Ransome was born and raised in an all-Black neighborhood in the small town of Rich Square, North Carolina called “The Hill.” Those early years were infused with music—soul, R&B, gospel, jazz and blues flowed from neighbors’ homes, churches, and the cars driving down the Hill’s dirt road.
As a teenager he moved to Bergenfield, New Jersey. Here the sampled sounds of rap music, with its remixing and recomposing beats became a compelling force in his practice. To paint and collage on the same surface, applying the similar spontaneity used by hip hop deejays and the resourcefulness of rural quilters, repurposing what is at hand, assembling, collaging, and creating became natural to his making. While made of the energy of contemporary culture, his work asks us to consider how the small and overlooked—or erased—details of culture and geography tell the stories and history of African Americans which is the history of all North Americas.
Ransome graduated from Pratt Institute and retired as a tenured professor from the School of Visual Performing Arts at Syracuse University to pursue a full-time studio art career. He received his MFA in Studio Arts from Lesley University.
Ransome has solo and group exhibitions at numerous museums across the country including The Weatherspoon Art Museum in Greensboro, NC, Center for Maine Contemporary Art in Maine, the Contemporary Art Museum of Raleigh, NC, the University of New Hampshire, the Katonah Museum of Art in New York, The Sigal Museum in Easton, PA, The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) Museum of Art in Winston-Salem, NC, and the Visual Art Center of New Jersey.
A 2022 recipient of the Pollock Krasner Grant. Other awards include the Hudson Valley Artist Purchase Award from the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art in New Paltz, New York. Two recent residencies, The Gibbes Museums which includes a solo exhibit in late 2023 and a residency for the 2023/24 season at The Studios of Key West.
Becca McCharen (they/she) is a social practice artist and fashion designer trained as an architect. Their work creatively reimagines sustainable futures, climate optimism and celebrates the body as a site for collective social action and personal autonomy. She studied at the University of Virginia School of Architecture and is based in Miami, FL.
McCharen was awarded the Smithsonian National Design Award in 2021, was recognized by Forbes 30 under 30 “People Who Are Reinventing the World” and was honored in the OUT 100 as one of the LGBTQ’s communities’ brightest voices. Their work has been profiled in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Vogue and Elle. Collaborations include Beyonce, Intel, Disney, Reebok, MAC and MIT.
She gave a TED Talk on inclusive design, and has spoken at SXSW, Harvard, Parsons, MIT, CFDA, Pratt, Fashion Institute of Technology and Tulane. She has been an artist-in-residence at MASS MoCA and Blue Mountain Center, NY. McCharen curated ‘Queer Joy’ at the MoMA PS1 and her work was recently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Scott Ponemone has been exhibiting his artwork for over 40 years. His principal medium is watercolor because he’s enthralled with the luminous quality of the medium. His work focuses on what is it like to be human. This has been expressed since 2009 first with an exploration of hands at work (since the dexterity of our hands has helped defined our capabilities as humans), then the arms of his subjects and the objects the subjects hold above their heads that help define who they are and what they do, and since 2017 whole portraits of pairs of strangers who meet the viewers of their portraits eye to eye. During his career he has had 25 one-person exhibitions and has been awarded residencies in four countries as well as in the U.S. His most recent awards include 2019 Maryland Individual Artist Award; best of show at the 4th Biennial Regional Juried Art Exhibition, University of Maryland Global Campus; and election to signature status of the National Watercolor Society, the Watercolor Honor Society and the Baltimore Watercolor Society.
Ariel Delgado Dixon was born and raised in Trenton, New Jersey. Her first novel, Don’t Say We Didn’t Warn You, was published by Random House in 2022, while her second novel, Sourland, is also forthcoming from Random House. Her writing has appeared in O: The Oprah Magazine, Kenyon Review, The Idaho Review, Library of America, and elsewhere. She lives in Philadelphia and works in farming.
Allegra Hyde is the author of the story collection THE LAST CATASTROPHE, which was an Editors’ Choice selection at The New York Times. Her debut novel ELEUTHERIA was named a “Best Book of 2022” by The New Yorker and shortlisted for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Prize. Her first story collection, OF THIS NEW WORLD, won the John Simmons Short Fiction Award. Hyde’s stories, essays, and humor pieces have appeared in The New Yorker, Harper’s Magazine, BOMB, and other venues. She has received four Pushcart Prizes and her work has been anthologized in Best American Travel Writing, Best of the Net, and Best Small Fictions. She currently teaches creative writing at Oberlin College.
Timothy Goldkin has the intention of marrying fine art and commercial art. With a background in printmaking and alternative photographic processes, Timothy has innovated the historical cyanotype process into a larger format using photographic negatives as a base. His time spent with graffiti artists across the country has led him to expand upon the uses of the traditional wheat-paste process to create beautiful and unique pieces. Timothy has a passion for altering spaces through the creation of massive wall pieces that are impactful, boundary-pushing, and completely unique.
The artist’s experiences living out of a backpack as he traveled across the United States via freight train, hitch hiking, sailing and rubber tramping have inspired him to produce work that situates the viewer in a sense of place, a state of adventure, and a feeling of freedom. He believes in the power of history, interpersonal connection, and the kinship between person and place, as a means for collective growth and transcendence of the digitization that often consumes much of our everyday attention. Timothy’s work is influenced by both a love of travel and a reverence of home.
Vocalist/composer Derek Lassiter has been a mainstay in the Bay Area arts scene for nearly three decades. His music fuses elements of soul, jazz, R&B and gospel to render a surprisingly joyful account of the journey through dark days that ultimately deliver us back into the light.
His critically acclaimed albums and live performances have featured Bay Area heavyweights including pianist Tammy Hall, producer/percussionist PC Muñoz, composer/pianist Art Khu, and jazz legend Lady Mem’fis. He has been interviewed and played live on local radio and profiled in Julian C. R. Okwu’s book Face Forward: Young African American Men in a Critical Age.
Lassiter’s acclaimed 2006 EP Witness draws upon his own journey through a five-year period that left him spiritually and emotionally disconnected from the creative outlets that previously sustained, nourished, and inspired him: no music, writing, acting or photography. The collection of earthy, organic-soul songs garnered attention around the globe and ushered in a flurry of performing activity. However, his return-to-form was interrupted by a much more dire circumstance when Lassiter was hospitalized with life-threatening pneumonia in 2008. If given a chance to return to singing, he vowed to release the music that lay inside him.
Music Outside in 2016 was the resulting second album, premised on capturing and synthesizing the disparate influences from his early years that shaped his musical style.
Born in the South Bronx, Lassiter was exposed to soul and 60’s folk music while moving around the neighborhoods of that New York City borough in his first decade of life. Just before turning 12, he moved to the idyllic suburbs of Pennsylvania to live with his maternal grandmother, who took care of Derek and his siblings until becoming gravely ill. While she introduced him to Gospel at church andCountry/Western on her kitchen radio, it was Lassiter’s teen years in the foster-home system that further exposed him to an ever-increasing range of musical genres.After putting himself through college, Lassiter eventually settled in San Francisco, where he fronted several bands in the early 90’s and played many of the local clubs, including Slim’s, Great American Music Hall, Cafe du Nord and numerous intimate venues and private events. In 2010 he moved to Oakland to further explore variety int he art and music scene.
Jeffrey Colvin was born and raised in Alabama and now lives in New York. His debut novel, Africaville (Amistad/HarperCollins, 2019), received a Legacy Award from the Hurston/Wright Foundation, and was named a best book by Vogue and the CBC. His short fiction and essays have appeared in Narrative Magazine, Painted Bride Quarterly, Brooklyn Rail, The Millions, Rain Taxi and elsewhere. He has received fellowships and residencies from Virginia Center for Creative Arts (VCCA), Vermont Studio Center, Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, Hambidge Center, Aspen Words, Blue Mountain Center, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, and others. He holds an M.F.A. from Columbia University and has taught writing workshops at numerous community-based organizations. He was the 2021 Hodson Trust Fellow at Brown University and Washington College.
Dana Al Rashid is an architect and visual artist from Kuwait. She has created a unique style coined ‘Modern Miniatures’ in which she uses a modernized version of the ancient Persian miniature style to tackle contemporary and relevant topics. Her artwork also focuses on social issues, with historic building preservation, consumerism, low income expat workers, and the state of the world during the pandemic as common themes. Her artwork has a time traveling quality to it, with heavy referencing from ancient metaphysical manuscripts.
The artwork has been well received, having her own solo digital art gallery at the Khaleeji Art Museum, as well as being published in Vogue, Cosmopolitan, Art & Object, and Kuwait times to name a few. She recently had a gallery concluding her residency stay at the Promenade Culture Center. She continues to explore and expand incorporating different themes and techniques into her artwork.
Dana also has a strong background in journalism. Her work is regularly published in local, regional, as well as international newspapers, magazines, and online publications. A regular writer in Al Jarida Newspaper, Sekka magazine and Unootha, as well as various contributions in Sail magazine, Sumou, Kuwait Times, Jeem, Madswirl, and many others. Dana tackles the social issues faced daily with a philosophical bent, be it in article or poetry form. She is bilingual and published work in both Arabic and English.
Mark Powell is the author of eight novels, including Small Treasons (Gallery/Simon and Schuster 2017)–a SIBA Okra Pick, and a Southern Living Best Book of the Year–and Hurricane Season (forthcoming in the fall of 2023). He has received fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Breadloaf and Sewanee Writers’ Conferences, and twice from the Fulbright Foundation to Slovakia and Romania. In 2009, he received the Chaffin Award for contributions to Appalachian literature. He has written about Southern culture and music for the Oxford American, the war in Ukraine for The Daily Beast, and his dog for Garden & Gun. He holds degrees from the Citadel, the University of South Carolina, and Yale Divinity School, and directs the creative writing program at Appalachian State University.
From the intense, diverse energy of New York, Debra Hill creates powerful narrative works drawn from her imagination. Her work is bold, whimsical, colorful and symbolic. Her color palette is inspired by the intense light of the southern hemisphere of her youth. Under vivid blue skies, nature’s colors pulsate with life. She is drawn to the unnatural juxtaposition of images and fantasy. Whimsy is often expressed through symbolic use of native birds. If studied closer these become the energy, the clue as to the tone of the narrative. Debra uses the exotic floral natives, like the Waratah, some times morphed with the human form to create haunting yet striking images.
