Thursday, November 13, 2025, 6:30– 8:30 pm ET at Franklin Furnace’s new location in Long Island City, a celebration of this year’s 12 Franklin Furnace grant recipients from three categories: the FUND for Performance Art, the XENO Prizes for Performance Art and Artist’s Books, and the Jacki Apple Award in Performance and Artist Projects.
“Past, Present & Future” welcomed these artists to the Franklin Furnace family and introduces them to a broader audience.
Each artist had a few minutes to introduce themselves and shared details about their newly funded projects, and discuss their inspirations, processes, and methods.
Franklin Furnace’s Ken Dewey Director Harley Spiller, and this year’s panelists are invited to join with Franklin Furnace members and the general public live in person.
- We highly encourage you to RSVP friends and family to join us in this celebration. Light refreshments will be served.
Video documentation of the November 13, 2025, 6:30-8:30pm event of Past, Present & Future XI: 2025-26 FF FUND Recipients Celebration. Recorded on Zoom, edited by Rohan Subramaniam
2025-26 Recipients
This season marks the 40th anniversary of the Franklin Furnace FUND. Initiated in 1985 with the support of Jerome Foundation, Franklin Furnace has annually awarded grants to early career artists selected by peer panel review to enable them to prepare major performance art works in New York. This season, Franklin Furnace received 382 applications.
This year’s peer artist review panel met in June and decided to award nine $7,000 grants from support Franklin Furnace received from Jerome Foundation, the SHS Foundation, the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Luca Evans

Project Description
“The Puppet’s Verdict: a queer Yiddish theater puppet trial” An immersive drag puppet music performance retelling a 1920s housing court case where two Yiddish puppeteers successfully represented themselves (or rather, their puppets did) and won.
Set in a recreated courtroom in NYC, audiences become active participants in legal proceedings through cabaret, klezmer music, and puppetry.
As trans artists investigating historic and contemporary housing justice, we will blur reality between puppets and puppeteers, asking: Who has power in our legal system? And who is pulling the strings?
The performance connects historical tenant struggles with today’s housing crisis, to empower audiences through storytelling and practical tenants’ rights education.
Biography
Luca Evans (they/them) is a multidisciplinary writer and performer raised in London and based in Brooklyn, specialising in immersive, cross-genre productions that blend comedy, drag, clown, puppets, and theatre. As a drag king and clown, they have performed across New York City at the likes of House of Yes, The Slipper Room, and Dixon Place, and have toured internationally to Australia, New Zealand and the UK (including to London and the Edinburgh fringe). In the past two years, Luca has focused on creating original full-length theatre work; their most recent stage shows have played at Cannonball Festival (Philadelphia Fringe), Exponential Festival (NYC), and The Brick (NYC). Luca is also a 2025 PIT/SNL Scholar.
Luca’s current project, a puppet drag musical retelling of the 1920s housing court case of two Yiddish puppeteers co-created with Yael Horowitz and Abbie Goldberg, will take place December 18-20 at Life World in Bushwick with the support of Franklin Furnace, NYSCA, and BAC.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by Jerome Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Miguel Alejandro

Artist Website: www.miguelalejandro.art
Project Description
ELMO-MENTO is a site-specific performance in Times Square centering the lives of immigrant street performers who work as cartoon characters. Blending movement, text, sound, and oversized costumes, the piece juxtaposes personal narratives with fantastical embodiment, revealing tensions between labor, visibility, and aspiration. By transforming public space into both stage and workplace, ELMO-MENTO exposes the systemic inequalities these performers face while asking questions about the cost and value “American Dream.” This project invites audiences to witness, reflect, and reconsider their role in shaping the policies and power structures that define our collective reality.
Biography
Miguel Alejandro Castillo Le Maitre is a queer interdisciplinary artist from Caracas, Venezuela. Named one of Dance Magazine’s “25 to Watch” in 2024, he is the 2025–2026 Opera Directing Fellow at Juilliard’s Marcus Institute for Vocal Arts. A director, choreographer, installation artist, and performer, Castillo is drawn to the permeability of art forms and the generative possibilities of cross-disciplinary, multicultural collaboration.
His work is community-oriented and self-reflexive, blending expressionistic dance theatre with visual allegories of Latin American and Caribbean life. His research investigates diasporic imagination, future folklore, and performance as a vessel for intimacy, resistance, and connection.
Castillo choreographed David Lang’s prisoner of the state for the New York Philharmonic, Barbican Centre, and Malmö Opera, and John Adams’ The Gospel According to the Other Mary at the Volksoper in Vienna. With the Met Opera and countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo, he devised site-specific works for BAM, the Brooklyn Museum, Lincoln Center, and the New York Hall of Science.
A Pina Bausch Fellowship cooperating partner, he is currently conducting intergenerational research with his 93-year-old grandmother. Castillo performs nationally and internationally in Faye Driscoll’s Weathering, and has worked with Jeanine Durning, Maria Hassabi, and others. He holds a B.A. from Middlebury College and an M.F.A. from Smith College.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by Jerome Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Matt Romein

