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Category: NEWS ARCHIVE

Internal Repair Works at hARTslane

Repair works at hARTslane

The internal repair works at hARTslane are in full swing. We are aiming to make the space drier, safer and more welcoming to our artists and communities.

We’ll be reopening in March 2024 with some very exciting projects, including Invisible Visible and HA! (hARTslane alternative), both providing opportunities and amazing exhibitions for local artists & audiences.  

hARTslane is dedicated to providing artists & creatives with affordable opportunities to produce, exhibit and inspire. Our ongoing submission programme is still running and we currently accept submissions for projects taking place from March 2024 onwards. We particularly welcome applications from our local area. 

The repair works are made possible thanks to funding from NCIL and UKSPF.

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HA! (hARTslane Alternative)

HA!

(hARTslane Alternative)*

Link to the Frequently Asked Questions 

What are artists doing in general? When they are not creating objects that are intensely exquisite, sharply thought-provoking, and simultaneously, shocking. When they’re not using their materials for company, creating a doll, and eating paint as sustenance. When they are not hanging out on the steps of the Tate…wondering. No but really? Is anyone else wondering? 

Can we talk a bit more genuinely about the “true lives” of artists.

The artists who are outside of funding or a residency, the ones who are outside of an institution or loan, those who have graduated, those who haven’t, artists who don’t align with the working hours of other artists, artists who can’t find the time to hang out in the museum, or on its steps.

How do you find the time to collide with your other artists? Do you want to make your artistic life spicy? Again? 

HA! Is an alternative “MA” Fine Art programme designed by artists in collaboration with hARTslane.

HA! provides artists with a focus on skill-sharing, affordability, and living/working life as an artist in London.

HA! responds to discontentment with mainstream art education models.

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* HA! is an alternative MA fine art programme which is not officially recognised or accredited, which is why we are “alternative”.

It’s an artist-run education model and takes place with collective resources and skill share at its heart. We learn from each other by sharing skills and knowledge.

This programme was designed around affordability and the working/living life as an artist in London. It is for those who want to develop their artistic practice but can’t afford the costs of higher university education.

If you’d like to see other alternative school programmes, I’ve attached a link here:

https://videomole.tv/alternative-art-education/

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HA! (hARTslane Alternative) 2024

Location: hARTslane Gallery

Duration: 4 months (15th April –  5th August)

Commitment: 2 x evenings per week (Monday and Wednesday)

Credential: Certificate in Master of Art by the authority of the assembly *

*held at the convocation

 

Course content:

Studying in the belly of the beast and between the walls and afterhours of hARTslane 

We will have a large selection of crits, talks, workshops, visiting artists/experts and off-site visits, gathering as a group 1-2 times a week.

There will also be the chance to test exhibiting work in a weekend interim show with your cohort at hARTslane Gallery. 

Your graduation will be captured in a final 9 day show at the end of the course, also taking place at hARTslane Gallery, with a total of 8 artists.

All the sessions will be happening between hours of 6-9pm on a weekday evening, staggered over the course of 4 months. 

This is a launch of a project we’ve been crafting for the past year. This year we only have 8 places available, but we are hoping to keep the project returning year after year, with many cohorts and hARTslane alumni.

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Breakdown

3 expert-led sustainability talks

–          Cristiana Botigella.

Founder & director of hARTslane, established the artist in residence at the Pistoletto Foundation (Italy), research in international work (Artquest), self-determination and economic sustainability for artists.

–          Charlotte Warne Thomas.

Artist, lecturer, freelance researcher and advocate for artists’ fair pay; author of Artists as Workers (2021), editor of Structurally F~cked (2023); founder of Peer Sessions post-graduate crit group; and current practice-based PhD candidate (AHRC-funding) at Kingston University. 

–          Sophia Kosmaoglou.

Artist and organiser who works collaboratively and across media to address the construction of identity through relationships. Founder of the alternative art education network ART&CRITIQUE (2015) and co-founder of the Radical Pedagogy Research Group (2019). She is currently working on a participatory action-research project to start a co-operative art school, in order to provide a self-organised and sustainable alternative to mainstream art education.

