meet the co-directors

Meet ACI’s Co-Director of Design | Quisol

Image Description: Quisol wears a striped collared shirt with bright pastels of peach, lavender, and teal. There’s a deep blue backdrop. To the right of Quisol, a stack of cassette tapes, family photos, and a Tagalog language bible sit atop a marble stand. Quisol is holding a cream and blue electric guitar that has daisies painted on it. Photo by Mel Taing.

Dear Reader,

My name is Quisol (he/they) and today I write to you from the traditional lands of the Catawba and Sugaree people, otherwise known as Mooresville, North Carolina. A few months ago, I entered a new phase in my journey with ACI as Co-Director of Design. Today, I reflect on the key moments that brought you and I to this moment.

I first joined ACI as the Programming Fellow in 2017. At that point in my life, I had just closed out a chapter full of community organizing, producing music showcases, and finding my voice as a music artist. Then, I was blessed with the opportunity to attend graduate school at Harvard with a full scholarship. My goal was to use the time and resources that academia afforded me to build an organization that could leverage my passion for the arts and political analysis gained through struggle to create new, liberatory futures. I didn’t know it then, but ACI turned out to be the home for this intersectional work. 

The first big project I worked on with ACI was the first ever Arts Equity Summit. Drawing on my production experience and the expansive network that ACI had been weaving in Boston and beyond in years past, we manifested a convening unlike any other. Over the course of three days, we witnessed performance art, celebrated, heard inspiring keynote addresses, engaged in critical dialogue, and much, much more. The summit brought together creative leaders from across the City of Boston and from around the world, providing a hub for new conversations, introducing audiences to new venues, and catalyzing new collaborations that would unfold over the following years.

Holistic design was a central element of this work and is an ongoing area of practice and learning for me. In the Summit context, intentional design was integrated into every element from how we approached partners, conducted our call for art, and curated the workshop breakouts. These were projects of curation and facilitation, a skillset that I was able to articulate and sharpen through collective work with ACI.

In another sense, graphic design is a key component of my work both with ACI and as an independent artist. I’m passionate about design because it’s how we’re able to communicate our identities, values and even vision for things yet to exist. Oftentimes, the design choices we make paint a picture of the future and invite others to share in creating it.

More recently, my thinking about design has turned to look to the past and Afro-Indigneous permaculture principles to inform how we collectively build liberatory futures. Over the last few years, I’ve been reconnecting with my indigneous roots. For me, that means recalling the names and places where my ancestors lived: Ilocos, Tagalog, Arawak, Borinquen. It’s learning the stories, worldviews, embodied practices, and language that my ancestors held. It’s realizing how much of the culture we share today, such as día de los muertos, hammocks, and barbecue, which actually come from indigenous roots. It’s communing with other people who carry on the traditions and deepening our personal connection to the earth as much as possible. To my great joy, learning the ancient ways and natural systems has given me new language and frameworks for discussing today’s issues, especially within my work with ACI. 

Image Description: A portrait of Quisol, seated on a drum throne in the pose of The Thinker, with his head resting on his fist. Quisol wears a pair of white and beige checkered overalls, white sneakers, and a silver necklace. A light greenish-grey sheet hangs in the background. Photo by Gothika Magazine

I feel empowered reconnecting with my cultural roots, especially as an act of resistance since colonial powers attempted to erase them over the last centuries. A big revelation for me recently is that I actually have a role in preserving and extending these lineages as an artist. When I reflect on my music and visual art, I notice the hundreds of tiny ways I incorporate my cultural inheritance into my craft. Earlier this month, I put out the first installment of my project Dreamworld, In The Flesh: a song with three movements and accompanying film. The cover art contains a sun symbol that I designed, drawing from Arawak petroglyphs found carved into massive stones across the island of Borinquen.

Thanks for allowing me to share a bit about myself and my craft. Thank you for your ongoing support of Arts Connect International.

Sincerely,

Joseph Samuel Quisol

connect with me on instagram


Image Description: Quisol wears a striped collared shirt with bright pastels of peach, lavender, and teal. There’s a deep blue backdrop. To the right of Quisol, a stack of cassette tapes, family photos, and a Tagalog language bible sit atop a marble stand. Quisol smiles at this camera while straddling the chair backwards. Photo by Mel Taing.

Throughout this fall season we will be highlighting our employee Co-Directors!

Interviewed by Artist in Community Fellow Mel Taing, each co-director will share more about themselves centering on what they're most excited about in their work, how they’ve been practicing self-care, and what they hope to manifest in the future!

Joseph Quisol (he/they) is the Co-Director of Design at Arts Connect International. You can follow their work on Instagram (@_quisol) or their website https://www.quisol.co.

What is the juiciest thing you're working on right now? What aspect of your work are you most passionate about in this moment? Is this a particular memory from the past month that you want to highlight?

This past month, I've been in New York and Boston working closely with Chanel Matsunami and Micah Rose for They Watch You Thrive. It's been a joy to work on this project since it's so aligned with the music album I've been working on called Dreamworld. I just closed out a year of working on this album with engineer Lucía Martinez and They Watch You Thrive came at precisely the right moment to help me pivot from the sonic to the visual elements of this project. I was blessed to work with Chanel Matsunami Govreau and Mel Taing on multiple photo shoots. Then we worked with Jay Hunt of The Loop Lab to film of live versions of my upcoming music blended harmoniously with the poetry of Micah Rose. I'm so excited to ultimately share these pieces with the world.

