Director, Choreographer, Dancer

Wendy Jehlen

Dancer

Ibrahim Abdo

Dancer

K Sarveshan

Dance (Benin)

Marcel Gbeffa

Dance (Brazil)

Luciane Ramos-Silva

Dance (Indonesia)

Danang Pamungkas

Dance (Turkey)

Yasin Anar

Dance (USA / Taiwan)

Ching-I Chang

Composer, music producer, sound design (France)

Fraction/Eric Raynaud

Dance (Palestine)

Yousef Sbeih

Composer, voice of the Hoopoe (Iran / Canada)

Shahou Andalibi

Music / sound director

Shaw Pong Li

Projection artist (USA)

David Bengali

Light design (USA, India)

Anika Nayak

Director, Choreographer, Dancer

Wendy Jehlen

Wendy Jehlen’s career has been marked by international explorations, study and creative collaboration. She received her Bachelor’s degree in ritual and performance from Brown University and her Master of Theological Studies degree from Harvard Divinity School with a focus on performance and religion in the former Persian world. Wendy engages in collaborations across languages, culture, media and genres.  Her work questions the boundaries that we imagine between ourselves, and seeks to break down these imagined walls through an embodied practice of radical empathy. This practice takes her around the world to conduct workshops, collaborations and performances which she calls collectively Dance Diplomacy. Her unique approach to choreography incorporates elements of Bharata Natyam, Odissi, Capoeira, Kalaripayattu, West African dance, Butoh, and a wide-range of Contemporary movement forms. Her emotionally powerful choreography has been created and performed in the US, Benin, Botswana, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Canada, Italy, India, Japan, Mali, Mozambique, Palestine and Turkey. Works include The Women Gather (2022); Conference of the Birds (2018); Entangling (2015), a duet with Burkinabe choreographer Lacina Coulibaly inspired by Quantum Entanglement; The Deep (2015), a work for 25 dancers created in São Paulo, Brazil, Lilith (2013), a solo on the first woman; The Knocking Within (2012), an evening-length duet on a disintegrating relationship; Forest (2010), a journey through the archetypal forest; He Who Burns (2006), a trio on the figure of Iblis (Satan); Breathing Space (2003), a collaboration with Japanese choreographer Hikari Baba in Tokyo; Crane (2002), based on images from Japanese Buddhist poetry; and Haaaa (2002), inspired by the experience of childbirth. Jehlen has received support from the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art (2017-2018), Theater Communications Group (2018), the Japan Foundation (2017), the Boston Foundation (2012, 2017, 2020), New England Foundation for the Arts (2016-2021), Network of Ensemble Theaters (2016-2021), the Association of Performing Arts Presenters (2015-2020), the Boston Center for the Arts Choreographers’ Residency program (2010, 2015), the Artist Fellowship Program of the Massachusetts Cultural Council (2003, 2012), the American Institute of Indian Studies (2001, 2013), the Boston Dance Alliance (2013), the National School of Drama (2006, 2011, 2013, 2020), the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (2011), the Fulbright program (2005-2006), the National Endowment for the Arts (2005, 2019, 2020), the Tokyo American Center (2002), the Puffin Foundation (2001), and the Ford Foundation/Arts International (1996), among others. She is a Fulbright Scholar and a Fulbright Specialist, an Arts Envoy of the US Dept of State, she is on the speaker roster of African Regional Services and has received Public Affairs grants from US Embassies in Benin, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Botswana, Japan, China, Mexico and South Africa.