Artist Website: https://matt-romein.com
Project Description
MILKMAN ZERO is a performance that combines live theater, text-based computer interfaces, and psychological horror. The audience watches as a performer engages with what appears to be a text-based video game about delivering milk, only to discover they’re witnessing a carefully orchestrated descent into cosmic horror examining labor, institutional decay, and systematic violence.
The staging is simple: a performer sits at a computer, playing a game projected on a large screen. The audience watches as narrative text unfolds and the performer types commands (“open door”, “travel to house”, “deliver milk”). This text-based format, reminiscent of early computer games, relies on collective audience imagination much like traditional theater.
Through its text-based interface, MILKMAN ZERO deliberately mirrors our contemporary interactions with AI systems like ChatGPT. The ambiguity around agency (who truly controls the narrative: the performer or the computer?) directly addresses current questions about AI: how much is conscious, how much is computational, and where does true agency lie?
Biography
Matt Romein is an artist and performer based in Brooklyn NY. His work consists of live performance, generative computer art, and multi-media installation.
His practice focuses on the human body’s relationship with technology. Employing humor and subversion, his work playfully navigates the complexities of bodies caught in the space between physical and digital worlds.
His performance work has been presented at Under The Radar Theater Festival, MAX Live Festival, The Brick, CATCH, Center for Performance Research, and Three Legged Dog Art & Technology Center.
Additionally, his video design work has been shown at SchauSpielHaus Hamburg, Soho Rep, The Public Theater, The Kitchen, The Chocolate Factory, and more. Notable video design credits are NY Times Critics Picks “While You Were Partying…” at Soho Rep and “50/50 old school animation” at The Public (presented by Under The Radar).
His art installation work has been shown at Sundance’s New Frontier Program, IDFA’s DocLab, and SXSW. He has had artist residencies and received grants from NYFA/NYSCA, Mercury Store, Pioneer Works, CultureHub, NEW INC, The Onassis Foundation and more.
Recent honors include: NYFA/NYSCA 2023 Artist Fellow in Digital/Electronic Arts, 2024 MacDowell Fellow, 2025 Yaddo Resident Artist, and 2025 Bogliasco Center Artist Fellow. He is currently a Studio Member at Onassis ONX.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by Jerome Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Symin Adive

Artist Website: https://syminadive.com/
Project Description
“Adult Fun (No, Not Like That)”: A live participatory performance of a new schoolyard game for those long past school, preceded by a series of absurdist micro short films meditating on the theme of lost childhood and the many barriers to fun. Created by comedian and artist Symin Adive (The Onion, Upright Citizens Brigade), this interactive obstacle course is designed to help me, help you, help me squeeeeeeeeeze the most out of adulthood, despite the ever-burning garbage fire threatening to engulf us all.
Biography
Symin (sigh-mean) Adive makes sad/fun art. She is an artist and comedian (The Onion, Upright Citizens Brigade) as well as an Art Director/glorified Graphic Designer with clients like The Empire State Building. Symin is brown, bi, and a third word that starts with “B.”
The Bangladeshi artist resides in NYC and abroad. She has received grants from NYFA (City Artist Corps), Queens Council on the Arts and the Norwegian Parliament.
Her work combines hurt and humor. It both overshares and sugarcoats. She uses her background in comedy and design to make the unpalatable palatable via multiple mediums (film, interactive, 2d, 3d). In her work, all the absurd and familiar ways in which we relate are of key importance especially if it’s hilariously sad and sadly, hilarious.
Her recent projects focus on community (or lack thereof) and creating fun-ish, interactive and thought provoking make-shift “third places” antithetical to the clinical walls of the art gallery. Adive specializes in making playful environments for people to contemplate otherwise darker subject matter like CPTSD, baseless hierarchies and lost childhoods.
Symin likes to think her current website looks better than the one she made when she was 11.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by Jerome Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Luis Eduardo

