Conversation with Queer Nature founders Pınar Ateş Sinopoulos-Lloyd and So Sinopoulos-Lloyd

In this episode we get into conversation with Queer Nature founders. Queer Nature is a Colorado-based project that creates a decolonially-informed queer futurism through earth-based skills. Queer Nature envisions and implements ecological relationship as a vital and often overlooked part of the healing and wholing of populations who have been systemically silenced and marginalized, such as the LGBTQ2+ population, and especially trans and queer people of color and two-spirit folks. 

This conversation was hosted by Ginger Dunnill of Broken Boxes Podcast

Queer Nature founders Sophia ("So") Sinopoulos-Lloyd and Pınar Ateş Sinopoulos-Lloyd

Sophia ("So") Sinopoulos-Lloyd and Pınar Ateş Sinopoulos-Lloyd


More about Queer Nature:

Queer Nature bow drill workshop

Queer Nature bow drill workshop

Queer Nature is a Colorado-based project that creates a decolonially-informed queer futurism through earth-based skills. Queer Nature recognizes that many people, including LGBTQ2+ people and womxn, have historically not had easy access to the culture of outdoor recreation on Turtle Island. Pursuits like hunting, fishing, camping, and tactical or survival skills have been very difficult to access or relate to for anyone who didn't grow up hunting, in Boy Scouts, or in the military. Additionally, LGBTQ2+ community has historically formed in urban America—in places like bars and clubs—the wilderness has not necessarily been a welcoming place for us. To create a space for women and LGBTQ2+ people to access their natural human right to these skills is a revolutionary act in today's world. This program envisions and implements ecological relationship as a vital and often overlooked part of the healing and wholing of populations who have been systemically silenced and marginalized, such as the LGBTQ2+ population, and especially trans and queer people of color and two-spirit folks. Ecological literacy is deep relationship building with living and non-living earth systems through ancestral-futurist resilience skills including naturalist knowledge, so-called ‘survival’ skills, natural crafts, and local cultural/natural history.

Queer Nature Founders:

Pınar Ateş Sinopoulos-Lloyd

Pınar Ateş Sinopoulos-Lloyd

Pınar Ates Sinopoulos-Lloyd (they/them/theirs) has always been allured by how the natural world mirrors one’s internal landscape. Enchanted by the liminal, Pınar is a nonbinary QTPOC (Queer & Trans Person of Color) with Huanca, Turkish and Chinese lineages. They along with their spouse, So, co-founded Queer Nature, a project bringing earth-based queer community through ancestral skills, nature-connection and vision fast guiding. In addition to offering LGBTQ2+ specific programming, Pınar is a consultant, presenter and speaker at universities and conferences, program designer and facilitator in collaboration with non-profits and a canoe guide. As an indigenous nonbinary outdoor leader, their inspiration is envisioning decolonially-informed queer futurism through interspecies accountability and remediating the myth of human exceptionalism. As a survival skills instructor, one of their core missions is to uplift and amplify the brilliant “survival skills” that BIPOC, LGBTQ2+ and other intersectional oppressed populations already have in their resilient bodies and stories of survivance. Their relationship with queerness, neurodivergence, indigeneity and belonging guided their work in developing Queer Ecopsychology through studies at Prescott College, Wilderness Awareness School, School of Lost Borders, Animas Valley Institute, Naropa University and Esalen Institute. Their undergraduate work was in applied ecopsychology with a somatic and depth approach through a decolonial and queer lens. Currently enrolled at the University of Vermont, they are working on their degree in Master of Science in Natural Resources with a Concentration in Leadership for Sustainability. 

Sophia ("So") Sinopoulos-Lloyd

Sophia ("So") Sinopoulos-Lloyd

Sophia ("So") Sinopoulos-Lloyd is a queer Greek-American who grew up in the northern hardwood forests of central Vermont. So’s initiation to the transformative power of the natural world came when they went on a summer backpacking intensive at age 16, and later continued when they worked as a seasonal shepherd and cheese-making assistant throughout college and sheep began to teach them new things about belonging, awareness, and community. Inspired by the resilience and hardiness of these beings, So went on to do immersive studies in ancestral earth-based skills and natural science, and also completed an MA that focused on relationships between religion and ecology in the Eastern Mediterranean. Much of So's work is animated by a study of how personhood and a sense of belonging are interwoven with geography and can be further informed by intimate knowledge of place through naturalist study. Along with their spouse Pinar, So develops and runs LGBTQ2+ nature-based programming for Women’s Wilderness in Colorado. Pinar and So’s organization, Queer Nature, is devoted to creating empowering and accessible spaces where LGBTQ2+, non-binary, and two-spirit people can learn various ancestral earth-based skills. Some things that So is most passionate about teaching and learning are survival skills, wildlife tracking, and wilderness emergency medicine. So still hopes to one day be as cool and skilled as sheep are.