Dancer

Ibrahim Abdo

Director, choreographer, and dancer with a bachelor’s degree in Philosophy from Cairo University. He began acting and dancing in 2006 while in university. In 2010 he joined Karima Mansour’s Cairo Contemporary Dance Center training program. In 2017 he received the “Step Beyond” travel grant to attend Impulse-Tanz festival in Austria. In 2016 Ibrahim joined the first Interdisciplinary Music Theater Group in Cairo and concurrently began his own movement research research on the flow of the movement in the body from a contemporary point of view of Sufi whirling and incorporating the concept of free fall. In 2017 and 2018 in service of this research, he conducted two residencies at Alanus University, Germany to learn more about the concept of the flow as understood in the Eurythmie studies. In June 2018 he performed the world premiere of the work “Green Leaves are Gone,” which is a work choreographed in collaboration between Egyptian and Italian choreographers as part of “Focus Young Mediterranean and Middle East Choreographers” in Inteatro Festival. Ibrahim was an ArtsLink Fellow at Dance Exchange in 2022. Ibrahim is interested in redefining the relationship between art institutions and artists in Egypt and the Middle East. In 2022 he established the “What’s Next” platform in Cairo with the intention of  promoting and embodying values like transparency, integrity, and non-hierarchy in the arts. He has been a member of ANIKAYA Conference of the Birds ensemble since 2018.

Dancer

K Sarveshan

K Sarveshan is a South African Bharatanatyam artist of Indian Origin. His performance practice rigorously explores the complexities of his diasporic cultural heritage and his embodied experience. The interplay between Bharatanatyam, Kalaripayattu, Yoga, Traditional Indian Folk, Kathak, and Carnatic Music has revealed to him a creative path that ferries between the “classical” and the “contemporary”. Bharatanatyam, however, remains the fertile ground from which his creative endeavors take root. Sarveshan’s distinct understanding of Bharatanatyam is derived from his initial training with Savitri Naidoo – student of the formidable Pandanallur Srinivasa Pillai and Indira Rajan – and his expert training received from living legends, Natyaacharya Shanta & V.P Dhananjayan. In addition to being a seasoned Bharatanatyam performer, Sarveshan concerns himself in areas of dance research and scholarship, with a first-class BA Honors in Performance Studies from The University of Cape Town (2021). Diverse dance-work experiences at Bharata Kalanjali, Leela Samson’s Spanda Dance Company, ANIKAYA Dance Theater & The University of Cape Town further enhance Sarveshan’s credibility as an award-winning Bharatanatyam performer, dance-maker and teacher. In 2018, The Madras Music Academy awarded Sarveshan the “Gutty Vasu Endowment Prize” for being the “Best Performer” at the Spirit of Youth Festival 2017. Other titles that have been conferred on him are “Natya Purna” from Bharata Kalanjali, “Natya Bhaarathi” from Visakha Art & Dance Association & “Yuva Kalaa Bhaarathi” from Bhaarat Kalaachaar. He is the 2021-2022 recipient of The Kalaavahini Junior Fellowship, an initiative by Malavika Sarukkai, for which he created and premiered his recent solo work titled, KailāsaKrishna.

Dance (Benin)

Marcel Gbeffa

Marcel Gbeffa is the Founder and Artistic Director of the Centre Chorégraphique Multi Corps in Cotonou, Benin.

Centre Chorégraphique Multi Corps welcomes more than 150 regular students per year, and provides courses, workshops, as well as choreographic and interdisciplinary residencies. Gbeffa is also the director of the Connexion festival and the Labo workshops Benin. He was a Fulbright Scholar in Residence for the 2022-2023 academic year at SUNY Purchase.

Gbeffa trained at the ‘Ecole des Sables’ in Senegal  and began his choreographic career in 2008 with his solo “Et si” which launched him internationally at the Rencontres Chorégraphiques d’Afrique et de l’Océan Indien.

As a performer and assistant choreographer, he has worked and collaborated with choreographers such as Andreya Ouamba, Marceline Lartigue​, and Reggie Wilson and has performed in well known venues such as the Théatre de la Ville in Paris and Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York.

Since 2010, Gbeffa has been developing his own movement vocabulary, creating collaborative works in Benin, Brazil, and throughout Europe. Always looking to invent new forms, his artistic approach is inspired and nourished by the traditional dances, rites, and rhythms of his Beninese culture and is hybridized through encounters, collaborations and influences from other disciplines. Contemporary art emerging from Beninese traditions and cults is one of his reservoirs of inspiration.