Project Description
War Cry is a performance that blends elaborate costumes, movement, and technology to delve into themes of identity, ancestral wisdom, and transformation.
Through ritualistic acts—chopping beets and drinking spring water—it crafts a powerful narrative of land reclamation and ancestral connection. Drawing from sacrifice rituals and Mexican, West African, and contemporary techniques, the work tells the story of Pardo, a migratory bird who returns to his ancestral homeland only to face sequester and subsequent exile.
War Cry creates an immersive, thought-provoking performance that inspires hope, encourages audience participation, and reflects on the immigrant experience through performance art.
Biography
Luis Eduardo is a choreographer whose work explores storytelling through movement, sound, and design. He has presented choreography at Tulsa Ballet and the Exchange Choreography Festival, and has produced immersive, evening-length performances including La Muerte del Ego and Force x Distance. These works combine dance, visual elements, and audience interaction to create emotionally resonant experiences.
Rooted in a belief that performance can be both therapeutic and transformative, Luis uses dance to process and share the complexities of the human experience. He views the stage as a space for healing, connection, and dialogue—both for performers and audiences alike.
Currently based in New York, Luis is preparing for his debut by expanding into costume making, music production, and new choreographic work. His creative process blends intuitive exploration with technical precision, resulting in work that is both visceral and reflective.
Whether producing independent work or collaborating across disciplines, Luis is committed to creating art that is accessible, meaningful, and deeply human.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by Jerome Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Kimberly Ye

Artist Website: kimye.com
Project Description
Choreographies of Care is a live, movement-based performance by an intergenerational group of caregivers and workers, taking place in free public spaces such as parks and plazas. The performance is filmed by drone and circulates as both a work for live audiences, and as a moving image piece. The 30-minute live movement piece is inspired by the popular Asian practice of park dancing and is to be performed in public spaces. Drawing from a range of movement sources—including the Military’s 20 Person Active Duty Sequence, pregnancy exercises, and breathwork inspired by Tai Chi and Qigong— these gestural vocabularies are interwoven to highlight how economic and geopolitical “growth” relies on forms of labor far beyond masculinized sectors of national security and militarized “defense”. Highlighting the physical echoes across vocabularies, this piece troubles assumptions about labor and value, asking audiences to recognize the feminized–often invisible–work of producing and reproducing the democratic subject within privatized spaces of the body and care, and revealing the inherent entanglements between birth and death, war and peace, native and foreign, and acts of public and private service.
Biography
Kimberly Ye is an artist and writer whose work traverses performance, film, installation, and object-making. Appropriating popular cultural forms and rituals, Ye uses their body and personal archives to interrogate the gendered constructs that shape perceptions of power, labor, and taboo. Their work enacts the entanglement between private desire and fantasy, and public discourse and ideology–reinterpreting the forces that enforce and reproduce normativity by activating artist/viewer dynamics through various performance contexts.
She has recently been a Mellon Arts Fellow at Stanford University, a California Arts Council Creative Corps Fellow, and an Impact Grant awardee. Her work has been funded by the California Arts Council (USA), The National Endowment for the Arts (USA), Foundation for Contemporary Art (USA), Mellon Foundation (USA), and The Australia Council for the Arts (Australia). Her work has been featured nationally and internationally at institutions such as The Getty, MOCA, Guggenheim Gallery, Wattis Institute, Hammer Museum, Banff Center for Arts, Material Art Fair, and Frieze Film Seoul, among others. Ye received her MFA from UCLA in 2012, has worked professionally as a dominatrix since 2011, and has been on the board of Sex Workers Outreach Project Los Angeles (SWOPLA) since 2019.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by SHS Foundation, Silicon Valley Community Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
edua mercedes