Originally from Sydney, Australia, she grew up a bare foot youth exploring nature in all its’ forms. A pencil or paintbrush her voice.
Debra then went on to study life drawing and portraiture at The Paddington Art School in Sydney. Her fascination with the figure combined with her passion for dance led to dynamic figurative pieces where the subject almost leaps off the canvas. Executed in oil on canvas her stimulating symbolic paintings are rich with vibrant color.
Early in her career she took to travel overseas, settling for a year in Mexico to devote to her art. Around that time her work became infused with an almost decorative carnival quality. This led to paintings now held in private collections internationally.
Paloma Vianey is an interdisciplinary artist from Ciudad Juárez, Mexico who currently lives and works in Washington D.C. She earned a BA in Art History from The University of Texas at El Paso and an MFA from Cornell University. She has received grants from the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation (2020, 2021, 2023), and the National Fund of the Arts in Mexico (2020). Vianey received a scholarship from the Institute of Mexicans in the Exterior (2018), was awarded the Municipal Youth Award in Ciudad Juárez, Mexico (2019), and the John Hartell Graduate Award at Cornell University (2021).
In 2018 Vianey realized a large-scale public art installation (22 ft x 70 ft) on the Americas-Cordova International Bridge along the U.S.-Mexico border. From 2021 to 2022 she was an Artist-in-Residence at the Antonio Gala Foundation in Cordoba, Spain. She was selected to be part of the 2024 Border Biennial at El Paso Museum of Art. Vianey has exhibited her work at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum, the Antonio Gala Foundation, Amos Eno Gallery, Jack Hanley Gallery, the Mexican Consulate at El Paso Texas, El Paso Museum of Art, The Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Center for the Visual Arts, and the Archeology and History Museum of El Chamizal. She currently teaches Painting and Drawing at George Mason University.
Rachael Allen is a scientist by day and kid lit author by night. She is also the winner of the 2019 Georgia Young Adult Author of the Year award, and her books include Harley Quinn: Ravenous (RHCB ‘23), Harley Quinn: Reckoning, 17 First Kisses, The Revenge Playbook, The Summer of Impossibilities, and A Taxonomy of Love, which was a Junior Library Guild selection and a 2018 Book All Young Georgians Should Read. Rachael lives in Atlanta, GA with her two children and two dire wolves.
Denise Burge has been a professor of Art at The University of Cincinnati since 1992. She works in a variety of media, including drawing, film, installation, painting, and quiltmaking. Her fiber-based work has been widely commissioned and collected; and was included in two Quilt National exhibitions. She has been awarded multiple Ohio Arts Council grants, as well as a nationally-competitive Joan Mitchell Foundation award (an artist must be nominated for this award. She has also carried out competitive residencies at the Headlands Center for the Arts, the Fine Art Work Center in Provincetown, and the Joan Mitchell Center in New Orleans. From 2006 to the present, she has been creating mixed-media video installations with Lisa Siders and Jenny Ustick under the name Maidens of the Cosmic Body Running; their most recent project was a year-long 2022 FotoFocus-funded residency at the Summit Hotel in Cincinnati. Burge is currently collaborating with Evan Carroll and Rob Jefferson on a graphic novel about Lafcadio Hearn. In 2022, a $10,000 research grant from the University of Cincinnati funded a trip to Japan to research Hearn. The first serial installment of the graphic novel is planned for release in 2025.
Ajuan Mance is a Professor of African American literature at Mills College in Oakland, California. A lifelong artist and writer, Ajuan has participated in solo and group exhibitions as well as comic and zine fests, from the Bay Area to Brooklyn. In her art, illustration, and comics, Ajuan uses humor and bright colors to explore race, gender, power, and the people and places in which they intersect. Her work has appeared in a number of digital and print media outlets, including, most recently, The Women’s Review of Books, Blavity.com, BET.com, Transition Magazine, Buzzfeed.com, KQED.org, the San Francisco Chronicle, NYTimes.com, KPIX News, and Publisher’s Weekly.
Marianne Vogel (b. 1956 in Philadelphia, PA) is a teaching fiber artist, affiliated with Ringling College of Art & Design’s Englewood Art Center whose 2-and 3-D works combine various forms of textiles and other, mostly natural, fibers. She trusts her intuition, as most artists do, to build patterned layers of mixed fiber materials with her own mark-making techniques to convey an expressive visual message. Vogel’s interest in fiber art began in college at Tyler School of Art, under the tutelage of acclaimed artist and weaving professor, Adela Akers. From exercises in the framework of traditional interlaced weaving methods to three-dimensional off-the-wall practices, Akers’ influence guided and strengthened her creative philosophy. After graduating with a BFA, she had a successful career in graphic design and later as an assistant art director with a PR firm, however, she never lost her interest in fiber design. She reignited her love of fibers and textiles in mid-life and hasn’t looked back.
Now located in Southwest Florida for over twenty years, Vogel finds find an abundance of curious natural materials that fuel her aesthetic. New interest includes continuing development of her wood-footed vessels using wet-felted wool techniques in combination with linen, hemp and sable palm fibers. Her works in fiber have been exhibited (and some awarded) in Philadelphia, PA and in Bradenton, Englewood, Saint Pete, Sarasota, Key West and Venice, FL.
Garrard Conley is the New York Times bestselling author of the memoir Boy Erased as well as the creator and co-producer of the podcastUnErased: The History of Conversion Therapy in America. His work has been published by The New York Times, Oxford American, TIME and Virginia Quarterly Review, among others. Conley is a graduate of Brooklyn College’s MFA program, where he was a Truman Capote Fellow specializing in fiction. He is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing at Kennesaw State University. His second book, a novel, All the World Beside, will release from Riverhead/Penguin on March 26, 2024.
Tina Fakhrid-Deen is an award-winning playwright and educator. She is the author of Let’s Get This Straight: The Ultimate Handbook for Youth with LGBTQ Parents. As a result of her LGBTQ activism, she won the Windy City Times 30 Under 30 Award and COLAGE’s Outstanding Achievement Award. Her Jeff-recommended play, Dandelions, premiered spring 2023 through MPAACT at the Greenhouse Theater. Her Jeff-awarded play, Pulled Punches, was developed through the Women’s Theatre Alliance of Chicago and was premiered by MPAACT in 2022 at the Greenhouse Theater. In 2022, Fakhrid-Deen won Definition Theater’s Amplify Two Series, a two-year play commission, for her satirical play-in-progress, Black Bone. In 2021, she wrote and directed her first children’s podcast play, Sankofa: A Journey into Bronzeville’s Poppin’ Past for the Chicago Children’s Theatre and the Chicago Park District. Fakhrid-Deen is a 2022 Fulbright-Hays Fellow (Ghana/Togo), 2020 MacDowell Fellow, 2018 Kimbilio Fellow, and VONA Fellow in Fiction and Playwriting (2011/2017). She is also the recipient of Oakton College’s 2018 Ray Hartstein Award for Outstanding Professional Excellence in Teaching, where she teaches writing.
Described by Classic FM as ‘one of today’s most exciting young composers’, British composer Rebecca Dale was the first female composer to sign to Universal Music’s Decca Classics label, and her debut orchestral album went to No. 1 in the UK Specialist Classical charts. As a concert composer her work has been performed and recorded by ensembles including the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, the Philharmonia, Welsh National Opera, Tenebrae, Voces8, soloists Steven Isserlis, Nicola Benedetti, Mari Samuelson and Angele Dubeau. She was commissioned to write the Church of England’s first Christmas single, and in 2023 her music performed at the Scottish service for the King’s coronation, and concerts of her work for choir and orchestra across the Netherlands including the Royal Concertgebouw. She also composes for screen, nominated for best original music in feature film at the Music & Sound Awards. She is an alumna of the MacDowell Colony, the Sundance Composers Lab and the ASCAP Film Scoring Workshop, and has judged for the Royal Television Society Awards and Ivor Novellos.
Nonney Oddlokken’s life was greatly colored and shaped by her agoraphobic aunt who raised her with her working class mother. Oddlokken states, “Unlike my mother, a cafeteria waitress, my aunt was unable to leave the house due to her mental illness. However, what could have been a catastrophic environment was turned into a world of magical realism. So colorful was my childhood, that it took me until the age of seven to realize how unique and peculiar our household was My entire childhood was filled with her daily magical creations: baby birds leaving Juicy Fruit gum at the windowsill, voodoo spells, a child named Toots that lived in the huge pear tree outside our door. Life was filled with magic and wonder… but secrets.”
It’s with the mixture of Oddlokken’s own childhood “fables,” Catholic references, Cajun folklore, New Orleans Voodoo and use of only the indigenous landscapes of Louisiana swamps and bayous and its flora and fauna, she created these stand alone art pieces that also piece together a larger Louisiana narrative entitled “Tiny, Little Fables.”
To best express Oddlokken’s vision, she created her own fiber art technique comprised of handmade paper substrates, stitched collage elements, finished with hundreds of yards of hand-stitched gold thread embellishments. The encircled eye symbolizes the enchanted people and creatures that live among us.
Lavett Ballard is a female mixed media visual artist, art historian, curator and author. She holds a dual Bachelor’s in Studio Art and Art History with a minor in Museum Studies from Rutgers University- Camden and an MFA in Studio Art from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia.
Ballard’s art has been commissioned as a cover twice for Time Magazine first in March 2020 for their special multi cover edition for the 100th anniversary of Women’s Suffrage and in February 2023 for a cover and interior art for Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel Wilkerson’s essay about her book CASTE: Origins of our Discontent. Among her other accolades is a Yaddo Fellow Artist residency in 2021, in 2023 a NJ State Arts Council Individual Artist Fellowship, and in 2018 Pew fellowship nomination. Ballard’s artwork has been exhibited both nationally and internationally and been used in film, television, and literary publications. Along with being acquired by many private and public institutional collections nationally and internationally.