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2 Group crits

–          One crit will be with a group of 4.

–          One crit will be with the whole cohort of 8.

 

2 visiting practicing artists talks

–          Hanne Peeraer.

Artist, facilitator and interdisciplinary problem-solver.

 

–          Alek Mechlinski.

Artist and curator with a painting practice, engaging with this dynamic environment by reiterating, digesting, and contemplating images.

1 x Workshop on a workshop

–          led by founders Rachel Lonsdale and Sarah-Athina Nahas

——–

8 skill-share workshops

–          Every artist on the course has to offer up 1 art related skill share workshop for the rest of the cohort. Skill share can take any form, but practice-based skill share is encouraged. Some examples include technician work/sewing machine skills/ archiving/ materials/ paper making / natural dye/ sculpture/ installing work/ movement based workshops

 

3 off site visits

–          To an art space/event/opening

1 x weekend interim show

–          May 2024

 

9 day graduation show at hARTslane Gallery

–          July 2024

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Finance

 We have set the fee for the course at £90 per month, coming to a total of £360 for the whole programme. 

This will be in 4 instalments from April-July, expected on the 1st of the month

The first instalment will be expected on 1st March 2024. Instalments will not be refundable

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Project Lead(s)

 

–       Rachel Lonsdale and Sarah-Athina Nahas

Rachel is a multi-disciplinary artist. Rachel puts questions to the environments she encounters (mainly spaces in London but sometimes in the Northeast of England when train fares are low and she goes home).  She creates narrative in the form of performance, writing, text and film. She restages elements of contemporary life and interacts with everyday objects, misusing them to create unresolved mysteries, satire, and conflict.

After graduating from Wimbledon College of Art on the BA fine art course that has since been axed ~RIP~, she is now Programme Co-ordinator at hARTslane gallery where she programmes events, co-curates exhibitions and other action.  She is the co-founder of GRAVEL* (2022-2023), and now is part of conch collective* as another extension of live performance projects.

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Sarah-Athina is Lebanese-French multidisciplinary artist with a particular interest for painting, textiles, sewing and any time consuming, painstaking activity. She studied BA:Fine Art at Wimbledon (UAL) and then had a very contrasting experience at the Royal college of Art.  It reinforced her love for the alternative and underground culture in general.

She co-ran GRAVEL* (2022-2023) where she developed her drawing performances, exploring silky paints mixed with honey and spilled goblets of wine. She’s part of conch collective, a get-together of artists with a particular focus on performance(s) with a small P but with a big S. 

(for both)

*a tri-monthly live performance art evening at hARTslane gallery

* a humble collective of seven

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Invisible Visible Open Call

Dates:

Open Call open: Tuesday 2nd of January 2024
Deadline for submissions: Sunday 21th of January 2024

Drop-off date: Wednesday 13 March 2024, 4-8pm 

Exhibition dates:
15-24 March 2024, 12-6pm
Opening night Friday 15th, 5-8pm

 Part of The Telegraph Hill Festival 2024

Supported by:

‘Invisible Visible’
A Celebration of LGBQT+ Bodies and Identities

OPEN CALL FOR ENTRIES

Deadline for submission: Sunday 21 January 2024

Submission Form

‘Invisible Visible’ is a group exhibition hosted at hARTslane that will be celebrating LGBTQ+ identities and bodies, as well as the freedom of expression and identification in terms of one’s gender and sexuality. The aim is to bring together LGBTQ+ artists that live in New Cross and surrounding areas in order to support the community and its creativity. The exhibition will be curated by queer visual artist Usva Inei.

We are now looking for entries for the exhibition. We welcome artwork of any media that responds to the themes of the call, including, but not limited to drawing, painting, printmaking, video, workshop, performance, sculpture, and installation. Please note that since we want to include as many artists as possible, you may be asked to edit or resubmit work that is very large. Depending on the number and type of entries, video work, performances, and workshops may be shown during viewings or events rather than throughout the show.

We will not be accepting work that is derogatory or against hARTslane’s inclusivity policy.

Eligibility and Submission:

We welcome any work by individuals that identify as LGBTQ+ and live or work in New Cross or surrounding areas (e.g., Peckham, Deptford, Telegraph Hill).

