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#Kymia Nawabi
las-microfisuras · 3 years
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Kymia Nawabi
http://www.kymianawabi.com/
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hiplillady · 3 years
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Kymia Nawabi
Kymianawabi.com
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artporium · 4 years
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Details of Before The Oracles (2015) by Kymia Nawabi
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thunderstruck9 · 7 years
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Kymia Nawabi (American, b. 1980), The Bridge, 2011. Acrylic, glitter, ink and watercolor on paper, 72 x 84 in.
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z11e637-blog · 7 years
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Atmospheric Shifts by Kymia Nawabi (2011)
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thequietlunch · 7 years
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Facial Profiling. | Group Show at C24 Gallery.
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canarchive · 4 years
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Kymia Nawabi. Third Eye. 2020.
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letternoon · 6 years
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Inspiration for the week: Brooklyn based Iranian American artist, Kymia Nawabi, skillfully navigates her many emotions and crafts her visions in her work- not easy! The Lookout, ink and watercolor, 2011. ->> @kymia_nawabi / / / #mondayfeelings #artheals #inspo #onetofollow #collectart #newyorkartist #nycart #nyc #art #artists #femaleartist #contemporaryart #contemporaryartist #artcollector #artcollectors #collectart #artgram #artistsofinstagram #iranianamerican #brooklynartist
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nyfacurrent · 5 years
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Apply Now | 2020 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship
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New York State-based artists are encouraged to apply for this $7,000 unrestricted cash award.
New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) is now accepting applications for 2020 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowships in Craft/Sculpture, Digital/Electronic Arts, Nonfiction Literature, Poetry, and Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts. These $7,000 unrestricted cash awards are made to individual originating artists living and working in the state of New York. They are not project grants and are intended to fund an artist’s vision or voice regardless of their level of artistic development. In 2019, NYFA awarded a total of $661,000 to 98 artists.
Applications close on Wednesday, January 22, 2020 at 11:59 PM EST. NYFA only accepts applications online via apply.nyfa.org/submit.
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2020 Award Categories
Craft/Sculpture
Digital/Electronic Arts
Nonfiction Literature
Poetry
Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts
Eligibility Requirements
25 years or older
Current residents of New York State and/or one of the Indian Nations located in New York State
Must have maintained New York State residency, and/or residency in one of the Indian Nations located therein, for at least the last two consecutive years (2018 & 2019)
Cannot be enrolled in a degree-seeking program of any kind
Are the originators of the work, i.e. choreographers or playwrights, not interpretive artists such as dancers or actors
Did not receive a NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship in any discipline in the past five consecutive years: 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019
Cannot submit any work samples that have been previously awarded a NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship
While collaborating artists are eligible to apply, the total number of collaborators cannot exceed three
Are not a current NYFA employee or have been in the last 12 months, a member of the NYFA Board of Trustees or Artists’ Advisory Committee, immediate family member of any of the aforementioned, or an immediate family member of a 2019-2020 panelist
Artists that have been awarded five NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowships receive Emeritus status and are no longer eligible for the award
Apply Now
Visit NYFA’s Submittable page to start your application.
For more information about the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship, visit our website.
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Upcoming Application Seminars
Binghamton, NY - Friday, November 8, 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM Location: Broome County Arts Council, 95 Court Street, Binghamton, NY 13901 Register: Please email [email protected] Held in conjunction with Broome County Arts Council
Corning, NY - Friday, November 8, 6:30 PM - 7:30 PM Location: The ARTS Council of the Southern Finger Lakes, 79 West Market Street, Corning, NY 14830 Register: Please email [email protected] with your name and email address Held in conjunction with The ARTS Council of the Southern Finger Lakes
Fredonia, NY - Saturday, November 9, 12:00 PM - 1:00 PM Location: Cathy and Jesse Marion Art Gallery, Rockefeller Arts Center P55, State University of New York at Fredonia, Fredonia, NY 14063 Register: Please email [email protected] Held in conjunction with Cathy and Jesse Marion Art Gallery
White Plains, NY - Thursday, November 14, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM Location: ArtsWestchester, 31 Mamaroneck Avenue, White Plains, NY 10601 Register: Please email [email protected] Held in conjunction with ArtsWestchester, this event will also include information about NYFA’s Fiscal Sponsorship Program. Prior to the event, ArtsWestchester will be offering a docent-led tour of their current exhibition Dataism starting at 5:00 PM.