Ballard views her art as a re-imagined visual narrative of people of African descent. Her use of mixed media collaged layered imagery reflects social issues affecting primarily Black women’s stories within a historical context. These photos are deconstructed and layered on reclaimed large and small aged wood fences. The use of fences is a symbolic reference to how fences keep people in and out, just as racial and gender identities can do the same socially.
Jennifer Basile (b. 1973, Manhasset, NY) earned her Master of Fine Arts in Painting & Printmaking at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (1999), and her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting & Printmaking at the University of Miami (1996). She is in her 20th year as an art educator at Miami-Dade College. Basile’s love for the environment is rooted in her childhood when she discovered its avenues of escapism and meditation. Throughout her extensive travels and perfected talent, she has combined this passion with the long sought-after tradition of landscape renderings which she adopted and transformed through her printing practice. In time, she has developed a narrative around advocacy and awareness using her art as a platform to discuss the pertinent issues affecting the world we live in.
Jennifer Basile has been represented by LnS Gallery since 2017 and has presented major solo exhibitions including The Power of Print: Iconic Images of the American Landscape (April 27 – August 3, 2019) and Lasting Impressions: A Cessation of Existence (September 16 – November 19, 2022). She has also been the recipient of numerous grants, residency, and public art projects including Disappearing Treasures (2021), viewable at the Underline at Brickell Metrorail Station (Miami, FL).
Stephen Grossman is a visual artist working primarily in sculpture, drawing and painting in New Haven, CT. He was trained as an architect and received his BArch from The Cooper Union in 1986. His work focuses on the movement of the human body in relationship to architectural space. He has been exhibited at The Drawing Center, Aldrich Museum, Real Art Ways, Artspace New Haven, New York Studio School Dumbo Sculpture Studio, Weir Farm Trust Gallery, Schweinfurth Art Center, Mt Ida College, Giampietro Gallery, Kenise Barnes Fine Arts, Garage gallery, Ejecta Projects and other venues. In 2023 he was an artist in residence as a fellow at the Ballinglen Foundation in Ballycastle, Ireland. In 2020 he was an artist in residence at Streamways in Rockingham, VT. In 2006 he was a visiting artist at the Weir Farm Historic Trust. In 2002 he received an NEA grant for his public art project “Fencing”. He has taught visual arts at The University of New Haven and Southern Connecticut State University. In addition, he has curated exhibitions at the (untitled)Space gallery in New Haven including a Sol LeWitt wall drawing installation in 2001. He served on the board of Artspace New Haven from 2002 to 2009 and was president of the board from 2004 to 2007.
Dianne Hebbert is a Nicaraguan-American artist based in New York. She works primarily in painting, printmaking and installation art. As a Miami native she attended New World School of the Arts before she earned her BFA in Painting and Drawing from Purchase College and her MFA in Printmaking from Brooklyn College. Hebbert is a recipient of the Vermont Studio Center fellowship and residency, Visual Muze Governors Island residency with the West Harlem Art Fund, Trestle Art Space residency in Brooklyn, and a residency with Constance Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts. She was selected as a Smack Mellon Hot Pick Artist in 2017 and an Emerging Leader of New York Arts 2016-2017 fellow. In the fall of 2019 she created an installation at Fordham Plaza in the Bronx for the Department of Transportation and Chashama. Her solo exhibitions include Hunter Project Space and the Old Stone House of Brooklyn. Hebbert, and is currently a Chashama Space to Connect artist.
Kristen Arnett is the queer author of With Teeth: A Novel (Riverhead Books, 2021) which was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in fiction and the New York Times bestselling debut novel Mostly Dead Things (Tin House, 2019) which was also a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in fiction and was shortlisted for the VCU Cabell First Novelist Award. She was awarded a Shearing Fellowship at Black Mountain Institute, has held residencies at Ragdale Foundation, Vermont Studio Center, and the Millay Colony, and was longlisted for the Joyce Carol Oates Prize recognizing mid-career writers of fiction. Her work has appeared at The New York Times, TIME, The Cut, Oprah Magazine, Guernica, Buzzfeed, McSweeneys, PBS Newshour, The Guardian, Salon, and elsewhere. Her next book (an untitled collection of short stories) will be published by Riverhead Books (Penguin Random House). She has a Masters in Library and Information Science from Florida State University and lives in Orlando, Florida.
Dionne Irving is originally from Toronto, Ontario. She is the author of the novel Quint (7.13 Books), and a short story collection The Islands (Catapult Books) which was shortlisted for the PEN/Faulkner and Hurston Wright Awards. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in Story, Boulevard, LitHub, Missouri Review, and New Delta Review, among other journals and magazines. She teaches in the University of Notre Dame Creative Writing Program and the Initiative on Race and Resilience.
Michael Shi has been recognized throughout his career with numerous international awards and exhibitions. His work has widely received critical acclaim. Michael Shi is an established photographer, who has been exploring the medium for almost three decades. Not only has he been awarded the First prize in PX3 (The Prix de la Photographie Paris), but he has also been recognized and awarded positions in IPA (International Photography Awards), FAPA (Fine Art Photography Award), and MIFA (Moscow International Foto Award).
In addition to this, Michael is the first photographer in the history of the illustrious Shanghai Symphony Hall to have a solo exhibition at this distinguished venue. He has also had a solo exhibition for his body of work in Long Island City, New York. Following on from this Michael’s photography has been showcased at prestigious group exhibitions around the globe including PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai, “The Chinese American Dream” in New York, as well as Dubai, France, Greece, Czech Republic, Prague, etc.
Alongside his photographic practice, Michael is also the Co-Founder of Sunrise Art Group, an art education company that has trained over 2,000 students all over China.
Ana Dopico was born in Cuba, grew up in Miami, and has lived and worked in New York City for over thirty years. She is a comparative scholar of the Americas, Cuba, the Caribbean, and the Global South. Since 2020, she has been Director of the Hemispheric Institute at NYU, a research institute and digital library dedicated to performance, scholarship, activism, and restorative archival practices in the Americas. She is Associate Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at New York University (NYU).
Professor Dopico works on the cultural and intellectual history of the American hemisphere. She has published, lectured and shared public scholarship on the novel; art and Latin American politics; political insurgency in the Americas and the Global South; Latinxs and American identity; José Martí, the Cuban revolution, Cuban national and diasporic imaginaries, photography, empire, and political emotion; and the visual and cultural imaginaries of the Caribbean and of Miami. In her book project, Cubanologies, Altered States of the Nation, Professor Dopico examines the ‘imagined disunity’ of the nation revealed by 20th century Cuban culture, wherein altered political states fracture the unifying political and racial myths of cubanidad. Her second book project, Cold Civil Wars: Black and Cuban Miami, 1960-2000 takes up the volatile cultural history of race politics, civil rights, anti-blackness, and segregation in Miami, from the arrival of Cubans to Jim Crow Miami through the Elián González affair. Professor Dopico’s essays and cultural journalism on the Cuban present have been published and translated in print media and literary journals, including The New York Times, NACLA, Al Adab (Arabic), L’Avenc (Catalan) and in the digital project Bridges to/from Cuba. She has also appeared in The New Yorker, on the BBC and BBC World Service, and National Public Radio. Her blog CubaCargo/Cult chronicled the popular and psychic resonance of events between the Obama opening to Cuba and the death of Fidel Castro.
Christine Fifer’s boundless energy and optimism mobilized a core group of volunteers to clear homes and properties in the Lower Keys of debris from Hurricane Irma. Working through grueling heat and dangerous conditions, they brought hope to many and directed their energies particularly to getting fellow artists back on their feet. Christine is a painter, costume artist, and former Studio Artist at The Studios of Key West. She has most recently exhibited in the Sanger Gallery in January 2021.
Gary Teplitsky and Olga Manosalvas are the owners of Baby’s Coffee on Big Pine Key. Despite significant damage to their own business, they opened their doors shortly after Hurricane Irma and made their entire inventory free to all. Baby’s quickly became a lifeline and a rallying point for residents – a vital distribution point for supplies, hot meals and other services donated from all over the Keys and beyond. Olga is an accomplished painter and sculptor who has exhibited at The Studios of Key West.
Along with her colleague Layla Barr, Margit Bisztray spearheaded a group of volunteers cooking and delivering hundreds upon hundreds of fresh, healthy meals to residents of the Lower Keys who were faced with rebuilding their homes and businesses due to Hurricane Irma. An entirely grass roots effort, Nourishing the Lower Keys quickly attracted a dedicated corps of volunteers and over $28,000 of contributions through a GoFundme campaign to continue buying groceries. Margit is a writer, chef and journalist.
Emma J Starr is one of the island’s most beloved artists. Over the spring and summer she had the inspiration to mobilize a group of artists to create new works on roofing tiles that she’d collected, and sell them through a pair of auctions called “Under One Roof.” The work was prominently displayed in a Duval Street storefront window thanks to landlord Ken Silverman, and the auctions were a rousing success, with virtually every piece sold, with 100% of the proceeds going back into the community. All told, Under One Roof raised $10,000 for the participating artists, and roughly $8,500 each to the Sister Season Fund and the Florida Keys Council of the Arts’ Audubon House Artists’ Fund, resulting in 17 grants to Monroe County artists who were financially impacted by the pandemic.
Gary Marion is better known as Sushi, the world-famous drag queen who lights up the stage at 801 Bourbon, and is dropped from a shoe every New Year’s on Duval Street. As a performer, Gary immediately realized the pandemic posed an existential threat to Key West’s vibrant drag community, and took action. With formidable sewing skills honed in backstage dressing rooms and costume studios, he rallied a team of “his girls” to begin sewing and selling face masks to help make ends meet. Some 10,000 masks later, and after appearances on NBC, CNN and other national media, Gary has become not just a symbol of the importance of masks to keeping us all healthy, and of the singular plight of working performers, but of Key West’s resilience and ingenuity.
Brad Lutz is a commercial lender for First State Bank of the Florida Keys, so perhaps not the first person you might think would receive an award from an arts organization. But Brad was also the bank’s point person for the federal Paycheck Protection Program, and as such found himself a calming presence at the center of a storm of anxiety and uncertainty in the pandemic’s early days. A lending and grant program for small businesses and independent contractors, the PPP had limited funds, and was first come first serve, so from the outset there was a clear sense of urgency. Brad understood that the economic survival of the roughly 1,000 businesses he was helping, including dozens of the island’s arts nonprofits and artist-entrepreneurs, depended on him.