Recent major works include DIDE, a piece co-created with French visual artist Sarah Trouche which questions the place of women in society in Africa and in the world. Meanwhile, his meeting with the performer Violaine Lochu at ‘The Center’ in Cotonou, Benin, during a joint residence during the winter of 2021 gave birth to AWOLI. He also created Mémoire d’Océan, a video installation which is a dialogue between the souls of enslaved Africans who died during the transatlantic slave trade and the souls of the young African people who die today while crossing the ocean to reach Europe. Since 2021, with the support of the French Institute of Benin and the New Aquitaine Region Fund, he has been working with the performer and visual artist Violaine Lochu on Hòxo. The piece offers a futuristic vision between the intertwined histories of France and Benin via slavery and colonization through Twinning and the Vodoun Hóho cult. In 2023, he will present Chuthulucene, a collaboration with saxophonist Clement Duthoit around the work of Donna Haraway.​

Marcel has been working with ANIKAYA Artistic Director Wendy Jehlen since 2016 in projects including Forest, Conference of the Birds, and Run Like a Girl, a workshop they have co-taught in Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso and Brazil since 2017.

Dance (Brazil)

Luciane Ramos-Silva

Luciane Ramos-Silva is dancer, choreographer, anthropologist and cultural organizer. She holds a BA in Social Sciences from the University of São Paulo (USP, 2002), an MA in Social Anthropology and African Studies from University of Campinas (UNICAMP, 2008) and a PhD in Performing Arts/Dance at UNICAMP researching the notions of coloniality in dance , pedagogical approaches and south-south relations. She is the 2003 recipient of the David C. Driskell Center for the Study of the African Diaspora Award (2003). With this award, she initiated and developed a movement training focusing on blackness and the body in African and African Diasporic communities. Luciane was a guest at the Conference/Festival “Tellling our stories about home” at University of North Carolina in 2016 where she participated as a lecturer, teacher and performer at the Sonja Haynes Stone Center.  She also had the opportunity to teach at Duke University hosted by Professor Thomaz de Frantz at the dance department. In 2015 she presented her research-solo-in progress at Red Pop Art House, in San Francisco, California, oriented by the artist Amara Tabor-Smith. As a performing artist, she has performed as a soloist in venues throughout Brazil. Her solo “Eyes at my back and a smile at the corner of my lips” (2015/2016) was presented in North Carolina and Sao Francisco. She is the Artistic Director of the São Paulo-based performance group Diaspóros Coletivo das Artes.

Dance (Indonesia)

Danang Pamungkas

Danang Pamungkas was born in Solo, Indonesia. He studied traditional Javanese dance at the Mangkunegaran Palace of Surakarta, and graduated from the Indonesian Institute of the Arts in Surakarta. From 2008-2011, Danang was a member of the renowned Cloud Gate Dance Company of Taiwan under artistic director Lin Hwai Min. 

Danang received a grant from the Asian Cultural Council for a 6 month residency program in New York City and a fellowship for a 6-week summer choreography program at American Dance Festival in Durham, NC in 2016.

Danang’s own choreography includes “Panyot Pun Padam, “ which was awarded First Prize at The Next Wave Indonesian Choreographer in Jakarta, and performed at the 2004 Surabaya Art Festival; a Beat Project Grant from Kelola Foundation performed at Teater Arena Taman Budaya Jawa Tengah In Surakarta (2011) and Salihara Theatre Jakarta also performed at Indonesian Dance Festival 2012 in Jakarta. He has collaborated as a choreographer with Indonesian director and filmmaker Garin Nugroho on “Opera Jawa Selendang Merah“ performed in Jakarta Theatre. 

Other projects include (2013) “A Part of Passion” performed at Teater Arena Taman Budaya Surakarta. (2013) Festival Salihara Jakarta (2014) “Break the Harmony” at the Welt Museum Impulstanz Festival 2013 in Vienna; “Fly on the Earth” at the Welt Museum Vienna Austria (2013); Residence program from Austrian Ministry of Education Vienna Austria (2013); “ANGST ANGEL; Return” a collaboration with Alex Dea and Maya Dance Theatre, Singapore (2014); “ Whispering of” performed at M1 Open Stage National Museum Singapore (2015); “In one/two world(s)” at Cornell University (2016); choreography of the Silent Film “Satan Jawa” directed by Garin Nugroho (2017); “Kabar Senja” at Taman Budaya Jawa Tengah in Surakarta (2021); “Ruang Bawah” Rumah Banjarsari Studio Surakarta and Bentara Budaya Yogyakarta (2022) “A Quest for Relationship: Island by choreographer Wang Yeu-kwn in Weiwuing Kauhsiong, Taiwan (2022).