ONLINE - Thursday, November 21, 12:30 PM - 1:00 PM Location: NYFA’s Facebook Page; scroll down in the feed to view/participate and refresh your page if the video does not appear in the feed
Brooklyn, NY - Wednesday, January 8, 2020, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM Location: New York Foundation for the Arts, 20 Jay Street, Suite 740, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Register: RSVP here via Eventbrite
ONLINE - Thursday, January 16, 12:30 PM - 1:00 PM Location: NYFA’s Facebook Page; scroll down in the feed to view/participate and refresh your page if the video does not appear in the feed
Visit our website for a full list of past fellows.
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NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowships are administered with leadership support from New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
Find out about additional awards and grants here. Sign up for our free bi-weekly newsletter NYFA News to receive announcements about future NYFA events and programs.
Images from top: LoVid (Fellows in Digital/Electronic Arts ’17), “Ruby Rendering,” 2015, Image Credit: Megan Raymond for SU Art Galleries; Kymia Nawabi (Fellow in Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts ’17), “Combat of The Immortal Pursuit,” 2016; and Valerie Hegarty (Fellow in Crafts/Sculpture ’17), “Alternative Histories, Brooklyn Museum, The Canes Acres Plantation Dining Room,” 2013, Image Courtesy: Brooklyn Museum
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@Regrann from @c24gallery - Join us, July 20th from 6.30 - 8.30 at @c24gallery for -FACIAL PROFILING a group exhibition in collaboration with NYFA, curated by David C Terry. The exhibition will feature work of seven NYSCA/NYFA Fellowship Award winners: Samira Abbassy, Kwesi Abbensetts, Geoffrey Chadsey, Sean Fader, Michael Ferris, Jr. , Kymia Nawabi, Oliver Wasow. 560 West 24st Kwesi Abbensetts | #1 ( A Kind of Masking Series) | Digital Print | 20 x 30in. #c24gallery #newexhibition #nyfa #SamiraAbbassy #spaceshipgeorge#GeoffreyChadsey #photoartstar#kymia_nawabi #OnWasow #opening#chelsea #groupshow #painting #spaceshipgeorge #sculpture #DavidCTerry @NYFAcurrent @davidcterry @spaceshipgeorge - #regrann
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3rdeyechakra · 7 years
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What's ur religion/spiritual beliefs? What's your fav season? Top 5 fave artists? Fav ice cream flavor?
I believe in god but it's completely different from what Christianity is based off of.Fav season is winterTop 5 fav artist are Charlie immerAlexander McQueen James jean Kymia NawabiNick sheehy Fav ice cream is cookies and cream.
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psychkto · 6 years
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The Guerrilla Girls: Who are your top five favorite women artists?
omg yas thank youuu
Jenny Saville, Lesley Oldaker, Kymia Nawabi, Helen Frankenthaler, Sarai Sherman
all outstanding women artists
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Art F City: This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Virtual Reality Exhibitions and Cyberdefense Workshops
The tight stuff and the right stuff at tonight’s special event with @babycastles –@di_mo_da @micahnotfound @moisesnotfound @akaprash @princessgollum and many more superstars 7-10pm Only @vrworldnyc #virtuallyexcited #actuallyexcited
A post shared by madabouteug (@madabouteug) on Jul 17, 2017 at 2:51pm PDT
Well, this week starts off strong. Monday we’re looking forward to checking out the new VR World NYC, which is hosting a virtual reality art show and concert until midnight. If that hasn’t sated your cyberpunk hunger, check out Lin Wang’s cyborg wigs tuesday at Gallery Sensei, the NYFA/NYSCA group show Facial Profiling at C24 Gallery on Thursday, or the “Digital Self Defense and Empowerment Workshops” happening all Saturday afternoon at the New Museum. We love when a week’s itinerary in IRL New York looks like a montage from Hackers.
