Indira Allegra | |
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Born | |
Nationality | American |
Education | |
Known for | Performative Craft, Poetry, dance, weaving, sculpture, assemblage, installation art |
Notable work |
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Awards | United States Artists Award 2022 Burke Prize 2014 |
Website | indiraallegra |
Indira Allegra is a multidisciplinary American artist and writer based in Oakland, California.
Allegra was born in Detroit, Michigan, and moved to Portland, Oregon, in the 1980s.[1] Allegra studied Biology at Yale University in the late 1990s but left and later completed an Associate of Applied Science degree in Sign Language Interpretation from Portland Community College in 2005 and a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the California College of Arts in 2015.[1] Allegra has worked as a sign language interpreter, domestic violence advocate, union organizer, teaching artist, and in the service industry.[1]
Allegra makes work concerned with memorial and social tension. They work in a variety of genres and media, including performative craft, poetry, dance, weaving, sculpture, assemblage, and site-specific installations. Their work has been featured in exhibitions at the Museum of Arts and Design,[2] The University of Chicago's Arts Incubator,[3] John Michael Kohler Arts Center,[4] Yerba Buena Center for the Arts,[5] Mills College Art Museum,[6] Museum of the African Diaspora,[7] and SOMArts.[8] They have been awarded the United States Artists Award (2022),[9] YBCA 100 Honoree (2020),[10] Minnesota Street Project's California Black Voices Project Grant (2020),[11] the Museum of Arts and Design's Burke Prize (2019).[12] the Fleishhacker Foundation's Eureka Fellowship (2019),[13] the Artadia Award (2018),[14] the Mike Kelley Foundation Artist Project Grant (2018),[15] the MAP Fund (2018),[16] the Tosa Studio Award (2018),[17] the Windgate Craft Fellowship (2015),[18] and the San Francisco Foundation's Joseph Henry Jackson Literary Award (2014).[19]
Allegra published Blackout with Sming Sming Books in 2017.[24] Their writing has appeared in American Craft,[25] Art Journal,[26] Foglifter Magazine,[27] Cream City Review[28] and Wordgathering: A Journal of Disability Poetry.[29] Their work has been anthologized in Dear Sister,[30] Red Indian Road West: Native American Poetry from California[31] and Sovereign Erotics: A Collection of Two-Spirit Literature[32] among others.