From 2007 until her recent retirement in 2022, Lauren McAloon served as the gallery and facilities manager of The Studios of Key West. The title is deceptively simple, as any title would be, for all the passion, joy, and commitment she brought to the position.
Lauren brings patience, selflessness, and a keen attention to detail to everything she does. But most of all, she helps us understand we all have an artist inside us and that
The Studios is a place that everyone can call home. She is extraordinary service personified. And for that reason The Studios of Key West is so pleased to present Lauren McAloon with The 2023 Studios Hero Award.
Stanley and Judith Zabar are native New Yorkers who now snowbird and spend their winters on Sugarloaf Key. Both are artists and art-lovers and are involved in numerous charitable organizations in Key West and New York. Stanley is Vice-President and house counsel for Zabar’s & Co. Inc located at the upper west-side of Manhattan.
image credit: Johnny White
Bill and Ann Lorraine have been a part of the creative fabric of Key West since 1975. Ann Lorraine’s paintings and drawings have been exhibited in all over the world. Her first Key West one-woman show was at East Martello Museum in 1975, and her show “Window Wonderlands & Fantasy Floats – 23 years of legendary floats, windows and exotic creations.” was a hit of The Studios of Key West’s exhibition season in 2012. She is well-known in Key West for her award-winning Fantasy Fest costumes and giant animated floats and for her work as window designer for Fast Buck Freddie’s department store on Duval Street.
Bill Lorraine arrived in Key West has been involved in the Key West arts community as a musician and composer, writer and sculptor. His music compositions have been performed by the Key West Symphony Orchestra, the Old Havana Symphony Orchestra and the Keys Chorale. Bill was editor and publisher of a quarterly art magazine, “The Key West Arts Review” in the 1980s. He was assistant managing editor for the Key West Citizen newspaper for 2 years. He worked as a freelance writer for many Keys newspapers and magazines. As a stone sculptor, Bill uses the old cornerstones from the Victorian-style houses in Key West. The stone is called Miami Oolite, an indigenous stone from south Florida. Bill’s sculptures can be seen at the sculpture garden at the East Martello Museum, at the West Martello Fort, home of the Key West Garden Club, and in his studio on Catherine Street.
image credit: Johnny White
Anne McKee has been a leader in charitable activities benefiting the local arts for over forty years. She states that her main concern is the individual artist. In the mid-1990s, with this target in mind, Anne founded the Anne McKee Artists Fund. Anne and the Fund are still going strong, having raised over a quarter million dollars to give in grants to support local artists. The Studios of Key West is proud to host the annual Anne McKee auction, where aficionados bid on contemporary and classic works to raise proceeds which help fund the vital grant program for Keys artists.
image credit: Anne McKee Artists Fund
A leader and force for social consciousness in this community, and a founding board member of the Anne McKee Artists Fund as well as The Studios of Key West, John Martini moved to Key West nearly forty years ago. As one of the original artists who had studio space in Truman Annex, Martini was a pioneer of the early art scene on the island. He opened Lucky Street Gallery at its original location on Margaret Street in the early 80s, and began representing local artists, curating work from around the country, and introducing “outsider art” to Key West. Eventually, he purchased and refurbished the iconic movie theater on Emma Street where he still works today.
image credit: Johnny White
Judy Blume is one of America’s most beloved authors and one of its most vigilant and committed anti-censorship activists. She has been a funny and knowing voice for children and adolescents for nearly five decades. Blume’s books have sold more than 85 million copies in 32 languages. She works with National Coalition Against Censorship to support teachers and librarians committed to keeping all books accessible.
Cooper, a Magna Cum Laude graduate of Harvard Law School and member of the Law Review, was a professor of Taxation and Civil Rights Law at Columbia University for 20 years. Active in civil rights policy and litigation in the 1960s and 1970s, and editor of textbooks on Equal Employment and Poverty Law, he spent 1979 in South Africa where he helped establish the Legal Resources Centre, an anti-apartheid legal aid program. Also a successful writer, Cooper focused on historic true crime.
Closer to home, Blume and Cooper are at the center of philanthropic life in Key West. Cooper, an independent film enthusiast, was the driving force behind the development of the nonprofit Tropic Cinema which Florida Monthly has named “Best Florida Cinema.”
Blume’s passion for books led her to become a board member of Key West Literary Seminar, a nonprofit organization that supports young writers, librarians and teachers. In 2016, she and Cooper opened Books & Books @ The Studios, a full service, nonprofit bookstore in an Old Town arts complex. Enhancing Key West’s rich literary heritage, Books & Books hosts readings, promotes local authors and encourages children to love reading. Blume and Cooper can be found most days working at the bustling bookstore.
image credit: Rob O’Neal
Though Christopher Peterson is perhaps best known for his live show “Eyecons” which he’s performed at La-Te-Da since 2001, he is also a passionate advocate for community causes. His charitable efforts as a comedian, impersonator and master of ceremonies have benefitted many organizations over the past two decades including AIDS Help, Equality Florida, Special Olympics, Key West Business Guild, The Studios of Key West, Queen Mother Pageant, Royal Coronation and many others. He is tireless in his devotion to Key West and its motto of “One Human Family.” Peterson’s Key West roots run deep. He arrived in Key West in 1998 with his husband of 37 years, the late James Mill. His extraordinary talents were recognized immediately, and he has become a local legend as one of the foremost female impersonators who sing “live.” He’s known for his masterful characterizations of Marilyn Monroe, Madonna, Joan Rivers, Reba McEntire, Bette Midler, Tina Turner, Julie Andrews, Barbra Streisand, Liza Minnelli, Judy Garland, Cher, Bette Davis, Lucille Ball, Lady GaGa and others. In addition, his skills as a costume designer and fabricator are unparalleled, manifesting in both his stage performances and charitable work. He is featured in the award-winning documentary “We’re Funny That Way,” which detailed the first gay and lesbian comedy festival in Canada and was later released on Showtime, Cinemax and HBO.
image credit: Johnny White
Lynn Kaufelt, a third generation Japanese American, was born and raised in Los Angeles, CA. After marrying novelist David A. Kaufelt and giving birth to their son, Jackson, the family divided their time between Manhattan, Sag Harbor, Long Island, and Key West. Her love for the Keys is unmistakable from her tireless work and support for Monroe County arts and service organizations.
Ben and Helen Harrison have served as advocates and mentors to countless artists, writers, and musicians. In fact, over the past 35 years, Harrison Gallery has represented 172 artists and is widely recognized for the eclectic contemporary works exhibited inside its walls.
The Studios of Key West is grateful to Helen and Ben for all they’ve contributed to our community, helping to grow and preserve Key West’s reputation as an island of the arts.
We couldn’t be happier to announce Rosi Ware as the recipient of the 2024 Golden Mango Award! We can’t think of anyone who has been as active in the community as Rosi Ware has. She was Chair or President of the Key West Garden Club for over 20 years, worked tirelessly with the MARC House, an organization for physically and mentally challenged adults, and she was the first President of The Studios of Key West, overseeing the exponential growth those early years from small island art center to the thriving hub we are today. And to add even more, she has been a board member on the Community Foundation of the Florida Keys, an active advisor for Arts in Public Places, and a member of the personal advisory team to Mayor Teri Johnston. No wonder she was honored with “Humanitarian of the Year” in 2013 by the Red Cross. (photo by Mark Hedden)
For all the big wonderful ways that Tony Falcone has contributed to the community (Fast Buck Freddie’s, Fantasy Fest, saving the Strand sign, preserving the historic Key West Bight), he’s helped in a thousand quiet ways too. From supporting and encouraging artists to promoting a seemingly endless spirit of fun, from dedicating his time to community groups to working for a brighter future for the island while sustaining the things that count, Tony has been a fierce advocate for Key West. Passionate. Generous. Creative. And a whole lot of fun. There couldn’t be a person more deserving of the 2023 Golden Mango Award than Tony Falcone.
Monica Lopez De Victoria (b. 1980, Gainesville, FL, USA) is a multi-disciplinary artist and performer in Artistic Synchronized Swimming. For the past 20 years Monica has woven these two art forms together. Her colorful geometric aquatic videos, performances, and textiles investigate emotional volume in space and movement in the 4 dimensions.
Monica’s art work has been featured in international exhibitions such as “Uncertain States of America: American Art in the 3rd Millennium” curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist, Daniel Birnbaum, and Gunnar B. Kvaran, the Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, and PERFORMA in NYC by Roselee Goldberg. Her work has been seen and written about in L’Officiel magazine, The Guardian, STEP Inside Design, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Vogue Italia, and on the cover of ARTnews magazine.
Monica’s artwork also is a part of permanent collections of the Van Abbe Museum in the Netherlands and the Perez Art Museum Miami as well as other public and private collections. Monica has participated in residencies in Canada, New Zealand, Mexico, and the USA and has recently been supported by the Bauhaus Foundation for residency projects in Germany and South Korea.
artist photo by Thomas Meyer
William Kwamena-Poh is a native of Ghana, West Africa. He came to the United States in the early 1980’s and has resided in Alabama, Washington DC, Chicago, IL and has called Savannah, GA home since 1995. William is a self taught artist who paints with gouache, also known as opaque watercolor; the same medium used by the late, great African American artist, Jacob Lawrence and also experimented with by Dali, Picasso, and Klimt. According to Ralph Mayer’s Artist Handbook, “gouache paints are opaque and have (or should have) a total hiding power, and because they do not become progressively transparent with age as oil have a tendency to do…gouache has a brilliant light-reflecting quality of a different and distinct nature; it lies in the paint surface itself; its whiteness or brightness comes from the use of white pigments.”
This density and opacity of gouache allows William to capture and give the viewer a small window into his beautiful and wonder-filled homeland. “The sun’s strength is ever present, providing a colorful environment which is strongly reflected in Ghana culture and clothing,” says William. On his visits home he takes lots of photographs of places he grew up in and then sketches them freehand onto tracing paper so that he can best portray the natural and original feel of the scenes. He then transfers the sketched and corrected images onto heavier watercolor paper which permits him to implement numerous lifts and scrubbing to achieve the desired textures and emotional qualities of the scene.
