meet the artists

  • Marilyn Arsem

    Marilyn Arsem has created more than 200 live events since 1975, ranging from solo performances to large-scale, site-specific works incorporating installation and performance. Based in Boston, Massachusetts, USA, Arsem has presented work in 30 countries at festivals, alternative spaces, galleries, museums, universities and conferences, as well as online.

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  • Lani Asuncion

    Asunción has performed live at MFA Boston, Now + There Lot Lab, Somerville Museum, Little Berlin in Philadelphia, and Aurora Picture Show in Houston, TX. They've facilitated community and public art projects at Brookline Arts Center, Boston Children’s Museum, Boston Cyberarts, Urbano Project, and Asian Arts Initiative in Philadelphia.

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  • Margaret Bellafiore

    Now over 70. Post pandemic (or is it?). Still questioning survival of not just me but all life as we know it. My granddaughter was just born when she came to my installation at Mobius then located at Harrison Avenue in the South End. Entitled “Global,” a huge chunk of ice melted onto the floor where I had drawn with powdered chalk animals and plants endangered by rising temperature.

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  • Jimena Bermejo

    Jimena Bermejo is a multidisciplinary artist, immigrant, mother, and educator from Mexico City, whose practice oscillates between dance and performance art. Her practice is concerned with the examination of race, trauma, feelings of being an “other,” and various aspects of human relations, among others. Jimena's performances range from abstract and sculptural to visceral and provocative.

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  • Black and white photo of Alissa Cardone

    Alissa Cardone (On Leave)

    Alissa Cardone has been creating and supporting dance in the Boston area since 1998 as a performer, organizer, dance maker, curator, educator, and mentor.  Her work spans solo and group compositions, site-specific and durational street performances, improvisations with experimental music, experimental sound design, immersive installation, and dance films.

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  • Veronique D’entremont

    Veronique d’entremont (they/them) is a trans-disciplinary artist and visual storyteller whose practice spans devotional sculpture, hybrid documentary, ritual/performance, and inter-species collaboration. The artist descends from a line of Sicilian women who are either blessed with spiritual gifts or cursed with bi-polar disorder, depending upon who you ask.

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  • Serena Gabriels

    Serena Gabriels is an interdisciplinary artist working in the Boston area. Her work explores the subjects of mental health awareness and play. Using her own lived experience with mental illness, she creates work that visualizes feelings that many cannot put into words. By combining video and the use of her body as a canvas, she brings invisible sensations to light. It is her intention to communicate compassion for these experiences and convey the message that we are not alone.

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  • Forbes Graham

    Forbes Graham is a composer, musician, sound artist, and visual artist whose work explores themes of simultaneity, perceptibility, transformation, and collage. His work “Encounters I” for trumpet, electronics, and voices premiered at Roulette in 2019. He performed with Michael Pisaro at (the) co-incidence festival in 2017 and has appeared at other music festivals including High Zero, Vision, and The Thing In The Spring.

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  • Jeff Huckleberry

    Jeff Huckleberry is an American artist performing art for the last 30 years. He is the son and grandson of far more practical people, which he tries to express in his art. His mother thought it was time to stop getting naked in front of people and privately he thinks she was probably right; and something about death. It has been said that you are only as good as your last performance, and Jeff's last performance wasn't as bad as it could have been.

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  • Sandy Huckleberry

    Using common, mundane objects, processes and colors, I recombine them so that the meanings and purposes of the acts and objects become unclear or questionable or ripe with new meanings. Warmth and coolness are very important. The warmth of kindness and a welcoming atmosphere toward the performers and the audience members, the cool logic of an abstract point made.

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  • Bonnie Han Jones

    Bonnie Han Jones is a Korean-American improvising musician, poet, and educator working primarily with electronic sound and text. Her work explores noise, sonic identity, listening, and sound as knowledge.

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  • Sara June

    Sara June is a dancemaker, performance artist and movement educator based in Boston, MA. She makes art and teaches movement from the perspective that the body is a permeable vessel from which all things in the natural world can be sensed and communicated.

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  • Heather Kapplow

    Heather Kapplow is a self-trained conceptual artist based in the United States. Kapplow creates participatory experiences that elicit unexpected intimacies using objects, alternative interpretations of existing environments, installation, performance, writing, audio and video.

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  • Marcel Marcel

    Marcel Marcel is an emerging video and installation artist based in Boston and born in the former Soviet Union. They work with microbial SCOBYs, experimental cake-scapes, lo-fi sculptural props, performance, sound-scapes, drawing, writing, AR face filters and digital ephemera. Together, these materials become a polyphonic mode to interrogate fascism, capitalism, surveillance and the fiction of borders and binaries. Hovering between the absurd and the abject, Marcel's work offers a speculative refuge for queer liberatory futures, joy and healing.

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  • El Putnam

    EL Putnam is an artist-philosopher writer working predominantly in performance art and digital technologies. Her work focuses on borders and entanglements of gesture, particularly the interplay of the corporeal with the machinic. Through her artistic practice, EL explores hidden histories and emotional experiences, testing the limits of their un-representability.

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  • Jasper Sanchez

    Jasper A. Sanchez (he/they; b. 1997, USA) is an independent curator, queer art historian, and public art enthusiast who graduated from the Art History & Critical Theory program at Lesley University. A Venezuelan-Colombian raised in Miami, FL, immersion in transnational art since their youth inspired them to focus their studies on curatorial practice with an interest in queer diaspora.

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  • Kledia Spiro

    Kledia Spiro is a multimedia, interdisciplinary artist, creating immersive videos, performances, and installations. Spiro was born in Albania and trained with an Olympic weightlifting team. She uses strength and weightlifting as a symbol of survival, empowerment, and celebration in her art practice. Weightlifting becomes a vehicle for discussing women’s role in society, immigration, and times of war.

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  • Joanna Tam

    Joanna Tam is a Hong Kong-born, Boston-based interdisciplinary artist. Using video, photography, performance, and installation, her work examines the issues of migration, construction of national identity, meaning of safety, and one's connection to a place. Joanna's work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. Solo exhibitions include American Studies 2019 at the Center for American Political Studies at Harvard University; Wasenstraße Story at Chrom VI in Idar-Oberstein, Germany Learn More ⇢

  • Anna Wexler

    I am an interdisciplinary, project centered artist. My research based works often engage inventive legacies of resistance to colonialism and racial capitalism. I am inspired by collaborative projects that fuse archival sources, radical aesthetics and insurgent social practices across histories and communities.

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 To learn more about Mobius Artists Group organization, and past members, see here ⇢