Danang has been working with ANIKAYA since 2018 as an ensemble member of Conference of the Birds and is now developing a new work, T(h)ree with ANIKAYA. 

Dance (Turkey)

Yasin Anar

Yasin Anar is a contemporary dancer based in Istanbul. He is a graduate of Mimar Sinan Fine Arts University State Conservatory in Contemporary dance, as well as holding a certificate as Master Trainer in Turkish traditional folk dance. He has danced with a number of contemporary dance companies in Turkey and abroad including Hodjapasha Dance Theatre, MDT Istanbul Project, DEF Dance Company and the UK-based Aakash Odedra Dance Company.

Dance (USA / Taiwan)

Ching-I Chang

Originally from Taiwan, Ching-I Chang holds a master degree from the University of Utah. She has taught dance and choreography across the US and in Taiwan and China. She was an original cast member of the acclaimed immersive theater production by Punchdrunk – Sleep No More, which she also was the rehearsal director for Sleep No More in Shanghai. Ching-I currently resides in New Jersey and collaborates with many choreographers and other artists in New York City and beyond. Ching-I joined ANIKAYA in 2022.

Composer, music producer, sound design (France)

Fraction/Eric Raynaud

Fraction/Eric Raynaud is a French music composer and digital art creative designer living in Paris whose work particularly focuses on sound immersion and its interactions with visual media. After his first release on the prestigious French label InFiné, Raynaud moved away from the field of traditional music to focus on digital arts, working on complex stage designs and hybrid writings that combine visual, sound and physical medias. In 2013, he developed DROMOS for the Mutek Festival (Canada), a stunning immersive performance that found a lot of echoes in the blogosphere and eventually was featured by Apple for its 30 year anniversary video clip. Since then, he has continued merging 3D immersive sound with contemporary art and architecture, incorporating his research on themes that combine science and contemporary sociology. Experiments on the spatial, physical and emotional characteristics of sound are the epicentre of his unique work. He was awarded by Institut Français in Digital Arts field in 2014 and led several months of research and creation on sound immersion and new media interactions at Society for Arts and Technology of Montreal. This led him to imagine a new piece called Entropia, that has toured the world ever since and has been covered by well-known media outlets like Creators Projects, DesignBoom, XLR8 and many more. Most recently, he was the first artist in residence invited to the new and innovative Spatial Sound Institute created by 4DSound in Budapest (Hungary). He was nominated SHAPE artist 2017, a program of 16 festivals and an arts center that supports musicians and multi-disciplinary artists with innovative approaches in Europe. In 2018 he was a laureate of the Ircam Artist Research Program for the project Symbiosis where he explored a new artistic process for audiovisual creation involving real time sound spatialization.

Dance (Palestine)

Yousef Sbeih

Yousef Sbeih is a dancer and performer from Jerusalem, Palestine. In 2015, he received a BA degree in Marketing & Business from Birzeit University while simultaneously joining the Austrian non-profit organisation Yantè to become a Community Dance Trainer. He and his colleagues led collaboration efforts with the Palestinian Ministry of Education to integrate a program that teaches non-violent communication skills and physical learning for local school students and the differently-abled.

In 2017, he moved to Norway to pursue a career in performing arts after receiving an apprenticeship with the Norwegian national company of contemporary dance Carte Blanche. He took part in various productions of the company, performing in different cities in Norway, Holland, and Germany.

Since 2018, he has worked as a freelance dancer, collaborating with different choreographers and companies in Palestine and abroad. In 2021 he completed his degree at the National Academy of Dance in Rome. He currently lives between Palestine and Denmark.