This exhibition is to celebrate and bring together the work of local LGTBQ+ talent. For this reason, we have left the theme intentionally quite vague and open for you to interpret. Our main goal is to bring together local LGBQT+ talent.

Your work does not need to be completely finished for the submission, you may submit a sketch. However, we need to be able to get an idea of what you will be creating.

We will accept one work per artist.

We will not be accepting work that is derogatory or against hARTslane’s Equality, Diversity & Inclusion Policy.

Submission of work and participation are free of charge.

Click HERE to submit your work. 

Drop-Off and Pick-Up of Artwork:

You will need to physically drop off your work at hARTslane on Wednesday 13 March 2024, 4-8pm (or have someone drop it off for you). The work needs to be ready to hang.

Please provide written detailed instructions on hanging and installing. We will have nails and screws but If your work requires special fittings, you will need to provide them and you may be asked to help with installation.

Artwork will need to be picked up on Sunday 24th of March between 6 and 8pm. hARTslane does not have the space to store work outside of exhibition dates.

Curation:

The exhibition will be curated by visual artist Usva Inei. Usva (they/them) is a trans non-binary visual and performance artist. Usva mainly works through mixed media installations, with printmaking being at the centre of their practice. Working from their own lived experiences as a queer immigrant, Usva’s artwork addresses themes of misuse of power, suppression of freedom of speech, and generational trauma.

Following hARTslane’s policies, we aim to take all submissions. However, please note that due to spatial restriction, we may need to ask you to adapt or resubmit work if it is large. Depending on the number and type of entries, video work, performances, and workshops may be shown during viewings or events rather than throughout the show.

Care of work and liability:

The utmost care will be taken of all work submitted, however hARTslane shall not be liable for any:

  • theft of, loss of, or damage to the artwork whilst on display/exhibition or stored in the gallery or the Artist’s property during the exhibition period;
  • personal injury of the artist except to the extent that this was due to hARTslane’s negligence;
  • exhibiting artists will assume the responsibility to insure their works. The gallery is covered by Public Liability Insurance policy.

Photographs:

Exhibiting artists accept and agree that all works in the exhibition may be photographed and used for publicity and promotion of the exhibition (including on social media).

For further information please email info@hartslane.org

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The Dinner Art Project

The Dinner Art Project

A series of events for sharing food and stories

Saturday 23rd September, 1-4pm
Free entry, all welcome!

Intimate ingesting;
ingesting intimacy
by artists Fatima Alaiwat & Barney Pau

Creating three different dishes all using the same ingredients, exploring the variety that can be found in repetition.

A project by hARTslane.

In collaboration with:
Deptford RoyalNaval Place Allotments and GS Wines
Supported by Bold Vision  

Rather than focussing on the novelty of an array of different foods, this event will focus on repetition as a means of care and intimacy. The artists will explore ways of activating food/eating as practise for relearning, reinvesting and rewilding things we care for. Over the course of the event, Fatima and Barney will create 3 different foods, all using the same ingredients, to focus on the variability that can be found in repetition. These could take place on the hour.
One part will be about the physicality of eating; one about provenance; one about a poetic intervention. The intention is to explore how these three separate approaches invite modes of intimacy in ingesting.

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Artist Development and Access to Opportunities

  • DYCP Grant

    Webinar

  • Artist in Residence Unwrapped

    27 July – 16 August

  • One-to-One Sessions

Following discussions with artists, we have noticed there is a recurring theme surrounding a lack of support and accessibility to opportunities and arts funding applications. The creative sector deserves better than this – we want to collaborate by sharing our resources and experience.

We are offering a programme of artist development events and opportunities that take place either in hARTslane or online. 

We currently offer:

  • Arts Council England DYCP (Developing Your Creative Practice) application writing group workshops and webinars. 
  • ACE DYCP application support & review (both new applications and resubmissions)
  • We can help you obtain ACE Access Support for DYCP and NLPG funding applications and we can be your support worker
  • One-to-one advice & mentoring sessions: from career and practice development to funding, accessing opportunities, visibility, community engagement and project management. 