Artist Website: www.eduamercedes.com
Project Description
recursos tour finale takes places on the auction block. where my personal positioning is exploited to insert my shaking baawdie into the lineage of mutual aid as an economy for globalized peripheral communities. The performance consists of a reallocation of money from artistic networks across the u.s. towards a single transgender person in circasia, colombia, by means of auctioning the artist’s art, time, and labor.
i am the artists in question, and as part of this investigation, in preparation for recursos finale i have already raised $1963.60 amerikan dolarz. read more to find out how.
Biography
edua mercedes works from Embera and Tongva territory, using textiles, body action, and lens media. Her work resorts to allegory to organize her relationship to time, nature, and the diasporic condition. As a 2021 Curatorial Fellow at The Poetry Project, edua co-organized Somos Les Visibles, a series of five events bridging dialogue between TGNC artists throughout the Abya Yala with an emphasis on language access. Currently edua is faculty at Transgender Strategy Center. A graduate of Tufts University and Skowhegan School participant, edua has exhibited internationally including at SOMA (Mexico), Musée de l’Élysée (Switzerland), and Knockdown Center (New York).
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by SHS Foundation, Silicon Valley Community Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Nada Tshibwabwa

Artist Website: https://nadatshibwabwa.com/
Project Description
More than 10 million people have died in my country, the DRCongo, in the last thirty years, because the soil under their feet provides the world with the minerals necessary for the global, digital revolution, creating a ruthless and never ending war. With my performance I will activate three costumes that I create from mobile phone debris from the capital Kinshasa in a public space in New York City. Three Bwasi Tshombo [phone women], will reenact a reinterpreted birthing ritual to show the triumph of life over death, of resistance over oppression, of resilience over exploitation.
Biography
Nada Tshibwabwa (*1990, Lubumbashi, D. R. Congo) is a multi-disciplinary artist from Kinshasa, working in painting, performance art, sculpture and music. His practice deals with the violence inherent in contemporary power relations, entangled with his own biography, addresses environmental issues and sets out to create counter narratives. He connects with ancestral artistic and social practices and focuses on their ability to restore balance in moments of crisis. He reinvents these practices by mixing them with his own imagination and a symbolic repertoire that he expands as he works. As initiator of Mwano Studio, a space for exchange through the arts close to the Congo river, he provides, with many others, rooms for questions and actions.
Nada Tshibwabwa has long been active in collectives and festivals in Kinshasa (Timbela Batimbela Yo, KINACT…). Recently, his work was shown in «The Long Term you Cannot Afford. On the Distribution of the Toxic» (2019, S A V V Y Contemporary, Berlin), «New Views on Same-Olds» (2020, Akademie der bildenden Künste, Wien), «Fulu-Act: Du Mouvement, Naît Le Regard» (2021, BOZAR, Bruxelles), «Tango: On the (Dis-)Integration of Times » (2021, Kinshasa), «Kunst Im Untergrund» (2023, nGbK, Berlin), «Kokende Liboso Eza Kokoma Te» (2025, Laboratoire Kontempo, Kinshasa).
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by SHS Foundation, Silicon Valley Community Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
Xxavier Carter