Composer, voice of the Hoopoe (Iran / Canada)

Shahou Andalibi

Shahou Andalibi began learning and performing Persian classical singing and Maqam music at the age of 4 under his father’s teaching. His father, Iraj Andalibi was a well-known Persian musician whose work was especially appreciated amongst Kurdish people of Iran. At the age of 6, he started playing the daf with Maqam method under the supervision of great masters such as Khalifeh Mirza Agha, Khalife Karim, and in the method of his grandfather Haj Abdolsamad Andalibi. Shahou started playing ney professionally at the age of 13. He played in the Avaye Andalib Ensemble alongside his father, Iraj Andalibi. His dedication to music as well as his desire to learn works of other cultures led him to start learning classical western music in 1991. Despite his many valuable and successful performances in Iran, he was banned from performing in public by the Iranian regime in 2013 for one year because of promoting female performance in Iran and his leading role in the vocals of Mahbanu Ensembles accompanied by the two great female musicians, Sahar Mohamad and Mahdieh Mohamadkhani. 

Music / sound director

Shaw Pong Li

Violinist and composer Shaw Pong Liu engages diverse communities through multidisciplinary collaborations, creative music and social dialogue. She performs with groups including Silk Road Ensemble, MIT’s Gamelan GalakTika, Boston Modern Orchestra Project, Ludovico Ensemble, and Castle of Our Skins. Shaw Pong was one of three Artist-in-Residence for the City of Boston’s first Artist-in-Residence program in 2016 and a 2018-19 Kennedy Center Citizen Artist Fellow. She was one of three composers for ANIKAYA’s Conference of the Birds.

Projection artist (USA)

David Bengali

David Bengali is a theater and multimedia designer, based in New York for the past 14 years. He has designed theater, installations, opera, and dance Off-Broadway, Regionally, and internationally, and has worked as an associate designer on Broadway, Off-Broadway, and Regionally. David holds a BSE in Computer Science with a Certificate in Theater and Dance from Princeton University, and an MFA in Design for Stage and Film from NYU Tisch. He is a current Arts Fellow at the Lewis Center for the Arts of Princeton University, where he is exploring intersections between technology and performance via collaborative projects (and also teaches a course titled Technologies for Storytelling in the Performing Arts). David is a firm believer that deep collaboration is key to to creating relevant, affecting works of performance, and that breaking down perceived boundaries between fields, in methods and in content, is key to both the creation and audience reception of artworks in the 21st century. Although technology is a critical tool in David’s work, he seeks not to drive story from what technology can do, but rather to ask questions about what stories we wish to tell, and determine from that starting point how technology can serve art. He strives to create work that derives its energy from the most ancient form of storytelling: live humans sharing physical space with one another. Recent design credits include: The Great Leap (Atlantic Theater Company); Frankenstein (Dallas Theater Center); Rockin’ Road To Dublin (National Tour); Assembled Identity (HERE); The Temple Bombing (Alliance Theatre); Uncommon Sense (Tectonic Theater Project); Van Gogh’s Ear (Ensemble for the Romantic Century); Anna Akhmatova, Jules Verne From The Earth To The Moon (BAM);  Ring of Fire (Endstation Theatre); The Tempest (Classic Stage Company/The Young Company);  Kill Me Like You Mean It (Stolen Chair), Two Point Oh (59E59);  The Sensational Josephine Baker (Theatre Row); Cav/Pag (Tri Cities Opera); Little Nemo in Slumberland (Sarasota Opera)  Jamal Jackson Dance, Ephrat Asherie Dance, Battery Dance Company, Soho Rep.

Light design (USA, India)

Anika Nayak

Anika Nayak is a Boston based theater artist focusing on Stage Management, Electrician Work, and Teaching. Anika focuses on creating non hierarchical and collaborative spaces in which theater and art can be created and experienced as what she believes is at it’s core, a universal language of being. Anika most recently has been the Production Stage Manager for White Snake Opera, Production Stage Manager for the UMass Amherst Theater Department, a resident Master Electrician for Moonbox Theater, a returning teaching artist at Wheelock Family Theater and is the Technical Director and Stage Manager for ANIKAYA Dance Theatre. Their work has taken them throughout Massachusetts as well as internationally to Palestine, South Africa, Mozambique and India. She is currently pursuing a certificate in Intimacy Direction and Choreography as the next step in expanding her theater repertoire and creating safe and inclusive workspaces.