Michal Alpern
Michal Alpern is a New York based artist with an MFA from Columbia University and a BFA from Bezalel Academy, Jerusalem. Alpern’s practice shifts between making serieses of objects to room sized sculptures, reconciling spatial thoughts like gesture and materiality with abstractions like gender and domesticity. Her works were featured in museums and institutions in NY and Israel, including solo shows at M23 Gallery, NY, The Museum of Israeli Art, Israel and group shows at False Flag, NY and the LeRoy Neiman Center, NY.
Marcelo Arroyave
Marcelo Arroyave is a sociologist and urban anthropologist who has conducted quantitative and qualitative research in Colombia and the US. Since moving to NYC in 2014, he has worked in various urban settings as an after-school teacher, consecutive translator, marketing researcher, and community outreach specialist. Marcelo is also a creator, editor, and producer of fanzines and magazines. He was the founder and publisher of the MusaEnferma fanzine in Cali, Colombia (five editions). He also created Sursystem Magazine, which has eight editions so far. He published the magazine in Cali (3 editions), Bogotá (2 editions), Barcelona (2 editions in Catalan and Spanish), and NYC (1 edition in English and Spanish). The latest edition is The Sound Map of Salsa Music in NYC. Marcelo enjoys dancing to Salsa music and giving lectures whenever possible.
Nadia Bongo
Nadia Bongo is a teaching artist with a PhD in French literature. A former Brooklyn Poets Fellow, her writing and/or photographs have appeared in African Voices, Litro online, Solstice, The Citron Review, Blue Mesa Review, and elsewhere. Her first co-directed poetry short film, supported by University Open Air, has been selected by festivals. Nadia was the September 2025 Teaching Artist in Residence for the Washington Square Park Conservancy. Her co-created poetic video was on view at a gallery in Philadelphia. Find her at https://www.nadiabongo.com/
Carolina Dávila Díaz
Carolina Dávila Díaz is a poet and editor from Bogotá, Colombia. Her book Como las catedrales won the National Award of Poetry in Colombia in 2010. She is also the author of Imagen (In)completa (2018), animal ajena (2022), and Buenavista, un kilometro (2026). She is co-editor of La trenza, a poetry, essay, and illustration magazine. She is part of Contaminación Cruzada, an artistic and poetic intervention project that explores the possibilities of language in public spaces. She lives in New York, where she is pursuing a Ph.D. in Latin American Literature and Art at NYU.
Enrique Enriquez
Enrique Enriquez is a poet who has spent decades learning to read the world as a text. His work moves between language, image, and symbol — finding in each a different angle on the same mystery. He teaches not by explaining but by pointing: at the bird on the wire, the crack on the stone, the word that suddenly means more than it should.
Eliana Hernández-Pachón
Eliana Hernández-Pachón is a writer, anthropologist, and educator from Bogotá, Colombia. She holds a Ph.D. in Hispanic Literature from Cornell University. She is the author of The Brush (La mata), which won the National Award of Poetry in Colombia in 2020, and was shortlisted for the National Award of Poetry in Translation in 2025. She is the co-author of Plantas del camino, a book on medicinal weeds that grow in Bogotá, and the editor of A Vase that Shatters, which features short stories and poems by members of the Truth Commission of Colombia. Eliana is part of Como un Lugar, a collective of Latin American poets based in NYC.
Naama Levit
Naama Levit is a chef and artist based in Brooklyn, NY. Her work explores food as a medium for cultural inquiry, critical thinking, and performance. With a background in both fine art and culinary practice, she has worked in restaurants, test kitchens, and food startups, blending research, experimentation, and storytelling. She collaborates with cultural institutions and teaches, developing projects that examine the intersections of food, materiality, and social dynamics.
Alisa Minyukova
Alisa Minyukova is a Russian born artist, researcher and educator based in Brooklyn, New York. She is co-creator of the Dream Mapping Project which works to bridge dream science with the creative process resulting in an ongoing series of collaborative art, film and performance works. Her drawings, film and mixed media installations explore world mythology and symbols of the collective unconscious.
Her research covers the topics of dreams, memories, liminality, emigration, heritage and the loss thereof and the exploration of the human condition by way of ancestral memory. Her current creative focus is on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine - a collective memory of war, and faith healing in South African cultures.