William is internationally known for his series images of Women, Fisherman, Children and Market Scenes. His work is collected by private and well-known public figures throughout the United States and abroad (i.e., Academy Award winning Actor and Director, Forrest Whitaker; Actress, Angela Bassett; NBA Star, Tim Hardaway, just to name a few). Corporate collections include: Prudential, DuSable Museum, Disney Corp., Amoco Corp., Ford Motors, BET and Luster Products. Donated works include an original exclusively created and donated for auction to the Health and Educational Relief Organization (H.E.R.O.) for their 2014 annual fundraising gala in NY.
William’s father was a notable history professor who spent most of his teaching career at the University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana. He came to the U.S. in the early 1980’s as a Fulbright Scholar and taught African history at Talladega College. He brought young William with him, where he received his B.A. in Sociology. His father was aware of William’s budding artistic gift which was an inheritance from William’s grandfather, who was an art teacher. However, his father hoped William would follow in his footsteps sharing the history of his people…a wish William vehemently protested initially. But divine intervention saw his father’s wish, William’s protest and inherited gift through a slightly different lens. William walks in the footsteps of his ancestors and passionately shares the history of his people and homeland with his paint brush. This past February, during the week of William’s birthday he returned home for the ceremonial celebration of his father’s life and burial. While he was/is saddened by his father’s earthly departure, he found this trip home spiritually uplifting. He basked in the reminiscing of his father with family, friends, colleagues and town folk who paid such moving tributes that are forever etched in his heart. But also on this trip home, William celebrated his birthday and the life of his father, the man who had the great foresight to bring him to the U.S. for the opportunity to embrace, cultivate and share his gift of art with the masses.
Kat Ryals (b. 1988 in Jonesboro, AR) is an artist, entrepreneur, curator and photographer based in Brooklyn, NY. Her mixed media artworks blend photography, craft & sculpture processes, textile materials, and found object assemblage. Ryals received a BFA in Photography from Savannah College of Art and Design and an MFA in Visual Art & an Adv. Certificate in Museum Education from Brooklyn College. She has shown her work nationally, including recent two person shows at Elijah Wheat Showroom and Ortega Y Gasset Projects, in group exhibitions with NADA, The Every Woman Biennial, ChaShaMa, Ortega Y Gasset Projects, and The Wassaic Project, and in solo booths at SPRING/BREAK Art Show. Her first solo exhibition will take place at 550 Gallery in 2025. Ryals was a 2024 artist-in-residence at the Museum of Arts & Design in NYC and has also attended residencies and fellowships at The Wassaic Project, ChaNorth, The Peter Bullough Foundation, and the Vermont Studio Center. She is a 2022 Joseph Robert Foundation grant recipient, and has been featured in The New York Times, White Hot Magazine, artnet, Forbes, and Hyperallergic.
artist photo by Tiffany Smith
Andrew Russell is a writer and director who often creates new work for theatre often inspired by real-life events, including Stu for Silverton (Intiman Theatre); John Baxter is a Switch Hitter (Intiman Theatre); Full Gallop (The Old Globe); and Sara Porkalob’s The Dragon Cycle, featuring Dragon Lady (Intiman Theatre, American Repertory Theatre, Marin Theatre Company, Pittsburgh Public Theatre, The Geffen Playhouse), Dragon Mama (American Repertory Theatre, Diversionary Theatre, Williamstown Theatre Festival), and Dragon Baby. As Producing Artistic Director of the Tony Award–winning Intiman Theatre in Seattle from 2011-2017, Andrew played a critical role in reorganizing and reopening the theater after its closure in 2011. He is a graduate of Carnegie Mellon School of Drama. @heyheyandyk & www.andrew-russell.com
artist photo by JJ Geiger
Rehman’s first novel, Corona, was chosen by the NY Public Library as one of its favorite books about NYC. She’s co-editor of Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism and author of the collection poetry Marianna’s Beauty Salon. Her new novel, Roses, in the Mouth of a Lion, is a modern classic about what it means to be Muslim and queer from a Pakistani-American community in Queens. Roses was noted as a Best Book and Editor’s Choice by The New Yorker, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, People Magazine, Good Morning America, Ms. Magazine and more.
artist photo by Andrea Dobrich
Nancy Andrews makes films, drawings, music, books and objects. Andrews is a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellow in filmmaking. The Museum of Modern Art has collected six of her films, and her work is in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, and Franklin Furnace Archives. Her first feature film, The Strange Eyes of Dr. Myes, premiered at International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2015. This project was then developed as a web series when it was one of ten projects chosen to participate in Independent Film Project’s (IFP) Screen Forward Labs and subsequently, The Strange Eyes of Dr. Myes web series (YouTube) won the 2017 Gotham Award for Breakout Series (short).
The Museum of Modern Art, Pacific Film Archive, Anthology Film Archives, Flaherty Seminars, Ann Arbor Film Festival, Film on the Rocks- Thailand, and others have presented her work. Her work was featured in the 2013 deCordova Biennial and Portland Museum of Art Biennial and a solo show at Maine’s Center for Contemporary Art (2023).
She is a participant in Artists in Context’s “Artists’ Prospectus for the Nation” in the category of health, where she and other artists are bringing their aesthetic modes of inquiry to real-world situations. Andrews is on faculty at College of the Atlantic.
artist photo by Corrine de Korver
Vern Thiessen is one of Canada’s most produced playwrights. His plays have been seen across Canada, the UK, United States, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and Asia and been translated in five languages. His works include The Divners, Of Human Bondage, Vimy, Einstein’s Gift (GG winner), Lenin’s Embalmers (GG finalist), Apple, and Shakespeare’s Will. He has been produced off-Broadway five times. Vern is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Dora and Sterling awards for Outstanding New Play, The Carol Bolt Award, the Gwen Pharis Ringwood Award, the City of Edmonton Arts Achievement Award, the University of Alberta Alumni Award of Excellence, The Canadian Jewish Playwriting Competition, and the Governor General’s Literary Award for Drama, Canada’s highest honour for a playwright. He was also a finalist for the Siminovich Prize in Playwriting. Vern received his B.A. from the University of Winnipeg and an M.F.A. from the University of Alberta. He has srvedas president of both the Playwrights Guild of Canada and the Writers Guild of Alberta. For six years he served as Artistic Director of Workshop West Playwrights Theatre, one of Canada’s leading new play companies. He is married to acclaimed screenwriter and novelist Susie Moloney. www.vernthiessen.com
Sandra Jackson-Opoku is the author of the award-winning novel, The River Where Blood is Born and Hot Johnny and the Women Who Loved Him, an Essence Magazine Bestseller in Hardcover Fiction. Her fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and dramatic works are widely published and produced, appearing in Midnight & Indigo, Aunt Chloe, Another Chicago Magazine, New Daughters of Africa, Adi Magazine, Africa Risen: A New Era of Speculative Fiction, Adi Magazine, About Place Journal, the Chicago Humanities Festival, Lifeline Theatre, and others. She also coedited the anthology, Revise the Psalm: Work Celebrating the Writing of Gwendolyn Brooks.
Professional recognition includes a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, the American Library Association Black Caucus Award, the Chicago Esteemed Artist Award, a Lifeline Theatre BIPOC Adaptation Showcase, the Globe Soup Story Award, the Plentitudes Journal Prize, a Circle of Confusion Writers Discovery Fellowship, the Iceland Writers Retreat Alumni Award, a Pushcart Prize nomination, and the Casa África Purorrelato Prize. She placed as a quarterfinalist in the Stage 32 Springboard Diversity Screenwriting Competition and Roadmap Writers Short Story Competition.
Sandra Jackson-Opoku taught literature and writing at the University of Miami, Columbia College Chicago, and Chicago State University. She presents workshops, readings, and literary events worldwide.
Rachel de Cuba is an interdisciplinary artist raised in Sebastian, FL. She received her BFA in Studio Art from Flagler College in 2013 and her MFA in Digital Art from Indiana University in 2019. She received recognition for her thesis work with Grant awards from Indiana University. In 2019 she was invited to create new media artworks for the New Orleans Film Festival with support from the Andy Warhol Foundation. Her mixed media work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, as well as selected for publication in New American Paintings Southern 2022 Edition. Her work has been selected for Skyway 2024: A Contemporary Collaboration with an invitation to exhibit at The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida. Rachel de Cuba is currently an Assistant Professor of Visual Arts at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida.
Glenn Weiss is a public art critic, producer and artist currently studying the impact of architects, designers and digital fabricators on the world of public art. He has managed public art programs in Times Square, Seattle and Florida including Broward County and Jacksonville and wrote several public art master plans including Miami Beach. He served as an architecture critic for Seattle Magazine, Seattle Post-Intelligencer and ARCADE and blogged on public art for ArtsJournal.com. Special projects include the Delray Beach Cultural Loop with Rick Lowe, the Boynton Beach Kinetic Biennial, the Sealevel Rise Rauschenberg Residency, the Times Square Valentine Heart, Competition Diomede with Union of Soviet Architects, Adam’s House in Paradise and Homeless at Home. He professionally began in NYC as the co-director/curator for the Storefront for Art and Architecture and the curator for architecture at PS1 (now PS1/MoMA) after securing a Master of Architecture at Columbia University. He lives with his wife Maria Foladori Weiss in Delray Beach, Florida and teaches architecture theory at Florida Atlantic University. More details available at www.glennweiss.com and photography on instagram at @glennweiss
Mirena Suarez is a Cuban-born multimedia artist. She received her Bachelor in Arts degree with a minor in Printmaking from the Higher Institute of Arts in Havana. She moved to the United States and furthered her studies at Florida International University and NOVA Southeastern University. Her work reflects on the atemporal universal issues of identity, connection, and change. Through a variety of media that includes mainly tile mosaic, printmaking, drawing and photography, the artist explores philosophical questions associated with the concepts of loss, memory, conception, survival, fragility, perception of time, social relationships and dynamics, and emotional communication as originators of a visual dialogue that expresses the thoughts, worries, perceptions, and the constant internal fights that she experiences. This standpoint goes beyond being auto-referential and becomes a personal expression of the universal query that rules the dynamics inherent to modern life. Mirena has extensively exhibited her work around the world, and has been awarded numerous prizes and recognitions for her artwork. She currently works as a Visual Arts teacher for Miami-Dade County Public Schools. She lives and works in Miami, FL.
