Celebrating a Decade of Culture and Innovation in San Francisco
Sharmi Basu (they/them) is a multimedia performance artist, curator, composer, activist, and arts organizer born and based in the unceded territories of the Chochenyo Ohlone peoples (Oakland, CA). They create expansive textural sound and performance pieces investigating resistance and organizing strategies through decolonial worldbuilding and interactive sculpture. Sharmi creates new media controllers and interactive sculptures as a means of investigating liberation practices and self-exploration through care and trauma. Sharmi’s performance project, Beast Nest, transmutes experiences of trauma through complex sonic textural layering. Sharmi received their MFA from Mills College and hosts international workshops that center on sound, somatics, decolonization, conflict, and accountability.
Sharmi currently serves as the Executive Director at Vital Arts where they advocate for housing justice and artist self-determination. They also serve on the board of Bay Area Girls Rock Camp, California FM, and Safer DIY Spaces. Their workshops on Decolonizing Sound have been presented internationally including at Stanford University, Brown University, and Goldsmiths College.