Our group sessions normally cost £20 and one-to one online advice sessions are £40. For fees on application review and for more information please contact us via email at info@hartslane.org

DYCP Grant – Application writing webinar

Ongoing / Normally 4-6 times a year and near the ACE DYCP deadlines
Sessions last 90 minutes
New dates are announced on our Instagram page

Are you an artist looking to further develop your practice but you are not sure how to?
Are you planning to apply for Arts Council England’s Developing Your Creative Practice (DYCP) programme and are looking for inspiration, advice and support?
Join our Developing Your Creative Practice funding application writing workshop. We will share our knowledge and experience to help you create a strong Arts Council DYCP application.

What to expect:

During the workshop we will take an in-depth look at the DYCP programme application process: eligibility criteria and access support, the questions and what ACE assessors are looking for, how to create a solid plan and a budget.
We will look at examples of successful applications and we will share useful tips and resources to help you develop your ideas, plan and write your own application.
The session will be friendly and informal. There will be plenty of opportunities for discussion and questions.
This workshop is tailored to those who are planning to apply to Arts Council England’s Developing Your Creative Practice programme. However, it will be beneficial to all those who want to take a moment to reflect on how to develop their practice and decide to apply in the future or just want to bring their practice to the next level and don’t know where to start.

What is a DYCP?

Arts Council England’s DYCP supports individuals who are cultural and creative practitioners and want to take time to focus on their creative development. 

 


Artis Residencies Unwrapped

Run by Cristiana Bottigella (hARTslane director) & Rain Wu (Artist & lecturer)

Join us at hARTslane to get inspired and discover everything you need to know about artist in residence programmes:

Why you should go  

What they are  

Where to find them

How to apply…and be successful! 


1-to-1 sessions

These sessions are bespoke and they can be booked as a one-off or as a series.

This is an opportunity to get practical advice, receive feedback on your work and find out more ways to support your practice. There is no expectation of prior knowledge about funding and project proposals.
The sessions are informal and conversational.

Participants can use the advice session as they choose. This could involve:

  • A creative review of a project idea

  • Practice development; plan of action and target-setting

  • Funding opportunities; where to start and how to select the right ones

  • Help finding partners and creating meaningful exchange in working with local communities

  • Reading and commenting on a funding application/artistic opportunity or residency

Each session is a confidential, relaxed discussion about your ideas or project to explore the key issues and challenges you have identified. An advice session generally ends with a clear set of tasks and priorities or resources in order to progress to the next stage of your creative journey.
Sessions last 1 hour and cost £40.

For more information or bookings, please email us. 




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Gravel V: Pit of the water’s tongue – Saturday 18th of March

Pit of the water’s tongue  Gravel V

Part of the Telegraph Hill Festival 2023

Join us on Saturday 18th,  March 6-8pm, at hARTslane  for another evening of live performance art, featuring 8 acts

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Niamh Hannaford

Claudia Ramirez

Ruby Reding

Aimée Lyon

Rachel Lonsdale and Max Melvin

Shuyi Gao

Chloe Kelly

Michal Adamczewski and Sarah-Athina Nahas

——————————

This one is a special edition event that speaks to the theme of nature and the ecosystem

Curated by: Rachel Lonsdale, Max Melvin and Sarah Athina Nahas

Guest curator: Siin Lee

Tickets are £4

Pit of the waters tongue is about the dissolving boundaries between all life on earth. It centres on the idea written by Daisy Hildyard in her book The Second Body that “To be an animal is to be in possession of a physical body, a body which can eat, drink and sleep; it is also to be embedded within a worldwide network of ecosystems”. This idea of tapping into the intangible presents an art form which is its own document and has parallels with the ecosystem.

Find out more about Gravel

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Play the Lewisham Community Lottery and win £25,000!

Lewisham Community Lottery

WIN UP TO £25,000 WHILST SUPPORTING HARTSLANE
TICKET = £1 !

Play the Lewisham Community Lottery 
It gets drawn every week on Saturday!

Lewisham Community Lottery is an exciting weekly lottery that raises money for good causes in Lewisham. All good causes supported by the lottery will benefit Lewisham and its residents.

