Posts Tagged: artist

Abdu Ali

Abdu AliAbdu Ali, is an artist from Baltimore, a mystic soul club queen/king who uses his native sound Baltimore Club, hybridizing Hip Hop, House, and a spice of Ballroom, and some other cosmic shit, as a way to vocalize narratives of a thorn twisted alien(me) born in a shady and beautiful world. His first EP, Invictos (meaning unconquered in Latin), was released last Fall with production by Schwarz, DJ J Lamar, Amy Reid, and DJ Lemz.

Since his debut, Abdu Ali, has performed a long side artists like Cakes Da Killa, Big Freedia, House of Ladosha, and recently performed at SXSW with Light Asylum and Le1f.
Invictos, has been favored by Spin Magazine as “Rap’s Most Slept On Releases in the First Quarter” and has graced blogs like AfroPunk and True Laurels.

Laure Drogoul

Laure Drogoul is an interdisciplinary artist, olfactory spelunker and cobbler of situations who lives in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. She works in a wide range of media including large-scale public projects. Her artworks are a combination of video, sculpture and performance that incorporate audience participation. Drogoul has exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington Project for the Arts, Baltimore Museum of Art and The Chelsea Museum in New York among others. She has received Maryland State Artist Awards and a Franklin Furnace Award for performance art and has been a recipient of a US/Japan Creative Artist Fellowship. In 2006 Ms. Drogoul was honored with The Janet and Walter Sondheim Prize. Laure Drogoul directs The 14Karat Cabaret, a performance program of Maryland Art Place in Baltimore that she founded in 1989 and is a co-organizer and curator of the Transmodern Festival, which is a festival of provocative works by cultural experimenters from Baltimore and beyond. More info at lauredrogoul.com

Dan Deacon

Deacon recorded the track “Drinking out of Cups”. In 2006, Liam Lynch created a video to accompany the piece. The compilation has been viewed more than 17 million times on YouTube. As the video spread, rumors of what the video was and how it was made quickly began forming. One popular rumor is that it is a recording of someone on LSD locked in a closet. Deacon has stated numerous times that this is not true.
ala: wikipedia

Rachael Shannon

Rachael Shannon is a self-identified native Texan queeirdo. Rachael’s life adventures keep her oscillating between the roles of artist, organizer, teacher, participant, designer, business owner, project facilitator, and collaborator. Her creative involvement is motivated by the belief that art has the capacity to bring us in closer communication with ourselves and, in turn, to more authentic and infinitely spiritually expanding experiences with one another. Rachael’s practice tends to explore craft, architecture, personal mythologies, queerness, and community connection through whatever means necessary. She has a passionate reverence for the practice of art in everyday life and persists daily at keeping the dream alive. Rachael moved to Baltimore in 2011 to pursue an MFA in Community Arts.

Michelle Nugent

Michelle Nugent is an interdisciplinary/mixed media artist and community art facilitator. She
is currently pursuing a Masters of Fine Arts in Community Arts from the Maryland Institute
College of Art. In 2009, she received her BFA in Fine Arts with a minor in Art History from
The College of New Jersey.

During her undergraduate career, Nugent acquired a grant from the National Conference of
Undergraduate Research and the Lancy Foundation (2008) to create a public mural in
collaboration with youth from Trenton, NJ’s West Ward community. She is also a recipient
of the Pamela Joseph Art Scholarship (2009) and the Thomas George Artists Fund Grant
Award (2009).

In addition to her community work in Trenton, NJ, Michelle has also worked with
communities in Philadelphia, PA, creating large-scale murals and facilitating after school
youth art workshops through the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program and The Asian Arts
Initiative.

A recent recipient of MICA’s Community Service Fund grant, Michelle is investigating
community cross-cultural exchanges within community in her artwork. Through her own
experiences as a half-White, half-Filipino American artist, she is interested in using art as a
catalyst for dialogue, and exploring new ways of understanding and linking different cultures.

Lauren Bender

Lauren Bender is a teacher, twin, collaborator and writer living and working in Baltimore. Past performance works include Big Pink (Baltimore Museum of Art; To Build a House You Start With the Roof: A Franz West Retrospective) and CorpOreo (Transmodern Festival). Publications include Whale Box (Publishing Genius Press), There is No U in Poem (Big Game Books), and The Dictionary Poems: Some Bees (NewLights Press). Bender was the curator of the Show&Tell series in Hampden, Baltimore, and co-director of Narrow House, a publisher of printed and recorded literature until her job–which she loves–took over her life.

David London

david londonDavid London combines magic with storytelling, puppetry, comedy, performance, audience interaction, and that which cannot be defined, to create original shows of magic unlike you have ever experienced before. More info at www.magicoutsidethebox.com

Catherine Pancake

Catherine Pancake is an award-winning filmmaker and sound artist. Her work has been presented nationally and internationally in a wide variety of venues, including the Museum of Modern Art, Royal Ontario Museum, Baltimore Museum of Art, Academy of Fine Arts Prague and Contemporary Museum Baltimore. Her awards include the Paul Robeson Independent Media Award, Jack Spadaro Documentary Award, Maryland State Arts Council Individual Artist Award and the Silver Chris. Her films have been broadcast in the U.S.A. and Great Britain and are distributed by Bullfrog Films and the Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre. Sound art releases can be found on Ehse Records and Recorded Records in Baltimore. Pancake completed her MFA at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in May 2012.  She was awarded the Claire Rosen and Samuel Edes Foundation Prize for Emerging Artists, the graduate school’s highest honor.n More information at catherinepancake.com/

Bonnie Jones

Bonnie Jones is a Korean-American writer, improvising musician, and performer working primarily with electronic music and text. Born in 1977 in South Korea she was raised by dairy farmers in New Jersey, and currently resides in Baltimore, MD. Bonnie creates improvised and composed text-sound performances that explore the fluidity and function of electronic noise (field recordings, circuit bending) and text (poetry, found, spoken, visual). She is interested in how people perceive, “read” and interact with these sounds and texts given our current technological moment. Bonnie has received commissions from the London ICA and has presented her work in the US, Europe, and Asia and collaborates frequently with writers and musicians including Ric Royer, Carla Harryman, Andy Hayleck, Joe Foster, Andrea Neumann, Liz Tonne, and Chris Cogburn. She received her MFA at the Milton Avery School of the Arts at Bard College. www.bonniejones.wordpress.com

Asimina Chremos

Asimina Chremos, born 1966, has a lifelong history of identifying as a contemporary/experimental dancer and performer in and around Philadelphia and Chicago, IL. She has trained extensively in various forms of dance and movement including Ballet, Skinner Releasing, Butoh, Contact Improvisation, Yoga, Klein-Mahler, Graham, Limon, Cunningham, etc, not in that order. She currently works full-time as an arts administrator in Philadelphia and around the edges of that, she does crochet, kirigami, drawings, and dances. Learn more at asiminachremos.com.