Welcome January’s Artists-in-Residence!

Meet this month’s artists-in-residence!

Residency session: January 15 — February 10, 2026

We welcome our first cohort of 2026 to the Studios at MASS MoCA


Anna Hawkins

Edmonton, canada

Anna Hawkins is an artist who works primarily in moving image and installation with an interest in the ways that images, gestures and language are circulated and transformed online and the impacts of technology on the intimate spheres of daily life. Her works have recently been exhibited and screened at transmediale (Berlin, DE), CCCB (Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona (Barcelona, ES), the Istanbul International Experimental Film Festival (Istanbul, TR), Dazibao (Montréal, CA), Images Festival (Toronto, CA), and The Art Gallery of Alberta (Edmonton, CA). She has recently participated in artist residency programs at Villa Ruffieux (Sierre, CH), Fondation Napoule (Mandelieu-la-Napoule, FR), and Est-Nord-Est (St-Jean-Port-Joli, CA). In 2022, she was longlisted for the Sobey Art Award, Canada’s preeminent award for Contemporary Art. She is currently an Associate Professor in Studio Arts at MacEwan University on Treaty 6 Territory ᐊᒥᐢᑿᒌᐚᐢᑲᐦᐃᑲᐣ (Amiskwacîwâskahikan), Edmonton, Canada.

website

Yukie Maruyama

OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA

Yuki Maruyama is a drawing-based visual artist living and working in Oakland, California. She holds an M.F.A. from California College of the Arts. She is a recipient of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant (2015, 2025), the Ucross Foundation Fellowship (2023), the Meta Open Arts residency (formerly Facebook Artist-in-Residence), the Kala Art Institute Fellowship (2017-2018), the Anderson Ranch Arts Center residency (2017), and the Vermont Studio Center Fellowship (2016). She has exhibited in numerous galleries and project spaces in the Bay Area, New York City, and in Ibaraki, Japan.

Maruyama's practice is driven by the ever-expanding potential of drawing and by the elasticity of perception. Committed to the in-person viewing experience and to low-tech modes of seeing and making, she aims to produce singular works whose full effect can only be witnessed first-hand. In her latest project, Maruyama engages the effect of anaglyph 3D glasses through red-and-cyan drawing installations and smaller works on panel. The contrasting high-chroma hues clash and collide, generating a potent vibration to the bare eye. When seen through 3D glasses, the image now flickers relentlessly between background and foreground, positive and negative space, and flatness and volume. As each lens masks its corresponding color, the brain fails to integrate the picture as a complete whole. The resulting effect, disorienting both in the physical and psychological sense, is compounded by the spatially ambiguous compositions.

Website

Dusty Levesque

Brooklyn, New YOrk

Dusty Levesque is a writer, radical historian, and community health activist. They grew up roaming the southern wilds and found their holy calling on the shores of the Mississippi River.
These days Dusty lives on another river’s edge in NYC where they write poetry and prose, take pictures, and cook for their neighbors.
They creates living archives. Nothing to weigh you down, though; Dusty believes in moveable feasts.

In their work, they use the photographic, the fragmentary, the more-than-human, the collective and disorderly, the profane and sacred to render intimate histories of revolutionary imagination and desire. Wisdom traditions born out of the flames of resistance movements such as queer + trans liberation, anti-colonialism, prison abolition, anarchism, and anti-fascism deeply energize their creative praxis.

Dusty seeks solidarity in the work. They believe in revolt.
What are they resisting, you ask? Fascist erasure, for sure. Lest we forget that SILENCE=DEATH. But, the future isn’t inevitable if you find other ways to connect the revolutionary present to the revolutionary past, our understanding of change over time rendered bright, elastic, and electric through a prism of hot pink triangles. 

website

Melissa Sutherland Moss

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND

Melissa Sutherland Moss (b. Brooklyn, NY) is a Costa Rican American interdisciplinary artist and adjunct professor at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA). Her work spans collage, painting, video, sound, text, performance, and installation. Grounded in research and personal history, her practice explores the intersections of landscape, identity, and migration—particularly through the lens of Afro-Caribbean and diasporic narratives. She considers landscape not only as geography, but also as a cultural and historical archive shaped by memory, dislocation, and transformation.


Through layered processes of accumulation, erasure, and excavation, Moss creates work that navigates the tension between visibility and concealment, drawing on archival materials, inherited stories, and speculative reconstructions. She engages the body as both subject and site—interrogating how it holds and performs history, especially in relation to themes of colonialism, access, gender, and belonging.
Her work has been exhibited at institutions including the Biggs Museum of American Art and the National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center. She has been awarded residencies and fellowships with MASS MoCA (2025), ArtCrawl Harlem, the Chrysalis Institute for Emerging Artists, the Alliance of Artist Communities, and Zea Mays Printmaking. Her practice and perspective have been featured in publications such as Forbes, Black Enterprise, Essence, Modern Luxury, and Refinery29. Moss lives and works in Baltimore and NY.

