I’m a cultural worker and former public librarian, nowadays I am a student in sociology and media studies/information science. My work focuses on finding alternative artist economies. My interest include video essays (ways of distributing information), art history and creative technology. I’m dedicated to the DIY community and collective memory. This extends itself to somatic justice, as a deep practice through radical imagination. My sincere intention is to use scholarship in decolonial and anti-classists ways for larger access. I’m a Wikipedia editor and bullet journal enthusiast, keen to viewing myself as artist as reader.

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Currently Thinking: Desire, Museology, Occupational Therapy

“An "interestingness curator" is simply a curiosity guide—someone who digs out interesting cross-disciplinary content in a way that allows people to become interested in things they didn't know they were interested in until they discovered them. What makes an interestingness curator different from an information curator, is that today's information economy tends to have an air of newsiness and is often driven by what I call the "Digg mentality”—a small number of very active users allow sensationalist but not necessarily substantive information to float to the top. An interestingness curator is an antidote to this, finding those fascinations and, over time, empowering creativity by creating the right intellectual conditions for the crosspollination of these different ideas in one's mental petri dish of resources.”

— Maria Popova