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Conversation with Artist and Organizer Sharita Towne

In this episode we get into conversation with Portland based multi-disciplinary artist, educator and community organizer Sharita Towne. We talk art, ancestry, process, gentrification, accountability and much more. 

Subscribe to Broken Boxes Podcast on iTunes HERE to stream and download this episode

Music featured on this episode by Brown Calculus

More about the artist:

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As an artist, Sharita Towne’s interests lie in unpacking the inherited struggles of past burdens and in affording collective catharsis. Through collaboration, stereo-photography, printmaking, video, and community art projects; she's worked at memorials in Germany; in the Sahrawi refugee camps in Algeria; Brazil; in gentrifying cities like Portland, Oregon and New Orleans; in schools, museums, and neighborhoods, and within her own family. Sharita received a BFA from UC Berkeley and an MFA from Portland State University. She currently teaches at Pacific Northwest College of Art, works in the DIY printmaking and audiovisual collective URe:AD Press (United Re:Public of the African Diaspora), the post-colonial conceptual karaoke band Weird Allan Kaprow, and is a 2016 Art Matters grant recipient. 

This conversation was hosted by Ginger Dunnill of Broken Boxes Podcast

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Conversation with Curator and Writer bart fitzgerald

In this episode we speak with Queer artist/curator/writer/lecturer bart fitzgerald. The work of fitzgerald seeks to situate Trap Music within conversations around the longstanding tradition of sound in the black radical tradition. They discuss their practice and the relationship it has to Trap Music and we hear a bit on their theory around Trap Music including its sonic histories, relation to the black church and spirituality, and Trap's postmodern aesthetic practices. 

Here is the conversation with bart fitzgerald

Subscribe to Broken Boxes Podcast on iTunes HERE to stream and download this episode

This conversation was hosted by Ginger Dunnill of Broken Boxes Podcast

More about the artist:

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bart fitzgerald’s work explores black sociality, religion and queerness through a lens of liberation theology as base ideology for radical living. they make work as an visual artist, writer, lecturer and curator of vibrant life for black folks in Portland, OR. Their work has been presented at Reed College, Newspace Center for Photography, Portland African American Leadership Forum, Black Lives Matter: Portland and The Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA). They have received commissions and funding from c3:initiative, The Regional Arts & Culture Council, The Urban League of Portland, and numerous local and national organizations. Most recently, they were selected as a recipient of the Ford Family Foundation’s Golden Spot Award that is granted in connection with an artist residency at Caldera Arts Center in Sisters, OR.
-Source: PICA

Conversation with Writer Cooper Lee Bombardier

Cooper Lee Bombardier and Sassafras. Powells 2015

Cooper Lee Bombardier and Sassafras. Powells 2015

In this episode Trans writer and artist Cooper Lee Bombardier shares his multifaceted journey to becoming the writer and educator he is today. Cooper shares how in the 90's he found a radical community of queer artists, writers and musicians in the San Francisco Bay Area who invited him to participate in a safe and vibrant space, allowing him to really come into acknowledgment of his own creative practice. Cooper reflects on touring with Sister Spit, working in youth leadership with NMGSA youth empowerment workshops. He reflects on all the varying jobs of his survival, from digging trenches to working at the Santa Fe Opera scene shop. He also speaks about living, writing and performing in the Portland area and recently achieving two Masters degrees in writing before moving to Halifax, Novia Scotia where he presently resides. Cooper continues to write and educate, most recently hosting an online course titled Writing from your queer heart. The journey Cooper takes us on in this episode is full of heart and perseverance, and he offers incredible self care tips to move through the heavy societal pressures we all face, such as social media policing. 

Here is the conversation with Cooper Lee Bombardier

Subscribe to Broken Boxes Podcast on iTunes HERE to stream and download this episode

This conversation was hosted by Ginger Dunnill of Broken Boxes Podcast

More about the artist:

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Cooper Lee Bombardier is a writer and visual artist originally from the South Shore of Boston. He has been a construction worker, a cook, a carpenter, a union stagehand, a bouncer, a welder, a shop steward, a dishwasher, a truck driver, and a housepainter, among other things, for a paycheck. His writing appears in many publications and anthologies, such as The Kenyon Review, CutBank, Nailed Magazine, and The Rumpus; and recently in the Lambda Literary Award-winning anthology The Remedy–Essays on Queer Health Issues, (ed. Zena Sharman) and Meanwhile, Elsewhere: Speculative Fiction From Transgender Writers, (eds. Cat Fitzpatrick and Casey Plett). The Huffington Post named him as one of “10 Transgender Artists Who Are Changing The Landscape Of Contemporary Art.” His visual art was recently curated in an exhibition called “Intersectionality” at the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Miami, andhung recently in shows at Meow Wolf in Santa Fe, NM, the National Queer Arts Festival in San Francisco, and at Helltown Workshop in Provincetown, MA. His visual work has been recently published in the journals Faggot Dinosaur and CutBank. A veteran of the original Sister Spit tours, he's performed, lectured, and exhibited art across North America. He has received fellowships from the Regional Arts and Culture Council, Lambda Literary Foundation, and RADAR Labs. Cooper Lee has taught writing at the University of Portland, Clark College, Portland State University, and at various Portland-area high schools as a writer-in-residence through Literary Art's program Writers in The Schools. He is a 2017-18 Writer-In-Residence at the Pacific Northwest College of Art’s Critical Studies graduate program.

