over and over and over again by Eleanor Crawford

Eleanor Crawford is a multidisciplinary artist and choreographer invested in the act of remembering. Eleanor’s work combines personal narrative and cultural theory to offer queer, feminist social critique. She grew up dancing at the Brooklyn Arts Exchange and remains deeply connected to the community, including co-producing AlumNight at BAX in 2023. Eleanor has shown their work at SCDT, Atland, Triskelion Arts, The Parkside Lounge, Cora Dance, Anchor House of Artists, virtually through skewl, and at Vienna Union Hall as a 2024 Bearnstow Young Artist Intern. Eleanor graduated from Hampshire College with a focus in choreography and cultural studies and currently works as Cora Dance’s Advancement and Development Manager.

my mothers coat by Dagmar Radmacher

Dagmar Radmacher (MA RCA) is a German visual artist based in Copenhagen, Denmark. Working across a range of mediums, she employs dogmatic, repetitive and slow processes that often take on performative form. Her practice investigates memory and history while drawing on simple, everyday materials, the domestic sphere, and textile techniques. Radmacher’s moving-image works extend directly from her performative actions, tracing gestures and materials as carriers of lived experience. She has exhibited and performed in galleries, museums, festivals, and within an opera context.

Washington Street by David Hunter

David Hunter was born in Ottawa, Canada, and moved frequently during his youth.

He graduated from the Ontario College of Art and Design (honours) with further studies at the British Institute of Florence and Concordia University.

Hunter regularly participates in international exhibitions and festivals, presenting work that bridges personal narrative with broader cultural memory. He currently has several video-based projects in post-production, further expanding his multidisciplinary practice.

Surveyor Electron by Anisa Hodzic

Anisa Hodzic is a multidisciplinary artist whose work draws from Bosniak heritage and personal history to explore themes of intergenerational trauma, memory, spirit, and identity. Through film, sound, and collaborative practice, she creates poetic narratives that confront displacement and healing, using art as a bridge between personal experience and collective remembrance. As both an artist and educator, Anisa fosters community spaces that honor resilience and voice, inviting others to engage in dialogue across culture, time, and place.

Paul Tribute by Joe Staton

Joe Staton is a British actor, director, and producer based in New York City. Originally from Minehead, Somerset, he grew up in France and Spain. Previous credits include Hector McQueen (Murder On The Orient Express, Cumberland Theatre), Fred (A Christmas Carol, The Secret Theatre), Banquo (Macbeth, Cumberland Theatre), Duke Solinus & Doctor Pinch (Comedy of Errors, BCSC), Frances Flute (A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Classic Theatre of San Antonio), Edgar (King Lear, Royal Social Distancing Company), Benvolio (Romeo & Juliet, Shakespeare In The Woods), Gremio (Taming of the Shrew, Shakespeare In The Woods), Yakov (The Seagull, The Harold Clurman Lab Theatre), Corin, Lebeau, Amiens & Jacques DeBoys (As You Like It, The Rogue Players), Little Charles (August Osage County, Stella Adler Studio) and Mr. Fox (Fantastic Mr. Fox, Italia Conti Academy). Film credits include The Lightworker (Bubble and Squeak Productions), Chekhov’s Eye (White Space Film Productions), and TakeTwo (Fragile Wildflower Productions).

Funeral by Li-Ming Hu

Li-Ming Hu is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and former actress from New Zealand, known for her acting roles in shows like Power Rangers RPM and Shortland Street. She holds a master's degree in history and moved to the United States to pursue fine arts, eventually earning an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Today, she works as a visual and performance artist, creating works that deconstruct pop culture and examine performance through a carnivalesque lens. 

Anusam by Dorothea Gloria

Dorothea Gloria is a Filipina theater-maker and performance artist whose work weaves ritual, community, and contemporary storytelling. Her current artistic research explores mourning practices from the Ilocos region of the Philippines and how they translate into contemporary performance. She is the founder of Riffraff NYC (www.riffraffnyc.org), a collective devoted to developing new, multicultural work and sharing stories that bridge diverse voices. Dorothea’s work has been featured in various venues across New York and the Philippines, including independent theater spaces and community-based festivals. She attended conservatory at the Stella Adler Studio and is currently an MFA candidate in Performance and Interactive Media Arts at Brooklyn College. Her recent projects investigate grief, diaspora, and collective healing through movement, song, and participatory ritual. She continues to create works that invite audiences to gather, witness, and remember together.

CURATORS:

Abygai Peña (they/she) is a Brooklyn-based cultural worker and filmmaker serving as the Community Outreach Coordinator at NewFest, New York’s leading LGBTQ+ film and media organization. In this role, they build partnerships with local organizations, curate community-centered events, and lead efforts to amplify queer voices across the city. With a background in analog filmmaking and a deep commitment to queer cinematic expression, Abygai brings an artist’s sensitivity to their outreach work — connecting communities through storytelling, collaboration, and visibility. Their films have screened at Anthology Film Archives, Millennium Film Workshop, and DCTV. Abygai also serves on the programming committee at Millennium and is a former DCTV Film Fellow and Film at Lincoln Center intern.

Dorothea Gloria (she/her) Dorothea Gloria is a Filipina theater-maker and performance artist whose work weaves ritual, community, and contemporary storytelling. Her current artistic research focuses on mourning practices from the Ilocos region of the Philippines and how they translate into contemporary performance. She is the founder of riffraff nyc, an artist-led platform dedicated to developing new work and sharing multicultural stories through collaborative performance. RiffRaff nurtures artists in creating pieces that reflect diverse lived experiences while building community through process-driven creation and exchange.