Artist Website: http://xxavierismyname.com/
Project Description
“In The Event Of”: To be performed November 6, 2025.
Conceived as a wake, this performance is set in the Maritime Hotel Penthouse. The performance begins with a breakfast meeting on the terrace of the suite. The meeting is between the crew of the shoot and the performer, Xxavier. Breakfast is served while the audience is welcomed to the space. Xxavier will give a brief introduction on the conception of the work. A discussion of the themes of the performance (Andrea Fraiser Untitled 2003, The artist’s personal history, Materiality, Performance, Masculinity, Sexuality) will follow. Objects created for the funeral rites are staged around the hotel room (8 ceramic speakers, a tiled sarcophagus, textiles) The funeral rites begin. Xxavier is bathed while the audience is present, shaving and grooming takes place. Xxavier is massaged, oiled, and robbed. Xxavier is then manicured with flowers braided into hair. Xxavier is dressed and placed in the sarcophagus. The sarcophagus is taken down the elevator where the procession begins. 8 people process the sarcophagus along a planned route to a designated space where it is then delivered into the back of a truck. The sarcophagus is delivered to its final space and removed from the truck. Lunch is served and the sarcophagus is opened. Xxavier exits the sarcophagus and addressed the audience with a written text. A light lunch is served. This concludes the public portion of the performance.
Biography
Xxavier Edward Carter (b.1986 Dallas, Texas) is a Transdisciplinary Artist of Black and Mvskoke descent. The eldest child of professional athlete (Russell Carter) and saleswoman (Melody Missick), embodiment and communication were foundational to his upbringing as well as flexibility in new environments. Xxavier attended Stanford University on a football scholarship, receiving a BFA in Studio Art after studying Political Science and English. After 7 years of art world immersion Xxavier returned to Dallas to receive his MFA from Southern Methodist University, the alma mater of his father.
Through a commitment to the concepts of returns, community, ecology, humanity, abstraction, and poetry, Xxavier has established his career through the intimate connections made sharing his work and the philosophy that has molded his practice. He is currently the Head Artist and Engineer of Goldfish Dreams, an artistic publication and production house based in Dallas, Texas.
This work was made possible, in part, by the Franklin Furnace FUND 2025-26, supported by SHS Foundation, Silicon Valley Community Foundation and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
2025 Peer Review Panelists: Sheryl Oring (fundwinner 2015), Jesus Benavente (fundwinner 2023), Veronica Peña (fundwinner 2017), Liz Ferrer (fundwinner 2021), Nima Nikakhlagh (fundwinner 2023)
This project is made possible with funds from Jerome Foundation, SHS Foundation, Silicon Valley Community Foundation, the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and the members and friends of Franklin Furnace Archive.
2025-26 Jacki Apple Award
Yara Travieso

Artist Website: https://yaratravieso.com/
Project Description
“May Our Desire For Liberation Be Louder Than Our Fear Of Oppression” (“Que Nuestro Deseo De Liberación Sea Más Fuerte Que Nuestro Miedo A La Opresión”) is a performance and ritual film amplifying practices of embodied collective liberation as a means to open a channel towards our aliveness and our interconnected truth. The work centers a shift into our inextricable bond with each other and nature; absurdly narrated by various singular immigrant breasts (both trans and cis). Additionally, through collective ritual practices, we actively listen to our embodied interconnection––quieting the imposed fears of the punitive & violent systems around us, allowing us to disobey them without fear of retaliation, but instead, with clarity, solidarity, & a sense of deep radical love guiding us.
Artist Biography
Yara Travieso is a Cuban-Venezuelan-American anti-disciplinary artist, working in performance, film, & ritual. She is a 2025-26 Artist-In-Residence with UMD, a 2023/24 Resident Artist with NYC’s Chelsea Factory, a United States Artist Fellow, a Creative Capital recipient, a NYSCA Film & Media grant recipient, a winner of National Association of Latino Arts & Cultures Grant via The Ford Foundation, and an Open Interval Fellow via Gibney & The Simons Foundation. Travieso is faculty at her alma mater, The Juilliard School (Dance BFA 2005), and is the 2023 winner of Juilliard’s John Erskine Faculty prize. Her productions have been featured in NYC’s Park Avenue Armory, Lincoln Center, Performance Space NY, The Public Theater, The Knockdown Center, The High Line Park, Opéra National de Lorraine France, New World Symphony Center, EMPAC in Troy, NY & many more. Her films and visual art have been presented with El Museo, Film at Lincoln Center, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, PBS, SXSW, NY Latino Film Festival, Museum of The Moving Image, Vizcaya Museum, among others. Travieso has collaborated on numerous large scale community projects with thousands of immigrant/queer/female community members. Travieso co-founded the Borscht Film Festival in 2005 and co-ran it until 2010 when it won the Knights Grant and was named “the weirdest film festival on the planet” by IndieWire. Travieso is the recipient of The YoungArts award and residencies such as: EMPAC, PS122 RAMP, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, BRICLab, STREB, Tribeca Performing Arts Center, & The Bessie Schonberg AIR.
2025-26 XENO Prize for Performance Art and Artist's Books
EYIBRA