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Visit him at www.cooperleebombardier.com 
FB: cooperfrickinleee
Twitter: @CooperLeeB
IG: cooperleebomb

More resource on Coopers projects:

https://litreactor.com/classes/writing-from-your-queer-heart (an online writing class I typically teach 2X per year, Fall and Spring)

http://www.arsenalpulp.com/bookinfo.php?index=451 (The link for the book The Remedy: Queer and Trans Voices on Health and Healthcare, a Lambda Literary award-winning anthology which includes an essay of mine)

http://topsidepress.com/ (where to purchase the anthology MEANWHILE, ELSEWHERE: SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY FROM TRANSGENDER WRITERS which features a short story of mine)

http://www.gertrudepress.org/submit.html (I'm the fiction editor at Gertrude Press and want to read your submissions!)

Conversation with Artist and Organizer Israel Francisco Haros Lopez

Artist and poet Israel Francisco Haros Lopez was born in East Los Angeles to immigrant parents of Mexican descent. Israel brings his firsthand knowledge of the realities of migration, U.S. border policies and life as a Mexican American to his work, addressing a multitude of historical and spiritual layered realities of border politics, identity politics, and the re-interpretation of histories.

“Forget who’s watching you.... Your ancestors are watching you, and they are gonna give you what you need.” -Israel Francisco Haros Lopez

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In this episode Israel Francisco Haros Lopez takes us on a journey of story; from growing up in East L.A., to attending UC Berkeley, to being a working artist and community organizer in New Mexico today. He speaks about how various experiences and humans have shaped his foundation as an artist and activist, how he has had to decolonize the learning process of higher education, how music has informed his life and writing, and the importance of creating a contemporary narrative through poetry and drawing. Israel shares several teaching he has received along his path which have changed his world view, such as words from a respected Elder and Xicana Activist who shared, “Without Art, there is no Movement”. Israel also speaks of participating in the 2009 “starving teachers” action in California and the strength of fasting, prayer and poetry as forms of direct action. He invites us to remember the complexity of existing as humans, that we all will contradict ourselves constantly, and as artists we must be aware not to get caught up in the ‘isms’, that “if we are always de-contructing, then when are we constructing".

Here is the conversation with Israel Francisco Haros Lopez

Subscribe to Broken Boxes Podcast on iTunes HERE to stream and download this episode

This conversation was hosted by Ginger Dunnill of Broken Boxes Podcast

More About The Artist:

Israel Francisco Haros Lopez is both a visual artist and performance artist. He was born and raised in East Los Angeles, graduated from Roosevelt High School with a 1.59 G.P.A. He is a graduate of Laney and Vista Community College with an A.A. in English Literature. Survived UC Berkeley with a degree in English and Xikan@ Studies and received an M.F.A. from California College of the Arts. His work is an attempt to search for personal truths and personal histories inside of american cosmology. The american cosmology and symbolism that he is drawing from is one that involves both northern and southern america that was here before columbus. The work both written and that which is painted is attempting to mark and remark historical points in the americas and the world. The mark making attempts to speak to the undeniable presence of a native america that will continue to flourish for generations to come. The understanding which he is drawing from is not conceptual but fact and points to the importance of honoring and remembering ancestral ways of living as a means of maintaining healthy relations with all humans, the winged, all those that crawl on this Earth, all Life, the Water, the Sacred Fire, Tonanztin, Tonatiuh, the Sacred Cardinal Points, everything in between, above and below and at the center of self and all things in the universe. Currently the visual motifs are drawn from both a pre-columbian america that had far far less physical, mental or spiritual borders . He also draws inspiration from the contemporary styles of inner city youth who use public space by any means necessary as their method of artistic expression. Israel also draws much of his inspiration from his peers and contemporaries who constantly show him innovative ways to approach cultural and political dilemmas. The written words cannot be without the painted image. The painted image cannot be without words. Neither the written work or visual work can be without sound without vibration, as all things on this earth carry vibration. As such his written and oral work is constantly shifting as it is performed or recording. The same poem,story,monologue or abstract diatribe shifts within the space it is performed taking into consideration audience and the theatrics and vibration of the moment.

Find out more about Israel Francisco Haros Lopez HERE 
Purchase Israel's Chicano Codex Coloring Books and other artworks HERE

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