ʻO WESTAF kēia manawa ʻo Creative West.  E heluhelu i nā mea a pau.

Our Work – Networks

Leader of Color Network

The Leaders of Color Network unites alumni of the Leaders of Color program to deepen relationships across cohorts. The network shares and builds knowledge and skills to envision and enact a field that is supportive to the needs of BIPOC cultural workers at every stage of their career. Our goal is to deepen relationships — among alumni, with Creative West, and in the field at large — building an intersectional, intergenerational, and multiracial movement on behalf of cultural equity.

Hāʻawi-hui

Lae Hoʻopili

Nā Hāʻawi, Nā makana a me nā hui papahana

Creative Komohana

grants@wearecreativewest.org

Leaders of Color Staff

Anika - Poʻo

ʻO Anika Tené, ʻo ia

Luna Hoʻokele o nā haʻawina, nā makana a me nā papahana

Hoʻomaopopo a hoʻomohala ʻo Anika Tené i nā ʻike aʻo e pili ana i ke kaulike e hoʻopili a hoʻoulu i nā alakaʻi a me nā kaiāulu e kūkulu i kahi ʻoihana noʻeau a me ka moʻomeheu. Ua komo ʻo ia me Creative West mai kona kūlana ma ke ʻano he luna o ka hoʻonaʻauao aupuni ma ka John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts kahi āna i hōʻoia ai ua lako ka poʻe ʻoihana noʻeau me ke aʻo ʻana a me ke kākoʻo ʻoihana kūpono i ko lākou ʻimi ʻana e hāʻawi i ke komo kaulike i ka ʻoihana ma waena o ka lehulehu. haumāna kula. Ua hana pū ʻo Kwinana me kekahi mau hui noʻeau ma ke ʻano he luna kahua, mea hana, hoʻonohonoho hale kiʻi, a me nā hoa kūʻai inoa inoa. Ua lawelawe ʻo ia ma ke ʻano he alakaʻi alakaʻi no nā ʻaha koleke aupuni, nā papahana a me nā lawelawe no ka National Association for College Admission Counseling kahi āna i hoʻokele a hoʻonui i ke koleke STEM a me nā ʻoihana ʻoihana e hiki ana ma luna o 20,000 mau mea hele i kēlā me kēia makahiki. He lālā ʻo Tené ma ke Kulanui ʻo George Mason University's College of Visual and Performing Arts, ka noho mua o ka Arlington County Commission for the Arts and co-founder of Arlington for Justice; noho mua o ka Arts Administrators of Color Network a me kahi alum o ka BIPOC Leadership Circle o artEquity, e hana pū ana me nā alakaʻi noʻeau ʻē aʻe o ka ʻāina e hoʻomohala i nā kumu hoʻohālike alakaʻi alakaʻi kaulike. Ua loaʻa ʻo Tené i kāna kēkelē laepua ma ka ʻepekema politika mai ke Kulanui ʻo Howard a me ke kēkelē laepua ma ka hoʻokele ʻana i nā ʻoihana mai ke Kulanui ʻo George Mason, kahi i kālele ai kāna capstone i ka pono o ka ʻokoʻa i ke alakaʻi hoʻonohonoho ʻoihana. Loaʻa iā ia ke kēkelē laepua ma ka anthropology lehulehu mai ke Kulanui ʻAmelika a me ke kēkelē laepua ma ka hoʻokele ʻana mai ke Kulanui o Stellenbosch ma ʻApelika Hema.