Play the lottery, support Lewisham and hARTslane – it’s that simple!

hARTslane CIC is an art project space in New Cross Gate, rooted in the local community.
This is a place where artists and local people come together to share ideas, explore contemporary issues and be inspired.
We have a gallery space that we make available to artists to experiment and present their work to the public. This space is however in dire need of repair work.

We need your help for us to be able to improve our building so we can continue to offer and even expand our services.

Thank you for your support and good luck!

Yours sincerely,

The hARTslane team

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GRAVEL IV: If It Was My Trolley

If It Was My Trolley

GRAVEL IV

Saturday 3rd of December, 6-8:30pm

Trolls in my trolley what about you

“Trolls dwell in isolation, let’s break the trend” – avril lavigne

Join us on Saturday 3rd December at the gates of hARTslane gallery for another evening of live performance art.

Featuring artists:
Emma McAndrew D’Souza
Amy Gillies
Unamed Collective
Marta Burhan and Milan Tharmaratnam
Max Melvin
Karen Okpoti
Rachel Lonsdale
Sarah Athina Nahas and Michal Adamczewski
Charlotte Warne Thomas

Doors 6pm

Tickets are £4 via eventbrite 

Wrap up very very very warmly

See you there!

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Come Dine in Blue

COME DINE IN BLUE

Inspired by the work of Tisna Westerhof.  

Created and produced by artist Tisna Westerhof & Cristiana Bottigella. 

Participatory art project bringing together more than 100 Lewisham residents with a migrant background creating a Blue-and-White dining room installation that tells personal and collective stories of identity and belonging, redefining heritage, celebrating different cultures and the journey to Lewisham.

Please read more about Come Dine in Blue project: An article by Miri de Villers for Eastlononlines and an interview by Ayokunle Oluwalana, community reporter for My London News.

Please visit our Come Dine in Blue Shop.

‘Blue Borough’ – Illustration by Tisna Westerhof
Buy it here 

Supported by





‘Redefining heritage’ – Illustration by Tisna Westerhof

Artists and art facilitators: Tisna Westerhof, Amanda Holiday, Rain Wu, Clive Burton, Nadina Ali, Kai Christodulou-lee, Mary McInerney, Carla Thomas, Tang Victoria Hoi Yi, Amelia Yang and WhittyGordon Projects.

Participants:
Ainhoa Oleas, Al S. Family, Alan Chong, Alex & Lavinia Bajko, Anaya Hyde, Angeline Espinosa, April Lam, Asmahan, Aylin, Bella Alexandrova, Bernard, Biheri, Channan Warmington Lewis Moore, Dana, Deborah Thomas, Dulce, Edward, Elisabeth Grace Enriquez, Fabiola Jimenez, Fanyi Zhang, Farozan Saleemi, Farhnaz Saleemi, Faten, Fr. Grant Bolton-Debbage, Fiona Quadri, Flynn Richards, Fox Thomas Butler, Franklin Jackduring, Fransesca Telling, Freya Ye, Georgiana Hyde, Gustavo Barboza, Hanadi, Lloyd Richards, Hang Luc, Harris family, Iyamide Thomas, Jada Perry, James Attwood, Jane Dolores, Jessenia Parrez, Jinying Gao, Joshua, Julia and Jim Wells, Julia, Julia Deng, Julia Scoble, Kai Christodulou-lee, Ke Bao, Kiki Wong, Kyrah Warmington-Lewis, Leyre, Lia Ayuino, Lilyana Karavacheva, Limah, Linda, Lueillia Joseph, Luisa Chicaiza y Salvador Herrera, Maliha, Marianela, Marie Wotay Kamara, Marilyn Alfaro, Martha, Mary Shephard, Mateo Espinoza, Melvasquez, Mia Olaya, Mia Scoble, Mong Lang, Mutiat Oyesile, Nadina Ali, Naiala, Najm, Nicolas Saez, Petia Pakozdi, Pokuaa, Qianhui Sun – Alice, Quan Cao, Randolph Andy, Remmie Akibo-Betts, Rihanna Daño Cali, Ruby Seasy, Sabah, Sachi Slate, Sally Shao, Sanaya Havaldar, Sena Appeah, Serafina Min, Shoko Sakuma, Silvia, Sweeta jan, Tania Patiño Ariana Ruiz, Tolu Elusadé, Tom V., Vaura & Noah Viner, Veronica Ashley, Violeta Luna Enriquez, Waeed, Wiliam, Wagma, Woman from Syria living in Lewisham with her family, Xuemei Hwang, Yalda, Yen Trieu, Yiyun Li, Zainab, Zhuoyuan Zhang, Zoila y Luis Lema. 

