Creative ThinkTank

The Creative ThinkThank is an advisory group made up of artists from all disciplines across the UK. The group contributes to the development of  UKNA to ensure that the organisation continues to develop and thrive, by ensuring that the voice of new artists is at the heart of what we do.

 
 

Abdullah Adekola

Abdullah Adekola (he/him) is a Black-British working-class writer and performer.

His breakthrough collection of poetry 'Nigrescence' is out now on adekola.bigcartel.com.

He has been selected for Momentum, a nationwide mentoring, training and mental health programme for Black filmmakers and content creators in conjunction with Channel Four.

He has been awarded a PANIC bursary by The Tetley and been selected for the New Creatives North talent development program by Arts Council England and BBC Arts.

Photograph by Simon Ho

Ana Silvério

Ana Silvério is an award-winning dance artist from Brazil. She received a First-class Honours degree in “Choreography, Methodology and Pedagogy of Dance” from the Saint Petersburg University of Humanities and Social Sciences, in Russia. She acts internationally as a teacher, choreographer, dancer and member of the judging committee for several art and dance festivals. 

Ana is based in York where she founded Terpsichoring. A dance company and CIO aimed in the creation and touring of performances and the development of the dance field in the North of Yorkshire. The company was among the performers at the UKNA CityTake Over 22. 

Ana likes to develop thoughtful, well-crafted and creative performances that explore topics in a multi-perspective way and storytelling in narrative and abstract forms. At the core of her movement vocabulary is ballet, Brazilian folk dances, physical theatre and contemporary dances.

Website: www.terpsichoring.com

Social Media: @terpsichoring

Daniel Oduntan

Daniel Oduntan (He/Him) is an interdisciplinary media artist conceptional occupying the spaces between visual arts, sound and performance media. His polymath approach to creativity has led him in recent years to explore the politics of sound archives, the power of imagery and methods of accessibility for Black creatives through participatory design. Producing cross-disciplined art, editorials and commissions for the likes of the V&A Museum, UCL, Warp Records, Publicis London and the Design Museum.

Social Media: @danieloduntan
info@danieloduntan.com

 

Gaynor Tutani

Gaynor Tutani (Art Adlib) is a curator, producer and writer who merges her various arts, culture, community and educational passions to produce exhibitions, events and commentaries on art and curating. Her speciality is in public programming - hosting music performances, talks, interviews and poetry programs.

She is the Co-founder of EARTHworks [Artists], a curatorial duo that is dedicated to promoting creative collaborations through an intergenerational lens. Their work aims to raise awareness of the benefits of art and art making practices to health and well-being, alongside global issues such as climate change, equality and diversity.

Tutani holds a BA in History and History of Ideas from Goldsmith's university of London and is currently undertaking postgraduate studies in Museum Cultures at Birkbeck University of London, specialising in curating African art, Difficult Histories and Decolonial approaches.

Hannaa Hamdache

Hannaa Hamdache is an artist and curator of mixed English and Algerian heritage. Based in Nottingham, UK, she holds a BA (Hons) in Fine Art and Art History from Kingston University London and an MLitt in Curatorial Practice (Contemporary Art) from the Glasgow School of Art. She works to make the arts open for all through the use of humour and education. Her practice explores the idea of play: playing with context, the exhibition and the everyday.

She has delivered curatorial projects working with Glasgow City Council and the Gallery of Modern Art in Glasgow; Somerset House and the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London; and Soho House Museum in Birmingham. She currently works as the Creative Learning Partnerships Manager at LEEDS 2023

Hannah Fredsgaard-Jones

Hannah Fredsgaard-Jones is a composer, vocalist, songwriter and audio producer originally from Denmark, now residing in Oxford. Hannah’s work spans alt-folk music, sound art, and audio documentary. She writes and performs songs under the musical moniker Asthmatic Harp. Current projects include a new commission for ‘Voices of Exmoor’ as part of the Adopt a Music Creator Scheme, a residency with Oxford Contemporary Music exploring moving, site-specific performance, and a collaborative songwriting project ‘Missed Connections’ with songs based on ‘Craigslist’ classifieds.

 

Photo by Tom Morley

Malgorzata Lisiecka

Malgorzata Lisiecka is a visual artist, practising between public art, installation, costume, and performance. 

Limits, excess, exploitation: these are words that define the object of her focus. Exploring the political and psychological aspects of fashion, her art balances on the edge of the uncanny, absurd and unreal. 

Following the connection between art and social issues, she decided to study sculpture and journalism at the same time. After graduating from the Academy in Warsaw, she moved to London, where confronts her ideas in a completely different, socio-political territory. 

She received an MA in Contemporary Art Practice: Public Sphere at theRoyal College of Art in London and was nominated for the UK YoungArtist of the Year Award. Her artistic journey continues.

Photo by Tom Morley

SLQS

SLQS is a Franco-Vietnamese artist living in East London. Her work is multi-disciplinary and provocative: it questions the politics of space and who is excluded from it. She reclaims space by immersing herself and others in the public realm. SLQS makes and holds space as a woman, a person of mixed heritage, a foreigner, a mother, an artist and an equestrian. She invites her audience to decolonise spatial orders from imperialist, sexist and racist structures.