Karin Lin-Greenberg’s first story collection, Faulty Predictions, won the Flannery O’Connor Award for Short Fiction, and her second story collection, Vanished, won the Prairie Schooner Raz-Shumaker Book Prize. Her novel You Are Here was published by Counterpoint Press in 2023 and was an Indie Next pick from the American Booksellers Association. She’s received a Pushcart Prize and her stories have appeared in The Chicago Tribune, New England Review, The Southern Review, Story, Virginia Quarterly Review, and elsewhere. She teaches creative writing at Siena College in upstate New York and also teaches fiction in Carlow University’s low-residency MFA program.
Ruth Jeyaveeran uses textiles to examine a shared history of alienation and dissociation. In her soft sculptures and fiber-based installations, the boundaries between human, animal, and flora dissolve to tell a story of isolation, migration, and evolution.
Jeyaveeran’s first solo show, Soft Remains, was exhibited at Field Projects in 2023. Other notable exhibitions include Felt Experience at the Brattleboro Museum and Communion, a solo installation at Main Window Dumbo. Her work has been featured at Smack Mellon, ABC No Rio, Westbeth Gallery, The Yard, Ely Center of Contemporary Art, The Border Project, and Bronx Art Space, among others.
Jeyaveeran has been awarded residencies from the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Residency Unlimited, Lighthouse Works, Marble House Project, Jentel Foundation, Willapa Bay, Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, La Napoule Art Foundation, and PADA Studios. She is an Associate Professor of Textile Design at the Fashion Institute of Technology.
Nya Patrinos centers her art on giving voice to the voiceless, telling the stories of people and places that have been forgotten or left unexplored, and reinterpreting religious texts, myths, and folktales through a modern lens. As an artist and surface designer, Nya explores the realms of spirituality and identity, as well as cultural intersections. History, memory, light, wind, climate, temperature, the moon, and stars all form the tapestry of her artistry, weaving together to chronicle a cohesive story. Nya received an Emmy nomination in Art Direction/Set Decoration for the TV series Transparent. Website: www.nyapatrinos.com
Morgan Hill is a sculptor and jewelry designer whose work draws on a wide range of aesthetic and conceptual influences from 90’s pop culture, campy cinema, and costume design to her Southern, Christian upbringing and experiences as the only female child in an extended family of farmers in Arkansas. Her longing to break the silence surrounding culturally censured topics drives her to create work on themes of illness, abuse, depression, and suicide, as well as their counterparts of rebirth, healing, and empowerment. On the lighter side, her jewelry brand Bad Habits by Morgan Hill celebrates the pleasure of excess and indulged desires.
Morgan’s formal art education began at the Memphis College of Art where she focused on drawing. She also studied interior design and ultimately earned a BFA in Woodworking and Furniture Design from the University of Arkansas Little Rock. She was a Core Fellow at the Penland School of Craft from 2015-2017 where she worked with renowned artists and designers and studied techniques ranging from chainsaw carving to metalwork to neon tube bending. In 2018, she was an ITE Windgate Fellow at the Center for Art in Wood, and in 2022, she was awarded the Chrysalis Award by the James Renwick Alliance. Her work is carried in galleries across the US and internationally. She creates her work at Treats Studios in Spruce Pine, NC, a studio cooperative she co-founded.
Joy Castro is the award-winning author of the 2023 historical novel One Brilliant Flame, set amidst the nineteenth-century anticolonial Cuban insurgent community in Key West; Flight Risk, a finalist for a 2022 International Thriller Award; the post-Katrina New Orleans literary thrillers Hell or High Water, which received the Nebraska Book Award, and Nearer Home, which have both been published in France by Gallimard’s historic Série Noire; the story collection How Winter Began; the memoir The Truth Book; and the essay collection Island of Bones, which received the International Latino Book Award. She is also the editor of the craft anthology Family Trouble: Memoirists on the Hazards and Rewards of Revealing Family and the founding series editor of Machete, a series in innovative literary nonfiction at The Ohio State University Press. Her work has appeared in venues including Ploughshares, The Brooklyn Rail, Senses of Cinema, Salon, Gulf Coast, Brevity, Afro-Hispanic Review, Los Angeles Review of Books, and The New York Times Magazine. A former Writer-in-Residence at Vanderbilt University, she is currently the Willa Cather Professor of English and Ethnic Studies (Latinx Studies) at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where she directs the Institute for Ethnic Studies. With translator and co-editor Rhi Johnson, she edited the bilingual edition of the 1918 poetry collection Lágrimas y flores by Feliciano Castro, forthcoming in October, 2024 from the University Press of Florida.
Barbara Boissevain is a California based contemporary visual artist and photographer whose work focuses on the impact of human activity on the environment. Nature’s ability to regenerate and reclaim human altered landscapes is a central theme in her work.
Boissevain was born in Cleveland, Ohio and raised in Silicon Valley. She studied painting at Parsons School of Design in New York before immersing herself in photography, earning a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute and an MFA from San Jose State University.
Her work has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States and Europe, including Mémoire De L’Avenir, Paris; the Institute of Contemporary Art, San Jose, CA; Galerie Numero Cinq, Arles, France; and the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, Poland. From 2014 to 2021, she was an artist in residence with the City of Palo Alto’s Cubberley Artist Studio Program. In 2018 she was an artist in residence at Galerie Huit in Arles, France. She was invited to Atelier 11 for a solo residency through L’AiR Arts international residency program in Paris in July 2022. In the Summer of 2023 she was honored to participate in the Cycladic Arts Residency in Paros Greece.
In 2009 Boissevain published her first book, titled Children of the Rainbow, which documented the humanitarian challenges facing Quechua communities in Peru due to climate change. In 2021 her work was featured on NPR’s “The Picture Show” in conjunction with the UN Climate Change Summit in Glasgow, Scotland. She was also featured on the PBS News show Something Beautiful in 2022.
Her book “Salt of the Earth” was published by Kehrer Verlag in the Fall of 2023, and was chosen as one of Wired Magazine’s best photo books of 2023.
Boissevain’s photographs are in numerous public and private collections, including the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, Washington D.C.; the Google Corporate Art Collection, Sunnyvale, CA; and the De Pietri Artphilein Foundation, Lugano, Switzerland
R. Eric Thomas (he/him) is a national bestselling author, playwright, and screenwriter. His books include, Here for It, or How to Save Your Soul in America, which was featured as a Read with Jenna pick on NBC’s Today, the YA novel Kings of B’more, a 2023 American Library Association Stonewall Honor book, and Congratulations, the Best Is Over!, an instant USA Today Bestseller. He also writes the daily, nationally syndicated advice column “Asking Eric.” For his playwriting, Eric has won the Barrymore Award for Best New Play, the Dramatist Guild Lanford Wilson Award, the Lambda Literary Award, and was a finalist for the O’Neill Conference and the Steinberg/ATCA New Play Award. On screen, he wrote for the Peabody Award-winning series Dickinson on AppleTV+ and Better Things on FX and is currently developing multiple film and television projects, including a half hour comedy based on his memoir. Off the page, Eric is also the long-running host of The Moth StorySlams in Philadelphia, and has been heard multiple times on The Moth Radio Hour. Website: rericthomas.com
Lisa Morehouse is an award-winning public radio reporter and editor. Her series California Foodways is a county-by-county exploration of stories at the intersection of food, culture, history, economics, labor and the environment. The stories air on KQED’s The California Report Magazine, national shows, and on the California Foodways podcast. The series received a national Edward R. Murrow Award and four James Beard nominations, and Morehouse was named a fellow for the UC Berkeley-11th Hour Food and Farming Journalism Fellowship, and Les Dames d’Escoffier San Francisco Karola Saekel Craib Excellence In Food Journalism Fellowship.
Morehouse is the Senior Editor for KALW Public Radio’s news magazine, Crosscurrents, where she helps train new audio journalists. Her first career was in public education, teaching middle school in rural Georgia, building an educational non-profit in Arizona, and spending a decade teaching high school in San Francisco.
Lee Jensen is a Danish textile artist. Lee grew up in Copenhagen, Denmark, and now lives and works in Queens, New York. She holds a BFA degree from the School of Visual Arts in New York. Lee Jensen creates contemporary abstract quilts and hand-sewn stretched textile pieces. Her work is influenced by her urban environment and by a life-long connection to sewing and textiles.
Jensen is the recipient of the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA)/Queens Art Fund 2024 New Work Grant. In 2023-24 she was awarded participation in NYFA’s Immigrant Artist Mentoring Program. Her work has been featured in Hyperallergic and Queens Chronicle.
Christopher Castellani has published five books, most of which center on the Italian, Italian-American, and/or queer experience. His most recent novel is Leading Men, for which he received Fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, MacDowell, and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Leading Men was published in February 2019 by Viking Penguin, and is currently being adapted for film by Peter Spears (Oscar-winning producer of Nomadland) and acclaimed Italian director Luca Guadagnino (Call Me By Your Name).
The Art of Perspective: Who Tells the Story, a collection of essays on point of view in fiction, was published in 2016 by Graywolf Press, and is taught in many creative writing workshops.
His first novel, A Kiss from Maddalena (Algonquin, 2003) won the Massachusetts Book Award in 2004; its follow-up, The Saint of Lost Things (Algonquin, 2005), was a BookSense (IndieBound) Notable Book; the final novel in the trilogy, All This Talk of Love (Algonquin, 2013), was a New York Times Editors’ Choice and a finalist for the Ferro-Grumley Literary Award.
Christopher is currently on the faculty and academic board of the Warren Wilson MFA program and the Bread Loaf Writers Conference. Since 2019, he has chaired the Writing Panel at YoungArts, aka the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts. For nearly twenty years, Christopher was in executive leadership at GrubStreet, where he founded the Muse and the Marketplace national literary conference and led the development of numerous artistic programs for adults, teens, and seniors.