Josh Ellis - Poʻo

ʻO Josh Ellis, ʻo ia / ʻo ia

Hāʻawi a me ka Luna Hoʻokomo

He kuleana koʻikoʻi ko Josh Ellis i ka hoʻomaʻamaʻa ʻana a me ka hoʻokele ʻana i nā papahana BIPOC a Creative West a me nā hoʻolālā me ka hoʻohana ʻana i nā hana hāʻawi kālā i hoʻokumu ʻia e hoʻoikaika i ka hopena aupuni. ʻO kāna mau hana ma mua, ʻo ia ka mana o ka orchestra ma nā hui he nui, kahi i mālama ai ʻo ia i nā orchestra ʻōpio me nā haumāna he 500, mālama i nā kumu kula a me nā ʻaelike kiʻi malihini kipa, a hana a hoʻokō i nā papa hana papahana. Ua paʻa pū ʻo ia i nā kūlana ma ka John F. Kennedy Center no ka Performing Arts in Patron Services a ma ka Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts ma ke ʻano he hana hoʻokele hoʻokele opera, kahi āna i hoʻomohala ai i ka ʻike mea pena no ka manawa o ka papahana a alakaʻi i ka noiʻi ʻana i ka mea hana opera. hōʻoluʻolu i ka pūnāwai o 2020. Hōʻike ka hana manawaleʻa a Ellis i kāna kūpaʻa i ka ʻōlelo aʻoaʻo a me ke kaulike. He lālā ikaika ʻo ia no ka Arlington Commission for the Arts, e hāʻawi ana i ka hoʻonui kālā kālā no ke kalana a me ka lobbying i ka ʻaha ʻōlelo VA. Eia hou, ua hoʻopaʻa ʻo ia i ke kālā a me ka hui pū ʻana i nā hanana makana no ka Prince William County Arts Council. ʻO ka mea i hala koke aku nei, ua hāʻawi ʻia ʻo ia i kahi kūlana ma ke Kōmike Hoʻolālā no ka Hui Hui o nā ʻOihana Hoʻonaʻauao (APAP) - ʻo ka hui nui o ka honua i ka hōʻike ʻana i nā hana hana, hoʻopaʻa ʻana, a me ka ʻoihana huakaʻi. Loaʻa iā Ellis kahi Master of Arts in Arts Management a me kahi Bachelor of Arts in Music mai ke Kulanui ʻo George Mason.

Marcelina Ramirez - Poʻo

ʻO Marcelina Ramirez, ʻo ia

Nā haʻawina, nā makana a me nā papahana hoʻonohonoho

He loea loea ʻo Marcelina me kahi ʻano ʻano like ʻole e pili ana i ka hoʻokele hoʻonaʻauao kiʻekiʻe, ka ʻōlelo aʻoaʻo, a me ke komo ʻana i ke kaiāulu. Me ka ʻike ma ke ʻano he luna hoʻonaʻauao kiʻekiʻe ma ke Kulanui o Colorado, Colorado Springs, lawe ʻo Ramirez i ka ʻike hoʻolālā a me ke alakaʻi alakaʻi kaiāulu i kāna hana. Ma ke ʻano he mea pena kiʻi no Colorado College, ua hana nui ʻo Ramirez i ka hoʻonaʻauao ʻana iā Southern Colorado i nā pilikia koʻikoʻi e like me Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (MMIP) a me ka hopena o ka maʻi maʻi i nā Wahine o ke kala. Hōʻike kāna mau hana i kāna kūpaʻa i ka hoʻohana ʻana i ke kiʻi i mea hana no ka hoʻololi ʻana i ka nohona a me ka hoʻonaʻauao. ʻO Ramirez he lālā kaulana o ka hui Latisha Hardy Dance, e hāʻawi ana i ka vibrancy a me ka ʻokoʻa o ke kaiāulu hula. Ma o kāna alakaʻi ʻana, hoʻoulu ʻo ia i kahi wahi hoʻokipa a hoʻohui ʻia no ka hōʻike moʻomeheu a me ka laulima. I loko o ka honua keaka, ua komo ikaika ʻo Ramirez i nā hana kaulike, ʻokoʻa, a me ka hoʻokomo ʻana (EDI) (ʻo ka mea hou loa ma kahi papa ʻōlelo aʻoaʻo no ka hui keaka PHAMALY no kahi ākea ākea ʻē aʻe) ʻoiai e hoʻokani ana i nā hale kiʻiʻoniʻoni ma nā Mauna Pōhaku. He haku mele hoʻi ʻo Ramirez, me ka nānā ʻana i nā kumuhana o ke aloha, ka kilokilo, a me ka ʻohana. Hōʻike kāna kākau ʻana i kona ʻano ʻōiwi Latina a lilo ia i mea ikaika no ka haʻi moʻolelo a me ka pilina.