Website

Chenlu Hou

PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND

Chenlu Hou is an artist whose imaginative sculptures draw from Chinese folk art, ceremonial objects, and moments from daily life. Blending personal memory with reinterpretations of traditional storytelling, she has developed a unique visual language that combines intricate surface detail with layered narrative suggestion. Her hand-built ceramic works explore the complex relationships between human, animal, and plant forms, creating spaces where myth, memory, and lived experience merge.

Hou’s practice is grounded in a deep engagement with material and form. Drawing from her background as a new immigrant and her connection to Chinese culture, she often works with symbolic objects and motifs that carry emotional resonance. Her surfaces—rich with airbrushed underglazes and vibrant colors—offer both ornament and meaning, revealing subtle shifts in tone and texture that encourage close, sustained looking.

Her sculptures frequently suggest theatrical, using arrangements that feel both familiar and surreal. These compositions leave room for ambiguity, allowing viewers to bring their own associations into the work. Rather than offering fixed narratives, Hou’s installations open up possibilities—about cultural identity, adaptation, and the ways objects can hold and transmit memory.

Born in Shandong, China, Hou is currently based in Providence, RI. She earned her MFA in Ceramics from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2019. Since then, she has completed residencies at the Museum of Arts and Design in New York, the Penland School of Craft, the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, and the Archie Bray Foundation. Hou is currently a resident artist at Harvard Ceramics and a Visiting Critic in Ceramics at the Rhode Island School of Design.

Website

Camila Buxeda

la quinta, california

The "still life" series is an ode to memory. Inspired by the experience of living in a colony, it uses cliché elements and familiar objects as a means to explore complex emotions and themes. Through watercolor, I aim to capture the beauty and simplicity of everyday life, while inviting viewers to reflect on their own experiences and memories. By incorporating food and other common objects, I hope to create a sense of familiarity and comfort, while also exploring the deeper cultural and historical significance of these elements. My paintings are a reflection of a love for nostalgia and a tribute to the memories and experiences that shape us as individuals and as a community.

Born (1990) and raised in Santurce, Puerto Rico, where she lived until 2016, the artist has exhibited her art in Puerto Rico as well as in the United States. Camila Buxeda currently resides in Southern California, where she works full-time as an illustrator.

website

mehdi Darvishi

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Website

Woohee Cho

Los Angeles, California

Woohee Cho is a visual artist based in Los Angeles and Seoul. His work focuses on moments in everyday life where individual identity collides with or is subsumed by society, queering these experiences through installations, videos, and performances. Gathering, personalizing, and laughing are the primary methodologies of his practice.

He received an MFA from California Institute of the Arts (2020), and BFA from Seoul National University (2014). Solo exhibitions have been held at Vox Populi, PA (2025); Post Territory Ujeongguk, Seoul (2023). His works have been shown at Los Angeles Nomadic Division (2025); Torrance Art Museum, CA (2025); Human Resources LA, CA (2024); Brussels Independent Film Festival, Belgium (2022); Ann Arbor Film Festival, MI (2021); Cork International Film Festival, Ireland (2021); OUTFEST Film Festival LA (2021); UCLA New Wight Biennial (2020); Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (2020); and REDCAT (2019), among others. He is a recipient of LAND MOHN grant (2025); Visual Arts Fellowship (interdisciplinary field) from the Seoul Foundation for Arts and Culture (2023); and Body and Tech Fellowship from School of Dance at CalArts (2019). He has participated in residencies at UCross Foundation, WY (2025); Alex Brown Foundation, IA (2024); NARS Foundation, NY (2023); The REEF LA, CA (2020-2021); and Saas-Fee Summer Institute of Art, NY (2019).

website

Felipe Shibuya

PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND

Felipe Shibuya is a Brazilian-American ecologist and visual artist whose work highlights the visuality of nature through bioart, ecoart, and biodesign. His practice combines scientific research with artistic experimentation, focusing on how colors, patterns, and communication systems emerge in living organisms. He creates sustainable, multisensory installations that make ecological processes visible and experiential, working with bacteria, fungi, biomaterials, and the many materials nature offers. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Division of Experimental and Foundation Studies at the Rhode Island School of Design.

website

Shrimanti Saha

VADODARA, INDIA

Shrimanti Saha (b.Kolkata, India) is an artist working in the medium of drawing, painting and animation. Saha creates layered story structures, with references from a range of sources like history, literature, mythology, science fiction, comic books, art history, miniature paintings, news reports as well as memory, conversation and personal experiences. In her works, different time periods amalgamate with each other; leading to the creation of a personal mythology or an alternative history; which delves into the themes of identity, gender, ecology, exploitation and control.

Saha has been part of artist residencies at Art Omi, Vermont Studio Center and at Bemis Center for Contemporary art in the US. She had two solo exhibitions in New Delhi and has been part of group exhibitions in India and abroad. Saha has a BVA and MVA in Drawing and Painting from M.S. University, Vadodara, India.

Website