CURATORS 2026
Sanna Almajedi
Sanna Almajedi is a curator and writer based in New York, currently serving as Performance Curator at e-flux. She recently served as Performance Curator for the 13th Seoul Mediacity Biennale, Séance: Technology of the Spirit, held between August and November 2025. Almajedi co-curated Publishing Against the Grain–which was produced by Independent Curators International and toured institutions including Zeitz MOCAA and CCA, Lagos–and more recently curated Babel at SARA’S / Dunkunsthalle, Summer Dinner at Slip House, and Bricks of Memory, Fragments of Home, an online exhibition for White Columns.
Photo: Ali Asperheim
Anna Khimasia
Anna Khimasia is an independent curator and has curated exhibitions and performance events in both Canada and the United States. Her curatorial projects are often collaborative and focus on underrepresented voices and histories. She was the 2023–24 AIRspace Curator-in-Residence at Abrons Arts Center and is a co-founder of International Arrivals (IA), a NYFA-sponsored project supporting artists hailing from countries in conflict. She produces and hosts the IA podcast, which features conversations with international artists about displacement, migration, and transnational belonging. Recent publications include a new essay on Harold Offeh’s early performance video work and an assistant editor role for Kambui Olujimi: North Star, Meditations on Boundlessness. She has taught courses on contemporary art and performance at Carleton University, UCLA, and Rutgers University, where she is currently a lecturer. She received her Ph.D. from the Institute of Comparative Studies in Literature, Art and Culture (ICSLAC) at Carleton University.
Photo: Sean Lynch
Eva Mayhabal Davis
Eva Mayhabal Davis (b. Toluca, Mexico) is a cultural advocate and curator, collaborating with artists and creatives in the production of exhibitions, texts, and events. Recent projects include the Indigenous Practice Studio (IPS) at the Queens Museum and co-curating Bronx Calling: The Bronx 5th Biennial at The Bronx Museum of Art. She is a co-director at Transmitter, a collaborative curatorial initiative in Brooklyn. Her work in advocacy and equity is rooted in Indigenous and diasporic dialogues. She is a founding member of El Salón, a creative meetup based on a soulful potluck. In 2018, she was a fellow at the Art & Law Program, in 2019, she was a fellow at the National Association of Latino Arts and Cultures Leadership Advocacy and the New York Foundation of the Arts Leadership Boot Camp, and in 2020, she completed the Artistic Freedom Initiative Art & Cultural Heritage Law Certificate Program. Davis is a guest working from the occupied territories of the Munsee Lenape and Canarsie.
Photo: Xicanayork
Sofia Thiệu D’Amico
Sofia Thiệu D’Amico is an independent curator, writer, and researcher based in New York and co-director of Transmitter. Her work engages social practice and poetics, with recent research focused on intercolonial solidarities and abolitionist imaginings. She previously served as assistant curator at Canal Projects and has held arts administration roles at the Vera List Center for Arts and Politics, the Isamu Noguchi Museum, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), among others. Sofia holds an MA from Bard College’s Center for Curatorial Studies; her thesis research will appear in Borders of Art: Migration, Mobility and Artistic Practice (American University of Cairo Press, 2026). She has been a visiting critic at residencies including NARS Foundation, ISCP, and Brooklyn Navy Yard Studios.
Photo: Paul Rho