SLQS works in a wide range of media that includes, but is not limited to, performance, live art, photography, writing, walking and visual art.

She is also the co-creator of the performance making company Convex. Through immersive sound experiences, they give voice to threatened environments.

Photo by Tom Morley

Saziso Phiri

Saziso Phiri is a Cultural Producer and Curator, working independently and in partnership with organisations and individuals.

She previously worked for New Art Exchange, within the organisation's creative team, supporting its public programme and overseeing exhibitions within the building’s Central Gallery space. In 2017, she initiated Young, Black & Present, a now annual programme of events centred around the young Black-British experience. Saziso also helped establish ABC (All Black Connect), NAE's young people's collective which explores issues impacting young black people in the UK today.

Saziso manages The Anti Gallery, a pop-up art gallery launched in 2016 and initially inspired by her love of graffiti and street art. Since launching, she has produced and co-produced almost 30 events for the platform, from exhibitions, to film screenings, artists talks, performances, creative workshops and residencies. Some of the organisations that the platform has collaborated with on projects and events include Nottingham Contemporary, Sadler’s Wells, Surface Gallery and Broadway Cinema. Alongside The Anti Gallery, Saziso works on projects across various  disciplines, which have previously included Format International Photography Festival, Migration Matters Festival and Frequency Festival. She currently works within the core organising team for Nuart Festival in Stavanger, Norway, and its sister festival in Aberdeen, Scotland. She is also a founding member of SHEAfriq, a collective of black women artists. 

Saziso was the Curator of Applied, Digital and Visual Arts at UKNA City Takeover: Leicester 22.

 

Photo by Tom Morley

Sophie Mak-Schram

Sophie Mak-Schram is an art historian, producer, educator and occasional practitioner. She has been, amongst other things, one founding half of Overheard Map, an annual residency project that experiments with how artists work together, one half of Tail Bend Travel, a (sometimes fictional) tour company that offers unexpected walking/video/performance tours, one part of Cera Project, a curatorial platform for art of the non-West, and one part of PACTO, an international art collective. Sophie likes to think and work with other people around how knowledge is constituted through or around art, and what political, social and cultural implications these knowledges have. She is specifically interested in decolonial and feminist approaches, radical pedagogies and collective practices.

Sophie was the Interdisciplinary Residencies Producer at UKNA City Takeover: Leicester 2022 and the Curator of UKNA Weekender #5, Derry~Londonderry.

Quinn Rushforth

Quinn Rushforth (He/Him) is a performer and founder of Scum! Collective, who have created work such as ‘Veritas Rex’ a play about a dystopian future where Virtual Reality is everything, as well as an aspiring producer for the arts in Lincolnshire. 

He is based in Lincoln, attending the University of Lincoln with a degree in Drama and Theatre and is currently studying an MA in Arts and Cultural Management. Having a keen interest in the arts ecologies of both Lincoln and other cities in the UK. 

Quinn’s work is often provocative and looks to not tell someone an issue is bad but to show you just how bad it could be.

Quinn did not grow up around art and has a strong desire to change that for others believing everyone should have the opportunity to both create and consume all forms of art. Wanting to break down barriers between the arts and other sectors.

 
 

Ronia Iheama

Ronia Iheama is currently a sixth form student in Nottingham. She is a previous nominee and winner of a Nottingham's Young Creatives Award in the Creative Writing category. She enjoys creative writing, song writing and singing.

Sara Yaseen Mahmood

Sara Yaseen Mahmood is a Nottingham based Sixth Form student and Visual Artist of mixed British and Kashmiri/Pakistani heritage, studying Fine Art, Fashion and Textiles, Product Design and Geography. She hopes to develop her experimental mixed media practice and discover how to utilise her creativity in society during her Art foundation at University in September.

She was a proud winner of the Graphic Design category of the Young Creative Awards 2021 with ‘Cancelled Exhibition’ a book designed, created and published for her Gold Arts Award.

She is one of the founders of PATCH, a collaborative streetwear brand with established Artists, Fashion designers and Graphic Designers from Nottingham Trent University.

She has grown up surrounded by Art, volunteering at community art events and led climate awareness workshops at Green Light in the City with children and families. She recently worked as a workshop facilitator with lead artist Roma Patel during The Festival of Science of Curiosity for Ignite and was commissioned by UK New Artists to exhibit her work with a personal story of rebellion, in the Tunnel Vision Gallery for Light Night 2022.

Tabie Addae-Boateng

Tabie Addae-Boateng is a Polish Sixth form student and dance artist of Ghanaian decent.  She is based in Nottingham/Leeds and is part of the Dance4 Centre of Advanced Training programme, going on to study at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance. She has choreographed and performed in many dance films and festivals across the Midlands such as U.Dance festival and taken part in Intensives with Candoco inclusive dance company and Black British contemporary dance company FUBU Nation. As a woman of mixed heritage her practice is currently focused on merging languages and cultures with the art of movement.

She aspires to have people connect with her work on a personal level, helping dance to become better integrated into society. 

 Tabie is ready to meet new artists from different disciplines and backgrounds. She is excited about helping to sculpt the future of the arts and making them more accessible to young people.