They include: Negar Azimi, writer and senior editor at Bidoun, an award - winning publishing, curatorial, and educational initiative with a focus on the Middle East and its diasporas; Gean Moreno, artistic director of Cannonball, a Miami — based
nonprofit dedicated to the advancement of critical discourse and contemporary art through residencies, grants, commissions, and public programs; Aily Nash, co-curator of Projections, the New York
Film Festival's artists»
film and video section, and co-curator of the 2017 Whitney Biennial
film program; and Wendy Yao, a publisher and founder of both the
exhibition space 356 South Mission Road and Ooga Booga, a shop with two Los Angeles locations that specializes in independent books, music, art, and clothing.
Warren founded Whoop De Do, a
nonprofit with which she engages community groups to stage elaborate DIY performances and
exhibitions and creates
films based on historic paintings.
Encompassing nine
nonprofit venues around Manhattan and a total of fifteen partnering institutions, the
exhibition features paintings,
films, sound installations, drawings, archival presentations, performances, and a video environment by both Giorno himself as well as by others whom he has inspired.
In charge of
film and performance at the 124 - year - old
nonprofit South London Gallery, Anna Gritz is cooking up
exhibitions devoted to artists Kapwangi Kiwanga, who draws on academic training for research - based projects, as well as veteran comic performer Michael Smith.