Project Description
“DOMINA” is a six-hour durational performance that stages an unfolding struggle between fragility and force, intimacy and domination. At its center, a trans woman moves through a charged landscape where bodies, heat, and endurance become sites of resistance. The work invokes the weight of cisheteropatriarchal structures and the precarious, often brutal, conditions faced by queer and trans communities in a society that grows ever more hostile. Through acts that blur ritual and confrontation, spectators are drawn into an uneasy complicity—no longer outside observers but implicated participants. DOMINA refuses singular meaning: it is at once a lament, an uprising, and a visceral meditation on survival, power, and the possibility of liberation.
Biography
EYIBRA (formerly known as Abraham Brody) is a performance artist, multidisciplinary artist, and choreographer. His practice explores gender identity, and power dynamics, centering decolonial and anti-patriarchal perspectives. Through his work, EYIBRA uses the human body as a space of transformation, confronting systems of oppression and exploring themes of resilience and vulnerability.
A former collaborator of Marina Abramović, EYIBRA has worked with artists such as Lukas Avendaño, a muxe artist from the Zapotec Nation of Mexico. He is a member of the MUXX collective, based in Mexico, which received the Art + Technology Lab Grant from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) in 2022. His work has been presented at institutions and festivals including the Barbican Centre London, Kampnagel Hamburg, Fondation Beyeler Basel, Pace Gallery, BRIC Arts New York, François Ghebaly Gallery, Teatro de la Ciudad de México, and Festival Ceremonia México, among others.
Recently, EYIBRA presented his solo exhibition ‘TRASHUMANCIA’ at the Laboratorio de Arte Alameda, Mexico City, where he continued his exploration of identity, migration, and the body through audiovisual installations and performance. His work challenges dominant narratives and seeks to create spaces for reflection, resistance, and collective healing.
Sue Jeong Ka

Artist Website: https://melwatkin.com/
Project Description
Index of Pressure traces latent fingerprints on American prisons’ banned books to reveal how censorship traverses bodies and institutions. This project focuses on books by women of color, such as Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye and erotic romance novels by Zane, prohibited not for sexually-liberal content alone but due to racial and sexual biases of prison censors. When these books are intercepted, only the sender and censor touch them, rendering them legally and physically untouchable for the incarcerated reader. Reading is interrupted before it can occur, leaving disrupted communication.
As a queer Asian woman, my body has long existed outside the American legal imagination; Asian migration was structured around male labor while women were excluded, and queer Asians were banned from entering the US until 1987. This history informs my examination of erasure, refusal, and the question: if speech is denied, can the fingertip still leave a record?
Using forensic methods, including ninhydrin reactions, fingerprint powders, and digital scanning, I will lift amino acid, sweat, and oil residues left by fingertips that handled these banned books, visualizing them as both data and poetic index. These traces will be printed using risograph and offset methods to produce a 100-copy artist’s edition book combining fingerprint images, rejection letters, and maps of facilities where these books were banned. Drawing from the Indigenous philosophy, “stones remember,” I approach each printed page as a surface holding memory through contact. Index of Pressure transforms touch into archival transmission, exposing how censorship marks flesh, knowledge, and desire.
Biography
Sue Jeong Ka is a visual artist whose practice challenges systems of censorship, surveillance, and institutional control. Working with banned materials, redacted archives, and bodily data, she examines how institutions shape visibility along lines of race, sexuality, and legal precarity. Her projects often unfold in public contexts, using data to question how individuals are made legible, exposed, or erased within larger systems. Through installation, performance, and research-based media, she interrogates how knowledge is produced, who is rendered visible, and what is left out. For Ka, art becomes a method of remembrance, recovering the voices and presences of those pushed to the margins.
Ka is an alumna of the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program, the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm, and Hunter College. She has held residencies and fellowships with the Drawing Center, the New York Foundation for the Arts, Artists Alliance Inc., the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, Queens Museum, The Laundromat Project, and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, among others. She is developing a public art project examining how carceral censorship and the redlining of information access operate in California, with implications extending across the US, in collaboration with the San Francisco Public Library, UCLA, and NYC Books Through Bars.