Dr. Chok Tenzin Monlam
Dr. Chok Tenzin Monlam has dedicated his career to the continuance of Tibetan Buddhist culture and language in modern society. Ordained by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, he studied and practiced as a Tibetan monk for ten years. Having advanced his studies through institutions for two decades, Dr. Chok has obtained multiple degrees in Buddhist and Tibetan studies, including his PhD from the University of Delhi. He has studied and trained for decades in Buddhist studies, Tibetan yoga, healing, and meditation under the direction of many renowned Tibetan teachers of the major and minor Tibetan Buddhist traditions. An author, translator, and language instructor, Dr. Chok served as the Head of the Research and Translation Department at the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives in Dharamsala for thirteen years before relocating to the United States in 2019. Dr. Chok has taught prolifically in India, the United States, and over a dozen other countries, offering diverse and inclusive teaching series on meditation, Tibetan yoga, healing, Buddhist philosophy, and Tibetan language. He has written and translated more than 37 books and numerous articles into English and Tibetan. Since the pandemic, he has taught virtual courses all over the globe.
Achiro Olwoch
Achiro Patricia Olwoch is an award-winning writer, director, and producer from Gulu, Northern Uganda, now based in New York. She is a Visiting Scholar and Instructor at Vassar College and a former Weiss International Fellow and Scholar at Risk at Barnard College.
Her work spans film and theatre, including The Survival, which premiered with National Queer Theatre at Lincoln Center. Her writing appears in Guernica, PEN America, and Adi Magazine. She is currently working on a memoir and a novel about exile, war, and queer life in Uganda.
Maranna Rosen
Marianna Rosen is a Russian-born writer, scholar, college instructor, and Editor-in-Chief at Fine Art Globe. Working across art criticism, visual culture, and literary studies, she explores how images and texts produce meaning within shifting historical and political contexts. Her teaching brings together Russian literature, philosophy, and visual analysis, emphasizing close reading as a form of critical attention.
Her research engages Russian and Italian Futurism as key moments in the entanglement of art and revolution, with a sustained interest in how artistic practices both reflect and shape periods of upheaval. Across her writing and editorial work, she approaches art as a mode of inquiry—one that probes the limits of language, perception, and collective experience.
Hilla Shapira
Hilla Shapira is a Fiber artist, costume designer and educator. Originally from Tel-Aviv, Israel,
and is currently based in Brooklyn, NY. Her work deals with the relationships between common
design and body regimen. By making functional mundane objects she questions design norms
and the political aspects of things. She has presented her work in Israel, Europe, and the USA
including: Art Basel (Miami, FL), Philadelphia Museum of Jewish Art (Philadelphia, PA), NY
Textile Month (NYC, NY), Jerusalem Design Week (Jerusalem, Israel), NY Jewelry week (NYC,
NY), Little Berlin Gallery, (Philadelphia, PA), Depo2015 (Pilsen, Czech Republic), Neve
Schechter Gallery (Tel-Aviv, Israel), Hansen House (Jerusalem, Israel), Textile Arts Center
(Brooklyn, NY) and Wasserman Projects (Detroit, MI). She was AIR in Carrizozo residency
(Carrizozo, NM), Popps Packing (Hamtramck, MI), Makerspace (Brooklyn, NY) and Neve
Schechter center (Tel-Aviv, Israel). She received her BFA in Fashion from Bezalel Academy,
Jerusalem, Israel and her MFA in Fiber from Cranbrook Academy, Bloomfield-Hills MI, USA.
Shapira's work had been featured in different publications including: Hyperallergic Magazine,
NY Jewish Week, Metalsmith Magazine, Portfolio Magazine, Haaretz, and the Jerusalem Post.
Julia Adams
Julia Adams is a Certified Life Coach, Certified Aromatic and Mental Health Practitioner, and Holistic Wellness Educator. She is also an expert in tea cultures, skilled in the subject of Chinese Tea Ceremony and Traditional Chinese Culture, especially Tang Dynasty's culture etc. Prior to relocating to New York from Shanghai, Julia was a news anchor and hosted citywide events; she then became an HR director and often hosted nationwide conferences on HR-related topics. Julia is also a zither player, certified by Shanghai Conservatory of Music.