The son of Italian immigrants and a native of Wilmington, DE, Christopher was educated at Swarthmore College, received his Masters in English Literature from Tufts University, and a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Boston University. He lives in Boston and Provincetown, MA, where he is completing his fifth novel with the support of a Literature Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Andrew Shaffer is the New York Times bestselling author of Hope Never Dies: An Obama Biden Mystery, the children’s picture book Mothman’s Merry Cryptid Christmas (which he also illustrated), and over two dozen other books in multiple genres, including mystery, horror, and humor. He is a five-time Goodreads Choice Award nominee and a two-time finalist in the Humor category. His most recent book is the fully illustrated Literary Cats Coloring Book, featuring feline versions of famous authors from “Jane Pawsten” to “Furnest Hemingway.” An Iowa native and frequent visitor to the Keys, Shaffer lives in Louisville, Kentucky, with his wife, novelist Meg Shaffer.
Dylan Mabika is a 23 year old passionate hyperrealism artist on a journey of self-discovery and expression. Despite having no academic background in art, he has dedicated himself to creating art that resonates with the heart and speaks to the soul. For Dylan, art provides peace to his soul and mind unlike anything else, and it has become his passion.
Born and raised in Zimbabwe, Dylan has always been drawn to art, evident from his early days in primary school where he started and loved drawing. At the age of 16, he decided to take his art seriously after being inspired by an older student who refused to share his skills and knowledge. This sparked Dylan’s determination to teach himself to draw, marking the beginning of his artistic journey.
In 2017, Dylan created his first drawing of a human face, and in 2018, he passed his O’ level with 7 subjects. Due to financial constraints, he couldn’t attend an art school or a high school with art as a subject, so he refined his drawing skills on his own. In 2019, Dylan entered his first art competition and won a gold medal for coming first place in his age group in a national competition, also being announced as the best overall in the art category.
Since then, Dylan has experimented with various mediums like charcoal pencils, watercolor pencils, colour pencils and pastel color pencils and he is eager to learn more. He dropped out of school in 2019 to focus on art and support his family financially. Dylan’s life experiences and his aspirations inspire him to create art that provides a space for reflection and imagination, where each viewer can find a piece of themselves reflected back.
Dylan hopes to own a gallery with a spacious studio equipped with art materials and a positive atmosphere, where he can work as an artist and photographer. He also aims to give back to the less privileged artists in schools like his, providing them with art materials and knowledge. Dylan believes that art has the power to heal, inspire, and transform, offering solace and hope in times of uncertainty and despair.
Deborah Zlotsky received a 2019 Guggenheim Fellowship and NYFA Artist Fellowships in Painting in 2012 and 2018. Her work is in a variety of public, private and corporate collections in the US and abroad and she has been awarded recent residencies at MacDowell, Yaddo, the Bogliasco Foundation, Two Coats of Paint, and the Bemis Center. Zlotsky is represented by Markel Fine Arts and McKenzie Fine Art, both in New York, Robischon Gallery in Denver, and Sandler Hudson Gallery in Atlanta. She has a BA in art history from Yale University and an MFA in painting and drawing from the University of Connecticut. She teaches at the Rhode Island School of Design and lives in the Hudson Valley.
Allyson Morgan is an award-winning writer, producer, and performer. Allyson’s first short film Need For Speed (Dating) premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival, while her next short, Sitting, won “Outstanding Narrative Short” at Tallgrass Film Festival. First Date, her short film produced by 20th Digital Studio, is currently airing on Hulu in their “Bite Size Halloween” series. Allyson adapted First Date into a feature film for Hulu, titled Jagged Mind, which the LA Times called “edgy” and “powerful.” Her newest short, The Ghost, which also serves as her directorial debut, made its world premiere at the RiverRun International Film Festival in 2024. She has also been selected for the New York Stage and Film Filmmakers’ Workshop, been awarded “Best Teleplay” at Omaha Film Festival, twice been a top ten Finalist for Cinequest, a Finalist at Stowe Story Labs, and a Semi-Finalist at Austin Film Festival. Additionally, she has been awarded an Ensemble Studio Theatre/Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Commission, a Djerassi Artist Residency (California), an NG Art Creative Residency (France), a Monson Arts Residency (Maine), a Vashon Artist Residency (Washington), a Wassaic Project “Haunted Mill” residency (NY), and multiple Juno Leadership Residencies through the Omega Institute (NY). Allyson has two novels, Don’t Want To Remember You and The Perfect Place, currently available through Tapas Media. She is represented for literary by Heroes and Villains Entertainment. More: allysonm.com
Brittany Reeber is a writer and director living in NYC whose work spans narrative, music video, documentary and commercial mediums. Originally from the Sunshine State, she has inherited an affection for oddball characters and humid climates. Her work reflects the humor, tenderness, and spirit found in the lesser known corners of America — sometimes, there’s a choreographed dance sequence.
She has received grants and residencies from American Documentary, Kodak, The Austin Film Society, Caldera Arts, Cucalorus, The Bend Film Festival, The Studios of Key West, among others. Her most recent film, STUCK, an existential stoner comedy, just finished a successful run on the film festival circuit after premiering at the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival in 2023, and her feature script, SALT SPRINGS, a Florida climate dramedy, is currently in development.
Her music videos have appeared in Pitchfork, Rolling Stone Magazine, NPR and Billboard Magazine. In 2023, she directed NYC comedian Fareeha Khan’s solo show I ACTUALLY DON’T FEEL THAT GOOD to sold out audiences. While at The Studios of Key West, she’ll continue to explore the ways in which the Florida landscape, culture and environmental conflicts, play a vital role in her work.
John Graham’s ever-diversifying visual art practice includes printmaking, artist’s books, painting, drawing, installations, and digital imaging. This artwork has been widely exhibited in North America, Europe and Asia. John is also the writer, producer, director and editor of 10 short films that have been screened at over 220 venues in over 40 countries. Many of these arthouse films have won awards or received nominations for awards. STILL HERE / IMMERDAR (2024) is his 10th short film that poetically explores the theme of dying beautifully.
Andrée B. Carter was born and raised in New Orleans. She also lived in Seattle and Los Angeles, but now resides full-time in Palm Desert. Andrée received an MFA from The University of New Orleans and a BS from Loyola University in New Orleans (Cum Laude). She also studied art history in Florence, Italy through a Tulane University summer program.
In addition to numerous solo and group exhibitions, Andrée has been honored with painting fellowships from the Bau Institute held in Otranto, Italy; the Virginia Center for Creative Art, Amherst, VA; and the Ucross Foundation in Clearmont, WY. She is also a Kipaipai Fellow, a special program focusing on participants to build their professional network. Andrée’s latest residency was in November 2023 at the Cycladic Arts Residency on the Greek island of Paros.
Furthermore, Andrée has received several accolades, including the Artistic Selection Award from the Korean Cultural Center, Los Angeles, CA and the Museum of Art and History, Lancaster, CA. In 2022, she received a Jurors award from the Artist Council Exhibition in Palm Desert. Andrée was also honored to be one of 30 artists chosen for the Rancho Mirage Festival of the Arts, in November 2022.
Andrée’s was recently in an exhibition in Los Angeles at Gallery 825 called “Soul of a City.” This group exhibition of Swiss and American artists was also recently shown in Neuchatel, Switzerland. Andrée’s work is included in numerous private and public collections, most notably in the Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, LA; Swedish Hospital, Seattle, WA; and the Iberia Bank, New Orleans and Shreveport, LA.
Faith Adiele is the author of four experimental chapbooks about her Nigerian-Nordic-American heritage and Meeting Faith, an award-winning account of becoming Thailand’s first Black Buddhist Nun that is widely taught in American universities. Her media credits include My Journey Home, a PBS documentary about finding her family, HBO-Max’s A World of Calm, and Sleep Stories for the Calm meditation app. Her essays appear in O: The Oprah Magazine, Essence, OkayAfrica, Smithsonian Folklife, and numerous anthologies. She founded the nation’s first writing workshop for travelers of color and African Book Club at San Francisco’s Museum of the African Diaspora. Named one of Marie Claire magazine’s “Five Women to Learn From,” Adiele chairs the Writing & Literature Program at California College of the Arts and speaks and teaches around the world.
Franck Hodelin is an artist and interior designer from New York City . Straddling the boundary of realism and abstraction, his figurative oil paintings feature profoundly intimate portraits of men in an array of settings. In 2023, Hodelin was a recipient of the Warner Bros. Discovery 150 Grant. He also received grants from the New York City Artists Corps and a Queens Council on the Arts “New Works Grant” in 2020 to create a series of work that was featured in a solo show at Local Projects Gallery in Long Island City, NY.
Recent exhibitions include a 2-person show at the Chashama Gallery in New York City; the Long Island City Artists “Heritage” group show at Queens College; Greene County Council on the Arts “New Perspective: Selected Works of Artists From the African Diaspora.” Franck received a BFA from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. He currently lives and works in Sunnyside, NY.
image: “Sit and Reflect” (oil paint on wood panel, 40 x 60″)
A multi-faceted force, Sarah Dahnke is a choreographer, director and arts educator deeply committed to encouraging communities to use performance to reclaim narratives stripped away by colonialism. As a practitioner, Sarah specializes in devised performance for stage and screen. Sarah has also been a MAP Fund awardee, an NEA Our Town-funded resident artist, and an awardee of fellowships from Gibney’s Moving Toward Justice, Colt Coeur, Target Margin Institute, New Victory LabWorks, and Culture Push. She has received commissions from Little Island, PEN America and A Studio in the Woods and has been in residence at Abrons Arts Center and Brooklyn Studios for Dance. She was recently the Associate Director for the Off-Broadway play STILL. She was the 2022-23 Opera Columbus Directing Fellow and has gone on to direct opera productions of Carmen and Hydrogen Jukebox. Her dance film work has been screened through the Dance Films Association, Tiny Dance Film Festival, DanceBarn Collective, BRIC, and Movies By Movers. She is a graduate of ITP|NYU, where she specialized in studying the intersection of performance and technology.