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VR World NYC
4 East 34th Street New York, NY 7:00 p.m. - 12:00 p.m. Website
Virtual Insanity™: VR + Music
Well this is undoubtedly the coolest thing happening on a Monday night this summer. Babycastles is presenting a virtual reality art show and concert at VR World NYC.
Among the highlights is the Digital Museum of Digital Art, which Paddy and I have both experienced and raved about. It’s seriously one of the best art-viewing experiences you can have this week, so get yourself there ASAP.
Artists: Alfredo Salazar-Caro and his virtual institution Di Mo DA, Art 404, Haleek Maul, James Orlando, HYPER.ZONE, LaJuné McMillian, Michelle Cortese, Michelle Senteio, Nicole Ruggiero, Prashast Thapan
Live performances by: Icarus Moth, RAFiA, Haleek Maul
Tue
Gallery Sensei
135 Eldridge Street New York, NY 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Website
Lin Wang: Tenant, Tranant, Trance
This show is only up for two days, a unusual duration for an installation that has to do, on some level, with time. Lin Wang’s semi-narrative installation alludes to past tenants of a surreal domestic space, which itself is somewhat anachronistic—referencing a cyborg future where the synthetic and prosthetic wait to merge with absent bodies. The artist has created a series of household appliances associated with comfort (fans, massage chairs, etc.) combined with wigs. Picture mounds of artificial hair quivering in anticipation of contact with a user. So creepy, yet so alluring.
Artists Space
55 Walker Street New York, NY 7:00 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Website
People's Cultural Plan Launch
This looks good: Mychal Johnson, community activist and member of South Bronx Unite, and artist Chloë Bass will discuss the ins and outs of the People’s Cultural Plan. It’s a grass-roots, social-justice focused alternative to the Department of Cultural Affairs’ CreateNYC plan, which launches this week. The guiding principles here are de-gentrification, cultural equity, and labor equity—three things the city desperately needs, in particular for the survival of the arts.
The event features drinks, opportunities for discussion and mingling, and translators in Chinese and Spanish. This is a great opportunity to meet other artists thinking politically and getting involved in the interrelated labor/gentrification struggles happening now in New York.
Wed
Equity Gallery
245 Broome Street New York, NY 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Website
Liana Finck: Passing for Human
Liana Finck is the most millennial comic artist I can think of for several reasons. For one, her pen-and-ink melancholic musings on relationships, existential angst, and the never-ending stresses of being a broke 20-something are relatable and often hilarious. Also, she’s built her fan base out of her popular Instagram account. Here’s a chance to see her work (some 80 drawings!) IRL.
EFA Project Space
323 West 39th Street New York, NY 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m.Website
Setting 1880-1920 / Dinner Party
Liliana Dirks-Goodman’s theatrical dinner party/lecture/performance will introduce guests to “the utopian design visions of seven first-wave white feminists” who lived in the decades surrounding the turn of the last century. This is the era when a lot of social “progressives” advocated for urban planning, design, and architectural movements intended to better the lives of the poor and immigrants. We often hear about men’s grand visions for the “city beautiful” or Garden City movements, but the fact that many of these visionaries and activists were women is often overlooked. Their different perspective was often aimed at improving the lives of women as well.
The dinner (arguably the most highly-gendered domestic social activity of the 20th Century) will be prepared by chef Kristin Worral, who will use recipes from Rumford Kitchen’s cookbook.
Thu
MX
167 Canal Street, 5th floor New York, NY 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. Website
My fossil, my echo / my excess, my scrap
This exhibition is curated around the idea of anxieties related to the index.  The curatorial statement, from Gabrielle Jensen and Julia Lee, is a bit dense, but the show looks really promising. Chiefly, the concern here seems to be what becomes of an object once it is a record or fragment of itself?
I’m excited to see Carmen Neely included in this exhibition. When I met her on a studio visit years ago I was convinced she’d be an art star. Her work includes personified abstract forms that jump from piece to piece, personal objects embedded in canvases, and plenty of autobiographical ephemera worked into painterly compositions. It definitely fossilizes some weird stuff, and does it charmingly.
