CFPA Artist’s Residencies
For 25 years, artist’s residencies have been hosted at CFPA.
Residencies reflect our commitment to ongoing creative development offering performance-based artists space and community to create and present.
Residencies encourage artists to experiment, taking radical risks in a supportive community. We approach each resident with openness, supporting residents with rigor and without agenda.
Residencies are structured to: (1) spark engagement among performance-based artists, and audiences, (2) develop artists at all career stages, (3) build relationships across artists, disciplines, identities, and experiences.

Morgan Holmes, 2019

Nora Montañez Patterson, 2019

Alexandra Bodnardchuk, 2019

Kerry Parker, 2018
Ben Swenson-Klatt, 2018

Cooper, Melvin, and Young, 2023
D. Allen, 2023

David Means, 2019

Beth Ann Powers, 2019
2025-26 Resident Artists Working in Cross Cultural Collaboration
Resident artists will be creating works that actively integrate elements of their own cultural background or lived experience manifest through language, movement, music, attire, oral tradition, spiritual practice, narrative structure, design, or other creative frameworks. These new performance-based collaborations will explore and celebrate cross-cultural identity, heritage, and exchange. The culmination of this residency is a presentation in the Spring 2026 New Works Festival at CFPA.
Artists Mariadela Belle Alvarez and Tearra Oso
Artists Sam Aros Mitchell and Masanari Kawahara
Artists Kay Carvajal & Angelica Bello Ayapantecatl
This 2025-26 residency is supported, in part by the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council and the City of Minneapolis Office of Arts and Culture. Thank You!
prior years resident artists
Erica Jo Vibar Sherwood, Asha Rowland, Renee Copeland, While in residence, Asha and Erica Jo will choreograph a 20-30 minute original dance piece. Renée Copeland will craft sound for the piece and will be a virtual presence throughout the process. Er ca Jo is a mixed Mexican and Sicilian American, Asha is Afro-Panamanian and Punjabi, and Renée is Sicilian American. Our piece will draw from a few specific cultural symbols and use elements of trance and ritual remembering/making to tell the journeys and meeting of the Fish, the Blue Deer and the Snake. Photo: 2024 XCultures residency performance.
Isabella Dawis, Kyle Weiler. They share an enthusiasm for breaking away from engrained industry conventions to create truly community-based performance art. As a Filipina-American playwright and composer, Isabella works to weave global traditions and feminist perspectives into American onstage storytelling. As a white arts educator and leader who has worked in over 25 countries, often in predominantly POC spaces, Kyle uses his creative voice in the service of uplifting all voices, especially young people. Photo: 2024 XCultures residency performance.
Alys Ayumi Ogura, Masanari Kawahara, Both Masa (Masanari Kawahara) and Yumi (Alys Ayumi Ogura) are originally from Japan and each settled in Minnesota at different times. They are first-generation Japanese immigrants who are also artists, performers, and community members. Although they share the same basic cultural backgrounds, they've practiced very different types of dance. Masa is a Butoh dancer, and Yumi is a modern/contemporary dancer. We explored movements in our bodies—the way we use our body in our own movements—to make cohesive performances while celebrating each other's differences and expertise. Photo: 2024 XCultures residency performance.
D. Allen is a multidisciplinary poet, performer, and artist living in Minneapolis. Hybridity is central to D.'s creative practice. Their works typically interweave elements of text, image, movement, performance, mixed-media objects, and/or sound to explore themes of disabled embodiment, queer and trans identity, kinship beyond blood, and intimacy with place and the natural world. Website: www.thebodyconnected.com. 2023 THRESH.HOLD site-specific residency.
Kerry Parker is a choreographer, educator and dancer. Her work has taken her across North America and parts of Europe. Locally she has received commissions from Center for Performing Arts, James Sewell Ballet, University of Minnesota Opera Theatre and Michael Sommers. 2023 THRESH.HOLD site-specific residency.
Cooper, Melvin, and Young is a Twin Cities based collaborative artistic team working in puppetry, placemaking, and installation art. The team consists of Felicia Cooper, Kallie Melvin, and Alex Young. Previously, they have performed at Northern Spark 2022 with the project The Official Bureau of Lost Things. As individuals, their art has been supported by Open Eye Figure Theater, In the Heart of the Beast Mask and Puppet Theater, Greenway Glow, the Bell Museum, and more. 2023 THRESH.HOLD site-specific residency.
José A. Luis will continue work on Lunas, the third part of a series of dance works called, Chasing Moons. Lunas investigates the act of remembering purposefully, the weight of memory, the embodiment of text, and the paradoxes that emerge from the question: Can our re-creation of memories manifest an untrue version of ourselves? 2020-21 Works-in-Process / Mentor: Nora Montañez
Margaret Ogas is working iteratively to pursue connection with audience-witnesses in her solo performances. She is experimenting with humor and sarcasm to navigate her experience as a young, mixed-race Chicana woman, through movement, sound and text. Her work is built through investigations of sound, including recordings of her grandmother telling stories, pop culture references, vocal percussion, poetry, and academic text. 2020-21 Works-in-Process / Mentor: Cindy García