Ivonne-Chand-ONeal-PhD-Headshot

Ivonne Chand O’Neal

Dr. Ivonne Chand O’Neal, Founder and Chief Research Officer at MUSE Research, is a researcher and cultural strategist specializing in arts impact evaluation with a focus on equity, access, and belonging. As Co-Founder of the Greater Good Group, she crafts data-driven boutique retreat experiences for marginalized contributors to the arts and culture sector. Trained as a Cognitive Psychologist, she has pioneered research platforms for prestigious organizations such as the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, analyzing global arts impact. With strategic roles at Crayola and VSA: the International Organization on Arts and Disability, she chaired the Arts, Culture and Museums Division at the American Evaluation Association.

ivision at the American EDr. Chand O’Neal serves on board for the Minnesota Opera, the National Assembly of State Arts Agencies, and the National Guild for Community Arts Education.. Additionally, she advises the University of Pennsylvania’s Human Flourishing Initiative and serves as a federally-appointed reviewer for institutions like the National Endowment for the Arts and the Corporation for National and Community Service, advocating for quality creative education. Her impactful work, recognized by media and government bodies, foreshadows her upcoming 3-book publication, “The Impact of Arts on Human Flourishing” (Springer, 2026).

Leaders of Color Faculty

LOC-Faculty-Acevedo-Salvador-headshot

Salvador Acevedo

Salvador Acevedo has over 20 years of experience helping organizations link their design and innovation strategies with various cultures within the U.S. Being bilingual and bicultural gives him the ability to recognize the cultural markers that signal inclusion, and he’s committed to open opportunities for all.

For the last 15 years, Acevedo has been professionally invested in helping organizations increase diversity, deepen inclusion, and advance equity, in a broad range of fields, from arts and culture to informal education and urban planning.

Acevedo is a founding faculty member of WESTAF’s Emerging Leaders of Color (ELC) program and Leaders of Color (LC) network, with the goal of increasing BIPOC leadership in policy and arts administration. He is invested in understanding the forces that shape the future of the arts field and how we can realize an inclusive and equitable one. Acevedo is a regular speaker at

conferences on DEI topics and is a TED Talk speaker with the talk I’m Mestizo.

LOC-Faculty-Margie Johnson Reese

Margie Johnson Reese

Margie Johnson Reese is a founding faculty member of WESTAF’s ELC and current faculty of LoCF. She has a 40-year portfolio as an arts advocate and arts management professional. She received a B.A. from Washington State University in Pullman, Washington and an MFA in Theater from Trinity University in San Antonio, Texas. She is an adviser to the International Council of African Museums based in Nairobi, Kenya and is a Fellow at the Salzburg Global Seminar in Salzburg, Austria. She continues to serve as an advisor to the Wichita Falls Alliance for Arts and Culture in Wichita Falls, Texas, a local arts agency that seeded and developed under her guidance as its first Executive Director.

Her work in the local arts agency arena also includes a six-year tenure as Director of the Office of Cultural Affairs for the City of Dallas and General Manager for the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs. She held that position under three mayoral administrations managing grant making, arts education, festival production, cultural facilities and public art staff teams. She is credited with launching the Los Angeles International Cultural Exchange Program leading artist delegations to represent the city in Italy, Germany, Greece, France and Brazil. Her visionary city-wide music education program, Music L.A.! continues to provide music instruction, instruments and performance opportunities for young people.

Margie continues to contribute to the field of Arts Administration as a consultant to national, regional and local arts agencies, helping them develop inclusive arts policies that respond to contemporary civic goals. Recent clients include The Houston Arts Alliance, The Sacramento Metro Arts Commission, One Columbia (South Carolina) Mid-America Arts Alliance and Americans for the Arts. She is an adjunct professor in the graduate school of arts administration at Goucher College. She currently resides in Atlanta, Georgia.