Artists: Cristine Brache, Isabel Legate, Carmen Neely, Kayode Ojo, Patrice Renee Washington
C24 Gallery
560 West 24th Street New York, NY 6:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Website
Facial Profiling
Curated by David C. Terry, this show looks at identity through the lens of seven NYSCA/NYFA Artists. The artists here touch on issues such as “the observed self, the portrayal of individuals as well as the perceived and projected self, and how we interpret/project imagery as portrait.” Included among the seven is master of selfies/constructed identity Sean Fader, so expect there to be a dash of humor among what could otherwise be heady navel gazing.
Artists: Samira Abbassy, Kwesi Abbensetts, Geoffrey Chadsey, Sean Fader, Michael Ferris Jr. , Kymia Nawabi, Oliver Wasow
Sat
New Museum
235 Bowery New York, NY 1:30 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Website
Digital Self-Defense and Empowerment Workshops
In conjunction with the exhibition Paul Ramírez Jonas: Half-Truths, the New Museum has teamed up with Equality Labs and NEW INC residents DATA X and Taeyoon Choi to offer an afternoon of workshops about surveillance and autonomy in the digital age. So spend a muggy Saturday nerding out to all your hacker fantasies in the New Museum’s air conditioning.
Here’s the rundown of workshops:
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Handmade Computers with Taeyoon Choi—learn how to assemble a basic computer that can perform addition, keep time, and store memory! It’s free, but requires registration by emailing [email protected] .
3:15 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Data Selfie with DATA X—DATA X is a creative studio that believes in transparency. Here, they’ll be demonstrating their browser add-on Data Selfie, which tracks the way sites such as Facebook track your data, giving the user a peak at how corporations and their algorithms view us. Register here.
4:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Digital Self-Defense with Equality Labs—Equality Labs, “a South Asian women’s, gender non-conforming, and trans tech collective” will present a workshop about protecting one’s information in the age of the surveillance state. This is pretty useful stuff as the world becomes more and more like William Gibson’s worst authoritarian nightmare. The event is limited to 30 participants, so be sure to register here ASAP.
Pine Box Rock Shop
12 Grattan St Brooklyn, NY 2:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Website
Meowmania! A Cat Party in Brooklyn
It is Summer in New York City, which means our art event guides tend to be a little heavier on events that are just ridiculous or activism-oriented than usual due to the dearth of art openings. This event is both.
Bring your leashed cat to partake in activities such as a cat photobooth, games, cat-themed drink specials, and a cat costume contest. The whole event is a fundraiser for local cat rescue programs, so all of this “basically internet circa 2012” style shenanigans is at least for a good cause.
Sun
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn, NY 1:00 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Website
Performance in the Park: Maren Hassinger's "Pink Trash"
As part of the Brooklyn Museum’s exhibition We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women, 1965–85, Maren Hassinger will be re-staging her 1982 performance “Pink Trash” in Prospect Park. The piece was an important reflection on public space, labor, and “maintenance art”, and seeing it performed three decades later is bound to be something special.
Tickets are $25, but you get a lot of bang for your buck:
1:00 p.m. Special tour of We Wanted a Revolution and conversation with co-curator Rujeko Hockley and Maren Hassinger
2:00 p.m. Walk to Prospect Park
2:15 p.m. Performance of “Pink Trash”
from Art F City http://ift.tt/2u3fqKa via IFTTT
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artporium · 4 years
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Detail of Drifting Lair (2018) by Kymia Nawabi
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z11e637-blog · 7 years
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And Next, Next...Next... by Kymia Nawabi (2009)
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nyfacurrent · 7 years
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Introducing | NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program Recipients and Finalists
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NYFA has awarded a total of $644,000 to 95 New York State artists.
The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) has announced the recipients and finalists of the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship program, which it has administered for the past 31 years with leadership support from the New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA). The organization has awarded a total of $644,000 to 95 artists (including three collaborations) whose ages range from 25-84 years throughout New York State in the following disciplines: Crafts/Sculpture, Digital/Electronic Arts, Nonfiction Literature, Poetry, and Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts. Fifteen finalists, who do not receive a cash award, but benefit from a range of other NYFA services, were also announced. A complete list of the Fellows and Finalists follows.
The NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program makes unrestricted cash grants of $7,000 to artists working in 15 disciplines, awarding five per year on a triennial basis. The program is highly competitive and this year’s recipients and finalists were selected by discipline-specific peer panels from an applicant pool of 2,744. Since it was launched in 1985, the program has awarded over $31 million to more than 4,400 artists.
“Being an artist is hard work, and a struggle for many; a recent report by New York City’s Department of Cultural Affairs found that 40% of the artists surveyed cannot afford art supplies and tools,” said Michael L. Royce, Executive Director, NYFA. “This sobering figure is one of the reasons why we are proud to support artists across New York State with unrestricted grants. For 31 years, artists of all disciplines have put the money towards anything that helps make their lives and practice easier, including buying the supplies and time they need to make their art and push their careers forward” he added.
New York State Council on the Arts Chair, Dr. Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel, said: “The NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship program supports New York State’s creative communities, and NYSCA is proud of our leadership role in this nearly 32-year collaboration with NYFA. Since 1985, NYSCA has provided $31 million in funding for this critical program. Each individual grant helps the recipient more freely engage in imaginative work, and expand the boundaries of creative media. It is gratifying to know that this program has made a real difference in the daily lives of thousands of artists, throughout New York State."
Richard Barlow of Oneonta, New York, was awarded a Fellowship in Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts. He expressed that “the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship is an incredible validation of my work as a visual artist. As a relative newcomer to New York State, it also feels like an acknowledgement that I have established a successful art practice and presence in my new home.” He added that the money will “offset many of the costs of maintaining an active artistic practice: travel, shipping, residencies, materials, promotion, fabrication, etc., and in doing so will alleviate financial pressures and open some mental breathing room to allow for more creative work.”
Neda Toloui-Semnani, a Fellow in Nonfiction Literature from Brooklyn, New York, shared the following about her fellowship: “The NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship has given me, a nonfiction writer, the luxury of resource. It has given me both peace of mind and a great deal of joy because I get to see through the final reporting and writing of my first book without compromising. It’s an extraordinary gift.”
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Fellowship Recipients and Finalists by Discipline and County of Residence:
Crafts/Sculpture
Sharif Bey (Onondaga) Robert Bittenbender (Kings) Kathy Butterly (New York) Jack Elliott (Tompkins) Hiroyuki Hamada (Suffolk) Dave Hardy (Kings) Valerie Hegarty (Kings) Sophie Hirsch (Kings) Jerome Johnson (Kings) Robin Kang (Nassau) Zaq Landsberg (Kings) China Marks (Queens) Melanie McLain (Queens) Shari Mendelson (Schoharie) Toshiaki Noda (New York) Kambui Olujimi (Kings) Peter Opheim (Kings) Jim Osman (Kings) Lina Puerta (New York) Patrick Robideau (Niagara) Diana Shpungin (Kings) Elise Siegel (New York) Kurt Steger (Kings) Joanne Ungar (Kings)
Crafts/Sculpture Finalists
Jarrod Beck (Ulster) Oasa DuVerney (Kings) Panagiotis Mavridis (Kings) Susan Meyer (Columbia)
Crafts/Sculpture Panelists
Mikhail Gubin (Queens) Cal Lane (Putnam) Ryan Sarah Murphy (Kings) Armita Raafat (New York) Kako Ueda (Kings)
Digital/Electronic Arts
