Sarah Kaddoura
Saadia Batool (she/her) is a visual artist from Pakistan. She graduated with a distinction in Fine Arts from the National College of Art Lahore in 2022, majoring in Painting. She has exhibited her work in the Young Artists Exhibition at Alhamra Lahore in 2019 and 2020. She has showcased her work in a group show at Tagheer Art Gallery, Lahore. She was part of a group show “Asli Contemprorary” at Numaish Gah, Lahore. She also was part of a four-person show “Fine China” at Artescape Gallery Islamabad. She exhibited in the show “Broadcast Volume 1” art O Art Space, Lahore. She was part of the show “In the realm of madness” at Gallery Full Circle Karachi. She exhibited in a group show at 8B2 Gallery Islamabad in January. Batool was part of a Inception Grant show 2024 and exhibited at Triveni Kala Sangam New Dehli, India.
Lire la suiteDr. Wanjiru Kamau-Rutenberg
Dr. Wanjiru Kamau-Rutenberg is the Founder and Executive Director of Black Women in Executive Leadership (B-WEL). B-WEL centers insights from Black women’s experiences to strengthen, diversify, and connect leaders and innovative solutions available to solve the world’s most pressing challenges.
Lire la suiteGesiye
Gesiye is an interdisciplinary artist based in Trinidad and Tobago. Rooted in curiosity about the impacts of colonialism on our relationships with self, state and land, Gesiye’s approach is experimental, often leading to conceptual work that takes form through different mediums including film, tattooing, animation and performance.
Lire la suiteLía Zevallos
Lía Zevallos is a part of Ashanti Perú, the Peruvian Network of Afro-descendant Youth. This is an organization that works for the empowerment of young people, specifically Afro-Peruvian women, around their individual and collective rights. They also support young Afro-Peruvian women to participate in social and political work to construct of a solid, sustainable citizenship that contributes to eradicate discrimination and racism here.
Lire la suiteJhannel Tomlinson-Evans
Jhannel Tomlinson-Evans is honored to hold the role of co-founder at GirlsCARE Jamaica and Young People for Action on Climate Change (YPACC) in Jamaica. Additionally, Jhannel proudly serves as a committee member within Global Fund for Women’s Caribbean Feminist MLA Committee and as the Caribbean Advisor for the Global Green Grant Fund’s Next Generation Climate Board.
Lire la suiteBlack History Month 2024: Black Feminist Leaders #INMOTION TO #SHIFTTHEPOWER
Black History Month 2024: Black Feminist Leaders #INMOTION TO #SHIFTTHEPOWER Everywhere around the globe, Black feminist leadership is shifting the power to put the world in motion. For Black History Month, join us in celebrating Black movement leaders who advance justice every day of the year. This year, Global Fund for Women is doubling down…
Lire la suite#InMotion, our 2024-2026 Strategic Plan
Movements are setting change #InMotion, and Global Fund for Women is here to support them every step of the way. Learn how we’ll do it in our new 2024-2026 Strategic Plan.
Lire la suiteArtist Changemaker Program
The Artist Changemaker Program at Global Fund for Women supports artists who are making the gender justice revolution irresistible by using their art as a tool for new visions of a world with equity and equality for all.
Lire la suiteNatalia “Bubulina” Moreno
Natalia “Bubulina” Moreno Rodriguez (she/her) is a woman with a physical disability, a social communicator, a human rights advocate and educator, a Latin American consultant, and an expert on the intersectionality between disability, gender, and sexual diversity. She loves body language, dance, and theatre, and has knowledge of Integrated Contemporary Dance. She creates and produces different types of art (dance, theatre, and performance), including the award-winning performance monologue called “Tentacles,” presented several times in different cities in Colombia, and also in countries such as Mexico and Nepal.
Lire la suiteKulli Sarita
Kulli Sarita (she/her) is an illustrator in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Kulli Sarita has deep connections and collaborations with women’s organizations and collectives tied to the principles of anarchism, indianista movements, and feminism. Through her work she incorporates her lived experience as an Indigenous woman in Cochabamba, her academic background in visual communication, and her studies in engraving and printmaking, while also being inspired by her family’s work in the agricultural sector to establish connections between urban and rural experiences.
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