LOC-Faculty-Madalena Salazar

Madalena Salazar

Madalena Salazar is a creative focused on issues of cultural equity with extensive experience as a nonprofit administrator, DEI consultant, educator/facilitator, organizer, and cultural producer. Currently, she serves as the Executive Director for Working Classroom, and the Principal of 3rd Space Vision LLC. She is also a faculty member for WESTAF’s LoCF and predecessor program, Emerging Leaders of Color (ELC). Madalena is community lead for Coffee + Creatives in Albuquerque. She values engaging creatively as one’s whole self, collaboratively, and intersectionally across generations, in relationship. Madalena was born, raised, and resides in Tiwa territory aka Albuquerque, New Mexico (after returning from several impactful years in Denver, CO). She loves music, cooking (and eating), tarot, nature, traveling, reading, gardening, and the healing arts. Madalena received a B.A. in Anthropology, and an M.A. in Art History from the University of New Mexico. Madalena is most proud of being a mother, and spends her remaining time with her children, partner, and her extended and chosen familix.

LOC-Faculty-Joy-Young

Joy Young, Ph.D.

Joy Young, Ph.D. has more than 25 years of experience in the arts as an entrepreneurial performing artist, arts administrator, and academic. Joy’s work as a performing artist included owning a successful music studio and performing as a recitalist, sanctuary soloist, studio and background vocalist. Her 14-year tenure with the South Carolina Arts Commission was highlighted by serving on the executive leadership team as the agency Director of Administration, Human Resources, and Operations. Joy also implemented a variety of programs at the South Carolina Arts Commission to include arts/artist entrepreneurship; nonprofit leadership and organizational development; cultural tourism; statewide conferences and convening; and the AIR Institute. Joy’s contributions to the arts at the national level include service as a grant reviewer for the National Endowment for the Arts, member of the Committee for Individual Artists with Grantmakers in the Arts, and a mentor for the NASAA DEI Mentorship Program. She is also a Faculty member in LoCF and emphasizes leadership strategies.

Most recently, Joy served as the Executive Director of the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville. Her work saw her committed to a team who worked together implementing innovative programs, developing and executing proactive and quantifiable arts and culture initiatives, and broadening relationships with new networks and stakeholders. Joy found tremendous success capitalizing on the power of public-private partnerships as a strategy to significantly increase the Cultural Council’s earned revenue.

Joy enjoys sharing her experiences from the field in the classroom by preparing the next generation of arts administrators in the Master of Arts in Arts Administration at Winthrop University to be adaptive leaders. Joy holds a Bachelor of Arts in Music, Master of Arts in Voice Performance, and the Ph.D. in Organizational Leadership. Her research interests include arts leadership, program assessment and evaluation, and organization and leadership adaptations amid dynamic environmental paradigms.