Merche Blasco (Kings) Jeremy Couillard (Queens) João Enxuto and Erica Love (New York)* LoVid (Suffolk)* Melinda Hunt (Westchester) Zohar Kfir (Kings) Jen Liu (Richmond) Amelia Marzec (Kings) Eva and Franco Mattes (New York)* Joseph Morris (Kings) Ziv Schneider (Queens) Pascual Sisto (Kings) Christopher Woebken (New York)
Digital/Electronic Arts Finalists
Anthony Graves and Carla Herrera-Prats - Camel Collective (Queens)* DeeDee Halleck (Ulster) Mattia Casalegno (Kings)
Digital/Electronic Arts Panelists
Peter Burr (Kings) Heather Bursch (Kings) Moo Kwon Han (New York) Gabriela Monroy (Kings/International) Boryana Rossa (Onondaga)
Nonfiction Literature
Humera Afridi (New York) Jennifer Baker (Queens) Ava Chin (New York) Mitchell Jackson (New York) T Kira Madden (New York) Alia Malek (Kings) Joseph Osmundson (New York) Brice Particelli (New York) Ross Perlin (Queens) Hugh Ryan (Kings) Aurvi Sharma (New York) Neda Toloui-Semnani (Kings) Kelly Tsai (Kings)** Alejandro Varela (Kings) Katherine Zoepf (New York)
Nonfiction Literature Finalists
Brian Castner (Erie) Lisa Chen (Kings) Rong Xiaoqing (Queens)
Nonfiction Literature Panelists
Shahnaz Habib (Kings) Abeer Hoque (Kings) Annie Lanzillotto (Westchester) Thaddeus Rutkowski (New York) Eben Wood (Kings)
Poetry
Desiree C. Bailey (Queens) Jennifer Bartlett (Kings) Wo Chan (Kings) Alan Davies (New York) Joey De Jesus (Queens) Betsy Fagin (Kings) Jameson Fitzpatrick (Kings) Harmony Holiday (New York)*** Jake Matkov (Kings) Uche Nduka (Kings) Allyson Paty (Kings) Tommy Pico (Kings) Jayson Smith (Kings) Ann Stephenson (New York) Bridget Talone (Queens) Michelle Whittaker (Suffolk) Samantha Zighelboim (New York)
Poetry Finalists
Ana Bozicevic (Kings) Krystal Languell (Kings) Asiya Wadud (Kings)
Poetry Panelists
Albert Abonado (Monroe) Rosebud Ben-Oni (Queens) Rachel McKibbens (Monroe) Stacy Szymaszek (Kings) Matvei Yankelevich (Kings)
Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts
Richard Barlow (Otsego) Alex Barry (New York) Natalie Beall (Dutchess) Thalia Chantziara (New York) Amanda Church (New York) Amy Cutler (Kings) Terry Conrad (Saratoga) Donna Diamond (Bronx) Mark Dion (New York) Mark Ferguson (Kings) Johanna Goodman (Rockland) Ellen Grossman (New York) Takuji Hamanaka (Kings) Amir Hariri (Queens) Carla Rae Johnson (Westchester) Cotter Luppi (Columbia) Kymia Nawabi (Kings) Susan Rostow (New York) Jennifer Schmidt (Kings)**** Charlotte Schulz (Westchester) Sean Sullivan (Ulster) Dannielle Tegeder (New York) Scott Teplin (Kings) 
Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts Finalists
Nicole Maloof (New York) Debra Priestly (Ulster)
Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts Panelists
Perry Angelora (Kings) Gil Avineri (New York) George Hrycun (Allegany) Svetlana Rabey (New York) Jen Ray (Queens)
* Collaborating Fellows **Joanne Chen Fellowship: Kelly Tsai (Nonfiction Literature); the Joanne Chen Fellowship is awarded annually to a Taiwanese American artist residing in New York State ***Shelley Pinz Fellow: Harmony Holiday (Poetry) ****Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation Fellow: Jennifer Schmidt (Printmaking/ Drawing/Book Arts)
Click here for more information about the NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program.
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Funding Support
Major funding is also provided by the New York State Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA). Additional funding is provided by the Lily Auchincloss Foundation, the Milton & Sally Avery Arts Foundation, Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation, and individual donors.
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Images, from above: Terry Conrad (Fellow in Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts ‘17), Photo Credit: PD Rearick; Kathy Butterly (Fellow in Crafts/Sculpture ‘17), Chaos Monkey, 2017, clay and glaze, Photo Credit: Alan Weiner; Amelia Marzec (Fellow in Digital/Electronic Arts ‘17), Weather Center for the Apocalypse: Weather Tower, 2016, Wood, glass, acrylic, electronics
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