Marcelina Ramirez is an Indigenous Latina artist, cultural strategist and community builder whose work focuses on the intersection of art, advocacy and Indigenous self-determination. Her career began in higher education administration at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, where she developed a strong foundation in systems leadership, student advocacy and community-centered program design. That experience continues to inform how she navigates institutions today, with both strategic precision and relational care.
Now working in regional arts leadership, Ramirez designs and oversees Native-centered programs that prioritize relationships over transactions, process over product, and community care over extraction. As the inaugural artist-in-residence at the Colorado College Mobile Arts Program, she led community conversations and creative initiatives addressing Missing and Murdered Indigenous People and the disproportionate impacts of the pandemic on women of color. Her work reflects her belief that art is not decoration, but medicine, memory and movement.
An accomplished Latin dancer, she trains and performs with Latisha Hardy Dance Studio, continuing to collaborate in ways that honor cultural lineage while expanding contemporary expression and creating spaces where movement becomes both storytelling and reclamation. She also integrates leadership development and personal growth frameworks into her work, drawing from coaching experiences with Ashley Coffey Coaching and leadership mentorship to strengthen her capacity as a values-driven, community-centered leader.
Ramirez is also a published poet whose writing explores love, lineage, magic, grief and survival. Rooted in her Indigenous Latina identity, her work invites audiences into stories that feel both ancestral and immediate. Whether through policy, performance, poetry or program design, she is committed to building spaces where culture is protected, artists are resourced and community is held with care.