ʻO David Holland -Poʻo

David Holland

Hope Lunahooponopono

Hāʻawi ʻo David ma luna o 20 mau makahiki o ka ʻike ma ke ʻano he kumu aʻoaʻo hoʻolālā a alakaʻi i ka hana noʻeau, moʻomeheu, a me ka ʻoihana hoʻomohala no nā ʻoihana ʻole, nā kula hoʻonaʻauao kiʻekiʻe, philanthropy, a me nā ʻoihana ma ka honua holoʻokoʻa. Ma ke ʻano he Hope Luna Nui ma Creative West, alakaʻi ʻo ia i nā papahana hoʻolaha a me nā kulekele aupuni; alakaʻi i nā pilina o waho a me ka ʻohi kālā; a alakaʻi i nā lawelawe kūkākūkā i nā hui ma kahi ʻāpana o 16 mau mokuʻāina a me nā ʻāina a me ka ʻāina. Mai kona komo ʻana iā Creative West, ua hoʻomohala pū ʻo ia i ka Creative West's Pacific Initiative; i hui pū ʻia ʻo Creative West's Arts a me ka hui ʻo Rural West; alakaʻi pū i ka hoʻomohala ʻana o ka Mokuʻāina ʻo Washington's Creative Economy Strategic Plan; ua hoʻokumu a mālama i ka Creative Vitality™ Summit, kahi hālāwai kūkā honua e pili ana i ka hoʻokele waiwai; ua kākau i ka hōʻike Creative Economies and Economic Recovery me ka hui pū ʻana me ka National Assembly of State Arts Agencies; hoʻokumu i ka Western Arts Advocacy Network; hoʻomohala i nā polokalamu kōkua, hoʻoikaika, a me nā papahana hāʻawi kūikawā ʻē aʻe no nā mea pena kiʻi a me nā hui ma ke Komohana a me ka Pākīpika; ua komo i ke kumu o ka National Leaders of Color Fellowship; a ua hoʻopaʻa ʻia ka waiwai kūʻokoʻa a me ka lehulehu no nā papahana Creative West. Ua lawelawe ʻo David ma ke ʻano he Co-Chair o ka Creative States Coalition, kahi hui aupuni o nā hui kākoʻo kamaʻāina a me kā lākou mau hoa. Ua lawelawe ʻo Holland ma mua ma ke ʻano he luna hoʻomalu o ka ʻAha ʻAi ʻAi a me ka ʻOihana o Greater Boston. ʻO nā kuleana mua ʻē aʻe e pili ana i ke alakaʻi a me nā kūlana hoʻokele kiʻekiʻe me VCU da Vinci Center for Innovation, VCU School of the Arts, ART 180, ka Latin Ballet o Virginia, Arts & Business, a me ka hoʻokumu ʻana o UK ʻo Nesta. Ua lawelawe ʻo Holland ma ke ʻano he kūkākūkā koʻikoʻi me BOP Consulting, kahi noiʻi honua a me nā hana kūkākūkā no ka moʻomeheu a me ka hoʻokele waiwai, a ua hana ʻo ia ma ke ʻano he luna hoʻolaha no ka National Campaign for the Arts. No nā makahiki he 13, ua lawelawe ʻo ia ma ke ʻano he kūkākūkā hoʻokele kūʻokoʻa no nā mea kūʻai mai Salzburg Global Seminar a me ka Inter-American Development Bank i United States Artists and Think of Us, kahi keʻena noiʻi a hoʻolālā e pili ana i ka pono keiki. Aia ʻo ia ma ke kumu kula o ka papahana MA in Arts Administration ma Goucher College. Ua lawelawe ʻo ia ma ke ʻano he panelist a ma nā komite hoʻokele no ka National Endowment for the Arts, Colorado Creative Industries, a me ka Oregon Arts Commission ma waena o kekahi. ʻO ia he Salzburg Global Fellow, Evan Carroll Commager Fellow, a he hoa o ka Royal Society of Arts. Loaʻa iā Holland kahi kēkelē laepua ma ka ʻoihana waiwai a me nā haʻawina ʻAsia mai ke Kulanui ʻo Amherst a me nā kekelē haku ma nā haʻawina honua a me ka diplomacy a me ka mōʻaukala o ka noʻeau mai ke Kulanui o Lākana, SOAS.

Na Mee (Leaders of Color Network: ELC 2015) for LoCF Virtual Summit 2022-2023

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Conversations with 2022-23 LoCF Fellowship Program Alumni

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Nā lawelawe pūnaewele i hoʻohana ʻia e

Creative Komohana

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He ʻōnaehana hoʻouna palapala noi pūnaewele ʻo CaFÉ e hoʻoikaika ana e hoʻolako i nā manawa hana no nā mea āpau ma o ka hāʻawi ʻana i nā hui noʻeau i kahi kahua hoʻouna kūpono a me nā mea hana kiʻi i kahi ala maʻalahi e noi ai.

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ʻO GO Smart kahi polokalamu hoʻokele hāʻawi kūpono e hāʻawi ana i nā palapala noi mua a ma hope o ka noi, ka loiloi panel, a me ka hōʻike ʻikepili no nā mea hāʻawi.

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ʻO ka Public Art Archive (PAA) he waihona manuahi, hiki ke huli, a e ulu mau ana i ka ʻikepili pūnaewele o nā hana noʻeau lehulehu i hoʻopau ʻia ma ka US a ma waho, me kahi hui o nā kumuwaiwai a me nā mea hana i kūkulu ʻia no ka mālama ʻana i nā hōʻiliʻili kiʻi lehulehu.

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Hāʻawi ʻo ZAPP i nā luna hoʻomalu noʻeau a me nā ʻahaʻaina me kahi hui o nā mea hana e hōʻiliʻili ai i nā noi kikohoʻe a me nā jury, mālama i nā uku hale hale, a kamaʻilio pū me nā mea noi āpau i loko o kahi kahua kikohoʻe maʻalahi. Hiki i nā mea pena ke hoʻohana i nā haneli o nā hōʻikeʻike ma ka ʻāina ma o kahi pūnaewele kikowaena.