Meet ACI’s Co-Director of Creative Disruption | Zakiyyah Sutton

Image Description: A portrait of Zakiyyah seated in front of a red backdrop wearing a black t-shirt with the text “DANGER - EDUCATED BLACK WOMAN”. She holds a book open in her hands, about to turn the page. Next to Zakiyyah is a pedestal with several stacked books and a pair of glasses. Photo by Mel Taing

Image Description: A portrait of Zakiyyah seated in front of a red backdrop wearing a black t-shirt with the text “DANGER - EDUCATED BLACK WOMAN”. She holds a book open in her hands, about to turn the page. Next to Zakiyyah is a pedestal with several stacked books and a pair of glasses. Photo by Mel Taing

A love letter from Zakiyyah

My name is Zakiyyah (she/her). A few months ago, I had the honor of joining the ACI family. As I step into my fairly new role as the Co-Director of Creative Disruption, I’m reminded of the very long, and sometimes painful journey that led me here.

See I’ve been disrupted quite a lot in my life. I’ve been disrupted by men whose bias made my voice inaudible. By white people whose values deemed mine insignificant, and by a capitalist system that taught me that I am not worthy of living a good life unless I sacrifice my sanity--and my culture to do it. 

These are the lies that give credence to the idea that we must work with what we’re given, and not with what we can make. One of the greatest lessons I’ve learned from my art is that disruption doesn’t just have to be something that happens to me--it can be my path to salvation.

As an arts-activist, I’m constantly learning new ways of being, of lending my art to the charge that is social justice. Along the path I discovered Hip-Hopera, my own way of disrupting the social and artistic expectations of a Black girl whose classically-trained background meant she would gladly abandon the sounds that birthed her, for those that would be more easily heard and respected in the spaces that “matter”. 

I fell into disruption, and when I got up I found freedom. 

Disruption is messy. It’s unapologetic. Bold. Demanding. And it’s effective.

This is why I decided to join Arts Connect International. There are major systems designed to favor the few, and they require our disruption. Contrary to popular belief, “the system” was never broken, and that’s precisely the problem. Through ACI I’ve been blessed to work with a group of individuals who embody what it means to constantly rediscover your humanity through a commitment to self-disruption after a lifetime of societal conditioning. 

As I work with organizations who struggle with major inequities, seemingly imprisoned by years of tradition and capitalist incentives, I’m reminded of just how necessary disruption is. With platforms of greater power and influence, their own systems carry the weight that give all others validation and legitimacy. That is why I seek to disrupt those systems before they continue to disrupt the lives of other BlPOC beings whose very existence is a testament to why people in power fear disruption in the first place.

Now my focus is on working with my fellow ACI members to create the tune that makes all the others stop. We may not always get the notes right, but we always get better.

-Zakiyyah


Image Description: A portrait of Zakiyyah seated in front of a red backdrop wearing a black t-shirt with the text “DANGER - EDUCATED BLACK WOMAN”. She has her left elbow propped up on the pedestal next to her, her left hand framing her face in an ‘L” shape. On the pedestal are several stacked books and a pair of glasses. Photo by Mel Taing

Image Description: A portrait of Zakiyyah seated in front of a red backdrop wearing a black t-shirt with the text “DANGER - EDUCATED BLACK WOMAN”. She has her left elbow propped up on the pedestal next to her, her left hand framing her face in an ‘L” shape. On the pedestal are several stacked books and a pair of glasses. Photo by Mel Taing

Throughout this fall season we will be highlighting our employee Co-Directors!

Interviewed by Artist in Community Fellow Mel Taing, each co-director will share more about themselves centering on what they're most excited about in their work, how they’ve been practicing self-care, and what they hope to manifest in the future!

Zakiyyah Sutton (she/her) is the Co-Director of Creative Disruption at Arts Connect International. You can follow her work on Instagram - @zakiyyah_official or her website https://www.zakiyyahofficial.com.

To ‘meet’ with Zakiyyah, read below!

What is the juiciest thing you're working on right now? What aspect of your work are you most passionate about in this moment? Is this a particular memory from the past month that you want to highlight?

I'm excited about a show I'm putting together for the end of September at the Museum of Science! The theme is all about decolonizing museums, something that is essential to our arts equity work, and I'm excited that I get to lend my own artistry to this cause.

How have you been filling your cup? How are you creating space for rest, care and joy lately?

I'm still struggling to find my balance. I have a hard time resting because that capitalist guilt seeps in and I start thinking about what I SHOULD be doing. I'm trying to stave off those thoughts by getting back into exercise. Exercise changes my mood in general and I don't really have an opportunity to think about my long list of responsibilities in that moment.

Looking into the near or far future, what are you hoping to manifest? What are you visioning into within this moment?

In the near future, I want to manifest my tribe. I've already found an amazing tribe in ACI, but in my artist life, I'd like to have a tribe that can offer me the support I need to enjoy my art and be able to engage with it without it feeling so burdensome. None of us can go it alone so that's very important to me!