Part of We Are Lewisham, Lewisham London Borough of Culture 2022

Exhibition opening:
Saturday 24th of September, 3-7pm         
Exhibition open, Sunday 25th – Thursday 6th of October. Weekdays, 3-7pm, Saturday & Sunday, 2-6pm.

Programme of the opening day:
Launch of the Come Dine in Blue film created by WhittyGordon Project and the Come Dine in Blue publication.
Free creative family workshops available throughout the opening day.
Food and drinks made by the participating community groups.
Come Dine in Blue artworks, publication and gadgets available to purchase.

Partner community organisations:
Refugee Council – Lewisham 
Migration Museum 
The Confucius Institute at Goldsmiths, University of London
JOY & The Tai-Chi community at All Saints Community Centre
All Saints Church, New Cross
Be Seen Be Heard Youth Forum – Young black artists in Lewisham/SE London aged 16-25
The Latin-American community of Lewisham & SE London
The community of La Placita Mall 

Funded by:
The Arts Council England
The Heritage Fund 
Lewisham Council


The programme of 30 creative workshops was led by artist Tisna Westerhof and curated by Cristiana Bottigella, in collaboration with South East London based artists and art facilitators: Amanda Holiday, Rain Wu, Mary McInerney and Carla Thomas. The 100 participants engaged in various craft-based activities and learned new creative skills whilst sharing their personal and collective stories and memories of family rituals around food, domestic and national celebrations as well as the challenges of migration and building their home in a new country. The creative workshops varied from creating clay pots, decorating vintage crockery using onglaze enamels and decal transfers, embroidering and textile screen printing, spoken word and collaging extra-large cut outs, quilting, decorating tiles and kiln firing. All the artworks made during the workshops are featured in the Come Dine in Blue Exhibition. The gallery is divided in a dining room and a kitchen presenting The Table of Be-Longing, Two-Towels, The Story Tile of Joy, Messages to Blue, The Women’s Quilt of Pride, The Wish Dish Collection, Lewisham Toile and The Melting Pots.

Originated in China, the Blue-and-White ceramic technique has travelled the world. From Dutch Delftware to Portuguese Azulejos, from the Italian Maiolica to the English Willow Patterns and the tin-glazed earthenware from the British Isles. Often intended for the Middle Eastern market, the Blue-and-White ceramic was exported to Japan, Korea, South East Asia, Europe and as far as Africa and South America. The Blue-and-White is the unifying language through which the Come Dine in Blue participants tell their personal stories and recollect their memories, domestic traditions and ancestral words of wisdom.

Come Dine in Blue publication:
Buy it here
Editor: Frederica Agbah;  
Design: Matteo Grotto (OpenEDU);
Contributors: Massimiliano Mollona, Amanda Holiday, Rachel Kanev & Chenjin Ying (Confucius Institute), Fr. Grant Bolton-Debbage, Jada Perry & Fiona Quadri (Be Seen Be Heard Youth Forum), Shoko Sakuma, Alice Qianhui Sun, Amelia Yang, Tang Victoria Hoi Yi, Fabiola Jimenez.
Supported by The Heritage Fund

Special Thanks to:
Frederica Agbah, Bella Alexandrova, Massimiliano Mollona, Amanda Holiday, Father Grant Bolton-Debbage, Mia-Violet Leech, Liberty Melly, Eve Maia Annesley, Lois Nutt, Jane Keane, Yen Trieu, Mong Lang, Rachel Kanev, Jada Perry, Francesco Strocchi and Matteo Grotto, Renie Westerhof-Pot, Sigrun Sverrisdottir, Rachel Lonsdale, Max Melvin and the Refugee Cafe.

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