Kerry Parker and her collaborators built a site/season-specific dance that is a death ritual, exploring senescence and seasonal darkness as part of a personal cosmology. Kerry investigated the relationship between site, ritual, history, and movement in CFPA’s chapel over two years. This piece deeply revisits the history of the building, investing in the influences of winter. 2019 New Works / Mentor: Ruth MacKenzie
Morgan Holmes began 10 Hours of Rain Sounds, using YouTube beauty tutorials, endurance videos, music, and influencers to explore grief, healing, and re-establishing routine in the wake of trauma. She experimented livestreaming process, and with video genres like “get ready with me.” This was an extension of her work at Perspectives Theater, which creates space for marginalized stories, and reclamation of Queer/BIPOC bodies from “performing” pain. 2019 New Works / Mentor: Jessica Lopez Lyman
David Means composed Forward Observer with musician Tom Kanthak, centered on an infantry outpost in Vietnam and surgical hospital in Italy. “Two soldiers share a journey back to places of beauty and grace beset by war and trauma. One is a chief’s son, surgical assistant, and musician. The other is a radioman, architect, and storyteller. Together they weave a reminiscence of freedom and recovery amidst a tangle of destruction, injury and violence.” 2019 New Works / Mentor: Maureen Koelsch
Nora Montañez developed Sabor a Mi, a bilingual autobiographical survival story, started as part of the Anything But English series (Pangea World Theater/Patrick’s Cabaret), and furthered through Catalyst Arts’ PUSH Lab. In 2018, she used a grant to research in Peru. Nora integrated her research (and lessons on the cajón) to structure an interactive, bilingual, multimedia story experience, laying bare the human question: Where do I belong?2019 Works-in-Process / Mentor: Jessica Lopez Lyman
Beth Ann Powers built a solo durational/endurance performance, devised as part of a larger collaborative piece (Superhero) performed 2018 at the Southern. In this piece, Beth excavated her personal relationship with mental illness and recovery, and investigated how durational/endurance performance can create space for an audience to find themselves in a piece, in ways that are both intimate and offer the audience agency/aegis. 2019 Works-in-Process / Mentor: Kira Obolensky
Alexandra Bodnarchuk developed The Nature of Cloth, a dance begun in a Cowles Center residency. At Cowles, Alexandra examined the human experience of shame and conformity through a series of focus-group workshops. At CFPA, she dug into innate animalistic behaviors and investigated ways to interrogate differing cultural narratives of shame and conformity, to build space for diverse audiences to experience themselves reflected in the work. 2019 Works-in-Process / Mentor: April Sellers
Nelle June Anderson‘s project focused on the intersection of her rigorous opera training and her art-pop heart. She sought “a place where these old and new styles can play and breathe together, overcoming differences of genre and origin to make a new, cohesive sound…What is the difference between being an interpreter of a work and a generator of a work?…What is necessary to make my art feel like it’s mine?” 2018 New Works / Mentor: Aby Wolf
Margo Gray created A/part, “an interactive performance exploring the trauma of being uprooted from your family and culture of origin, and compelled to conform to another way of life.” Built on experience creating interactive storytelling, “this piece is inspired by events in U.S. history such as American Indian boarding schools, the sunder of enslaved families, and the recent implementation of ‘tender age’ shelters for detained immigrant and refugee children.” 2018 New Works / Mentor: Essma Imady
Kat Purcell’s project took the Medieval morality play, The Castle of Perseverance, as a jumping-off point to explore “the intersections and conflicts between my bodily, corporeal identity and the world around me…With the use of interactive sculpture, dance, sourced interviews and stories of perseverance, I invite the audience first to the field, then into battle, and finally to the place where Mankind is born and meets his death: inside the Castle of Perseverance.” 2018 New Works / Mentor: Eleanor Savage
April Sellers’ Patriot Erector explored gender through the notion of patriotism. “Americans have not been so divided over politics and social mores since the Civil War. Our political state has sharpened frustrations amongst neighbors, families, and strangers. It’s my mission to present human stories and to ask the audience to question their relationship to the identities presented on stage.” 2018 Works-in-Process
Ben Swenson-Klatt examined the relationship of masculinity to violence. “Masculinity walks to another store, purchases a gun with his privilege and his desire for power. And he will walk again into another school, another church, another office. And he will take innocent lives again. But still the cycle will continue. This piece is my attempt at change. So come witness my body and together let us judge, debate, and question the reality of our country.”2018 Works-in-Process
Emily Rose Duea explored identity after healing from trauma. “Know that after this performance or exploration or whatever you want to call it, there will be a community gathering and conversation. Know that you never need to out yourself as a survivor. Know that we can make mistakes and disagree and in that way we can heal. Love yourself and know you are not alone.”. 2018 Works-in-Process