Éli Moreira
Éli Moreira (they/them) is a multi-disciplinary artist, cultural producer, and a gender and sexual dissident currently living and working in Salvador, Bahía, Brazil. Their art research and practice blends popular contemporary Brazilian music, electronic music, vocal sampling, and organic and synthesized instrumentation with creative writing, collage, and experimental photography to delve in subjects such as gender, dissidence, sexuality, and love.
Читать дальшеGesiye
Gesiye (she/they) works with individuals and communities using performance, tattooing, installation, and image-making to explore embodiment and storytelling as forms of liberation. Raised in a Nigerian-Trinidadian family with a deep connection to divination and somatic healing practices, Gesiye uses an intuitive practice rooted in themes of belonging and examines the sociocultural symbols and power dynamics that impact our relationships with self, state, and land.
Читать дальшеShivanjani Lal
Shivanjani Lal (she/her) is a Fijian-Australian artist and curator whose work uses personal grief to account for ancestral loss. Recent works have used storytelling, objects, and video to account for lost histories and explore narratives of indenture and migratory histories from the Indian and Pacific Oceans. In Lal’s work, reading and objects guide audiences through lived and imagined narratives that attempt to decipher what is lost and the possibilities of futures.
Читать дальшеAnonymous Artist
The artist opted to remain anonymous. In the spirit of practicing feminist ethics of care and safety, we offer anonymity for all Artist Changemakers. Artist Changemakers may choose to remain anonymous for a variety of reasons in line with the multiplicities of their creative practices.
Читать дальшеSamantha Ainembabazi
Samantha Ainembabazi (she/her) is a poet, spoken-word artist, and curator. She began writing poetry at eight years old, when her family went through a traumatic experience and she learned to find solace in words. Her poetry gradually evolved from a form of escape from trauma to exploring body positivity, and she launched an art-based movement to encourage women to love their bodies.
Читать дальшеAlbena Baeva
Albena Baeva (she/her) is at the forefront of interactive art in Bulgaria. She works with artificial intelligence (AI), physical computing, creative coding, and augmented reality, pushing for a feminist discourse in tech-art (art that intertwines with technological innovation) and how AI impacts climate change.
Читать дальшеLori Robinson
Lori Robinson is the founder and executive director of VidaAfrolatina, the emerging international women’s fund that mobilizes resources and connects them with Black and Afro-descendant women-led organizations in Latin America that address sexual violence. A bilingual African American, she worked as a journalist for 25 years and is the author of I Will Survive: The African-American Guide to Healing from Sexual Assault and Abuse.
Читать дальшеCleo Kambugu
Cleo Kambugu is a Ugandan human rights activist leading the fight for equality for sexual and gender minorities, including trans, intersex, and gender non-conforming communities. She works as the Director of Programmes for the East African Sexual Health and Rights Initiative (UHAI EASHRI).
Читать дальшеDani Ayers
With 17 years of experience as a movement infrastructure architect, Dani Ayers is the first CEO of metoo. International. Global Fund for Women partners with the ‘me too.’ global movement to support a well-resourced ecosystem around the world that works to end sexual- and gender-based violence, and make healing and actionable support systems available to survivors.
Читать дальшеLatanya Mapp Frett
Latanya Mapp Frett is the President and CEO of Global Fund for Women and the author of The Everyday Feminist: The Key to Sustainable Impact—Driving Movements We Need Now More Than Ever, coming in March 2023.
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