Sarah is also the artistic director of Dances for Solidarity, a project that co-creates choreography with people affected by the criminal legal system and performs for public audiences as advocacy toward prison abolition. Learn more at sarahdahnke.com and dancesforsolidarity.com.
Kota Bowen is an interdisciplinary artist based in Milwaukee, Wi specializing in ceramic sculpture. With a printmaking degree from University of Wisconsin- Milwaukee they have a rich background in drawing, and other narrative forms. They have ten years experience working professionally in clay and freelancing as an illustrator. Much of their work is inspired by mythology and classical paintings with a contemporary graphic twist.
Josh Aronson (b. 1994, Toronto, Canada) is a photographer based in Miami. He received his B.A. in Philosophy from Northwestern University. His work reclaims and redefines Southern manliness, presenting tender portrayals of young men against the backdrop of Florida’s landscapes. His photography emphasizes vulnerability, introspection, and emotional complexity, challenging dominant narratives of masculinity. Aronson’s visual storytelling is rooted in his own experiences growing up in Florida, where the natural environment and cultural history serve as constant inspirations.
J Wortham (they/them) is a sound healer, reiki practitioner, herbalist, and community care worker oriented towards healing justice and liberation. They are also a staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, and co-host of the podcast ‘Still Processing,’ With Kimberly Drew, they co-edited Black Futures, a visual anthology and compendium of radical, imaginative, and provocative art by contemporary Black creators. J is also currently working on a book about the body and dissociation for Penguin Press. J mostly lives and works on stolen Munsee Lenape land, now known as Brooklyn, New York, and is committed to decolonization as a way of life.
Eric Pankey, who received his MFA from the Iowa Writers Workshop in 1983, is the author of seventeen collections of poems: For the New Year (Atheneum 1984), which was selected as the winner of the Walt Whitman Award by Mark Strand, Heartwood(Atheneum 1988), which was reissued by Orchises Press in 1998, Apocrypha (Alfred A. Knopf 1991), The Late Romances (Alfred A. Knopf 1997), Cenotaph (Alfred A. Knopf 2000), Oracle Figures (Ausable Press 2003), Reliquaries (Ausable Press 2005), The Pear as One Example: New and Selected Poems (Ausable Press 2008), Trace (Milkweed Editions 2013), Dismantling the Angel (Free Verse Editions 2013), which won the New Measures Prize, Crow-Work (Milkweed Editions 2015), Augury (Milkweed Editions 2017), Owl of Minerva (Milkweed Editions 2019), Alias: Prose Poems (Free Verse Editions 2020), Not Yet Transfigured (Orison Books 2021), The History of the Siege (Codhill Press 2024). A collection of essays, Vestiges: Notes, Responses, & Essays 1988-2018 appeared from Parlor Press in 2019.
His poetry, essays, and reviews have appeared widely in such journals as The Iowa Review, The Harvard Review, The Kenyon Review, The New Yorker, The New Republic, The New Yorker, and The Yale Review. His work has been supported by fellowships from John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, The National Endowment for the Arts, the Ingram Merrill Foundation, and the Brown Foundation.
Ernest Gold is a successful writer and director, who has worked in the United States and Austrian film industries for over 15 years, specializing in creating outstanding genre movies and tv shows. His work includes character driven dramas, heartfelt comedies, as well as stunt and effect heavy action films. Ernest is the co-creator and writer of the first ever Austrian AMAZON PRIME VIDEO series “Beasts Like Us”, released in 2024. He’s the recipient of a Fulbright Scholarship, and alum of the prestigious NYU Tisch – School of the Arts and Filmacademy Vienna.
Through generous sponsors we are able to provide the following extras to use during your residency:
BEST OF KEY WEST RENTALS. Generously provided your linens, bedding and towels.
FORT ZACHARY TAYLOR STATE PARK. We want you to visit the state park and beach as much as you’d like! Our pass unfortunately needs to be tied to a staff member, so you can coordinate a day to go together, or we’ve got a gift card you can use to visit on your own time. The card is in the PEAR House, be sure to bring it so you don’t have to pay the entry fee.
KEY WEST YOGA SANCTUARY. Free yoga classes all month! Register for your first class online with code ‘PEAR’ then connect with staff to get set up with a full month at your first visit.
YOGA ON THE BEACH. Meet at Ft. Zach Beach by 8:15am to flow with Nancy and Don. PEARs get your first class free!
KEY WEST PUBLIC LIBRARY. We’ve partnered with the library to offer you a library card to use during your stay. Key West Library has an extensive catalog of books and other media, plus e-books and audiobooks available for download and even some special events! Their calendar has more about what’s going on.
LAZY DOG ADVENTURES. Lazy Dog does it all – kayak and paddle board tours, rentals, lessons and classes, paddle yoga and fun boat adventures! They’ve offered a paddle pass for PEARs – simply inquire with staff about an available day and they’ll hook you up with a free rental.
WE*CYCLE. The fun way to get around town! Public transportation with 2 wheels. They provided your conch cruiser or tricycle.
The Studios accepts applications on a rolling basis from January-May of each year for the following residency season. The season runs from October-August. There is a $45 application fee to apply which supports the program.
Applications are evaluated by selection committees comprised of working artists and professionals in the applicants’ respective fields of discipline under the five categories: Visual Arts, Literary Arts, Media Arts, and Musical Arts and Performing Arts.
Acceptance to The Studios’ PEAR Program is based on the merit of past work and the potential for creative, intellectual and personal growth through the time and space to imagine new artistic work, engage in valuable dialogue and explore island connections.
Key West’s official motto, “One Human Family” reflects our commitment to living together as caring, sharing neighbors dedicated to making our home as close to paradise as we can. To that end, we encourage artists of all races, nationalities, gender identities, sexual orientations, and abilities to apply.
The Studios of Key West’s mission is to support artists, inspire creativity and build community.
The Studios was founded with the vision of bringing world class artists to the island, connecting them with local audiences and artists, and offering space for both to explore their creativity. We’ve hosted Pulitzer prize winners, world renowned artists and musicians, and introduced thousands of students to different ways of seeing and working. Our Helmerich Theater stage bristles with talent, music from our rooftop concerts flood into the neighborhood, and every month hundreds of people visit The Studios to take in new experiences and catch up with old friends.
You’ll find that the Key West community is very welcoming to new people (especially creative ones!) – and there is never a shortage of things to do. Your time is yours to do with as you choose, of course, and we respect that you’ll need plenty of time to dream, reflect and create. We do ask that you join us at two events during your residency:
Depending on the time of year, a group of about 20-40 friends and community members gather together for an informal potluck and a chance to meet our residency artists. Guests bring a dish to share (bring whatever you’d like – from chips and salsa to your favorite recipe). About halfway through the night, each of the residency artists takes few minutes to introduce themselves and talk about their work or what they’re working on in Key West (remember, it’s very casual, so no PowerPoint presentations necessary!). Writers often like to read a very short bit of their work and artists often like to open their studios to show what they are working on – but neither is necessary, whatever you feel comfortable with.
Friends new and old are invited to join us for each month’s First Thursday Open House event, when we keep our lights on late and throw our doors open to celebrate the newest work in our galleries. Stop in to say hello, relax with a glass of wine on the rooftop terrace, tour the third floor artist studios and see the just-installed exhibitions in the Sanger, XOJ, Zabar Project and Zabar Lobby Galleries.
Key West is an island community, two miles by four miles wide, at the very end of the road. Most people get around on bicycle or foot, and the neighborhoods are compact and filled with lush gardens and tropical plant life. There are Cuban groceries and café con leche on every other corner, and a mix of Latin and Caribbean influences everywhere. Known for blue skies, open water and mangrove islands, and 80 degree days in winter, Key West is removed from the American mainland by 120 miles of bridges and small islands.
Long a home to artists and creative people, the ghosts of Hemingway, Robert Frost, Elizabeth Bishop, Mario Sanchez, and Shel Silverstein still haunt our Old Town neighborhood. Flowers bloom year-round, and fruit trees proliferate. And on any given day, it’s not unusual to run into modern-day creative people, such as Judy Blume, Billy Collins, Jimmy Buffett, Meg Cabot, Terrence McNally, John Martini, Seward Johnson, or Annie Dillard.
For a small community, Key West is rich in cultural events, creative projects, and celebrations of every kind. The population is diverse and compassionate, and takes to heart the island’s famous motto: One Human Family, which reflects The Studios’ commitment to living together as caring, sharing neighbors dedicated to making our home as close to paradise as we can. Our creative community is proud of this special sense of place. We embrace an independence from the mainland, celebrate our tropical and Caribbean influences, and seek out artists and cultural leaders wanting to do the same—and gain the benefit of exile in the Conch Republic.
A limited selection of short length (4′ or less) specialty hardwoods (mostly Cuban Mahogany) can be purchased from the Woodshop. Email woodshop@tskw.org for inquiries.
For a wider variety in wood types and length, we recommend our friend on Big Coppitt, Mike. He has a great selection and is nearby. His phone number is (305) 797-5747.
Address: 6810 Front Street, Key West, FL 33040
We’re located in Safe Harbor Marina on Stock Island, just down the docks from Hogfish Bar & Grill.
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With one of the tallest buildings – and most spectacular views – in town, the Hugh’s View rooftop terrace serves as The Studios’ creative space in the sky. The terrace sits four stories above street level and offers panoramic views of the island. The Kitwald Stage glows in the golden twilight of our sunset performances.
Hugh’s View offers:
—Smaller audience sizes
—Outdoor environment
—Intimate experiences
—A rooftop bar that opens one hour prior to show time
With original seating from its days as a Masonic temple, the Helmerich Theater has been updated to also include floor seating. As a black box theater, the set up is intimate but professional, and sets the stage for concerts and performances that leave guests feeling like they really got to know the performer.
Helmerich Theater offers:
—More space and comfortable chairs
—Indoor comforts
—Intimate experiences
—A walk-up counter bar that opens one hour prior to show time
The period for applying to 2021/22 residencies is now closed. We will begin accepting residencies for the 2022/23 season, which runs from September 2022-August 2023, in January 2022. If you would like to be notified by email when the application period opens again, please fill out this form.
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