Possible online services disruption due to Internet related outage
2023.11.01 - FY23 Master/Apprentice Award Recipients
Master Artist, Asha Chandrashekara Adiga and Apprentice, Khristi Blocton
Master Artist City of Residence: Aurora
Artform: Bharatanatyam, Indian classical dance
Asha Chandrashekara Adiga (she/her/hers)
Guru Vidushi Asha Adiga is an accomplished Bharatanatyam dancer and Carnatic music performer. She has been in this field for more than 36 years as a student, performer, choreographer, composer, and an educator. Asha represented India on the international stage as a dancer at age of 9 and has given performances all over India, Europe, and the US.
She has visualized, choreographed and directed, many classical dances, folk dances, dance dramas, ballets and composed several pieces of music, some of which are “Shiva Shakthi”, “Rama-Eshawara”, “Sri Guru Sai Leela”, “Sri Sathyanarayana Katha”, Nadham, “Hima Maya” and many more. She secured the 3rd rank in dance Vidwath higher proficiency exams conducted by Karnataka Higher Education Board, India. Asha has received several awards and accolades to her credit such as Air India "Rank Award”. She is also an awardee of extraordinary artist green card in the USA. She is also an esteemed member of the international dance council CID – UNESCO.
Asha founded the Acharya Performing Arts Academy Inc in Illinois and she is a creative artistic director in Nupura Geetha Inc., a Nonprofit organization for art and culture. https://www.ashaacharya.org
Khristi Blocton (she/her/hers)
Khristi Blocton has been dancing Bharatanatyam and Indian folk dance for over 15 years and has been a shishya (disciple/student) of Guru Vidushi Asha Adiga since 2011. She completed her advanced performance (Arangetram) under Guru Vidushi Asha in 2015. Since that time, she has been performing and assisting at Asha Performing Arts Academy Inc.
Khristi has been in lead roles and participated in many dance dramas and feature performances composed and choreographed by Guru Vidushi Asha such as “Rama-Eshawara”, “Sri Guru Sai Leela”, “Sri Sathyanarayana Katha”, Nadham, and “Hima Maya”. She has also presented feature performances at SVS Balaji Temple, Aurora, Chicago Travel and Adventure Show, Waubonsee Community College, Natya Festival, St. Louis, Melharmony Festival, Wisconsin, Destination Asia at Morton Arboretum, and Telugu National Conventions (NATS, ATA) to name a few.
Master Artist, Edith “Mama Edie” Armstrong and Apprentice Carmenita Peoples
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: African American storytelling
Edith Armstrong (she/her/hers)
Edith (Mama Edie) Mcloud Armstrong is a bilingual storyteller (Spanish-English), speech/language pathologist and percussionist. She began writing stories, songs and plays to reveal to her predominately African American and Deaf students their beauty and power, invisible to many of them.
In the late '70s, Mama Edie incorporated math, science, social studies and literary art into her students' language programs. She theorizing that deficits were more likely related to the language and tone of instruction than to the children's ability to use critical thinking skills or comprehend. Academic success, self-esteem, finding their own voice and personal empowerment improved.
Local and global multidisciplinary storytelling performances, workshops and residencies are provided. Clients have included the National Black Child Development Institute; Illinois Speech, Language & Hearing Association; keynote for the Illinois School Social Workers; Argonne National Laboratories; Northwestern University Law School; B'nai B'rith Unity in Diversity Conference; African Festival of the Arts; PANAFEST Festival, Ghana; NPR; Channel 11-WTTW; and an international peace conference in Iraq. Mama Edie's stories and articles are included in publications such as Literacy Development in the Storytelling Classroom; Tell the World: Storytelling Across Language Barriers; and the Black Child Journal. Performance grants and other awards have been received by various organizations.
Master Artist, Sandip Barman and Apprentice, Tyler Krais
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: Hindustani Music
Sandip Burman (he/him/his)
Sandip Burman, a native of Durgapur, India, is a disciple of the late distinguished tabla master, Pandit Shyamal Bose of Calcutta. Sandipji’s performances are marked with spontaneous innovation and tonal purity while delivering complex rhythmic patterns (tala) or melody (raga).
Some of his accomplishments include solo performances at the Kennedy Center, First Night Providence (Rhode Island), Ravinia Festival (Chicago), Percussive Arts Society Conference (PASIC) and Nashville Symphony.
While exploring World Music, Jazz, Western Classical and Movie Soundtracks, Sandipji has played on albums such as Facing East, Vishnu, Outbound (GRAMMY award winner for best Jazz album), Live at the Quick DVD (GRAMMY Award winner for Best Live Performance) and Global Fusion from Warner Brothers. Always in search of new challenges, Sandipji wrote his first Western Classical piece for wind ensemble & string quartet with Gary Hill and Jonathan Moser, as well as contributed to Danny Elfman’s soundtrack of Tim Burton’s film, Mars Attacks.
“Support from the Illinois Art Council is very meaningful to me. Student/teacher relationships are made stronger by grant awards such as this Master/Apprentice Program.”
Tyler Kraiss (he/him/his)
Tyler Kraiss has been a student of Pandit Sandip Burman for 4 1/2 years learning Indian classical vocals and harmonium. “This music has inspired me to become more of a conscious human being because of the depth of the subject matter. This grant award will enable me to learn much more deeply and share what I learn through performances and teaching as I progress.”
When Tyler is not playing music, he can be found reading about spiritual, esoteric teachings, and yogic practices. Making art with watercolor and other mediums like acrylic and colored pencil are other expressions that Tyler uses to strengthen his artistic voice. When he is not playing music, making art, or writing poetry, Tyler expresses his creative energy through his full-time career as a tattoo artist which allows him to hold deep conversations with clients about life and therapeutic matters. “I love the work that I do, and carry that love into musical expression.”
Master Artist, Kioto Aoki and Apprentice, Helen Nagata
Master Artist City of Residence: Oak Park
Artform: Taiko - Japanese drum
Kioto Aoki (she/her/hers)
Kioto is an artist, educator and musician descending from an okiya (geisha house) performing arts family in Tokyo –called Toyoakimoto– with roots dating back to the Edo period. She is the fifth generation of the shamisen performing house, having just received her Toyoaki name: Toyoaki Chitose. Studying under her father Tatsu Aoki who was born in Tokyo, Kioto is carrying on the artistic family lineage in Chicago playing taiko, shamisen and tsuzumi in both traditional and contemporary musical contexts.
Her musical practice maintains a balance of retaining the artistic and aesthetic integrity of traditional Japanese music with a musical flexibility that extends beyond the measures of cultural preservation. Her playing is informed by the Japanese aesthetics of ma while challenging the common misinterpretation and beliefs of percussion as rhythm, and uses often stoic gestures of sonic textures, abstracted soundscapes and embodied phrasing that incorporates choreography as part of melody.
Helen Nagata (she/her/hers)
Helen M. Nagata, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of Art History at Northern Illinois University (NIU) in the School of Art and Design. Nagata teaches courses on East Asian Art and specializes in Edo-period paintings, prints and illustrated printed books in her research. Born in San Francisco and raised in Tokyo from age 11 to 18, she developed a desire to explore her Japanese cultural heritage and bridge cultures from a young age. This propelled graduate studies at U.C. Berkeley and Stanford University, as well as work and study experiences at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Yale University, the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, and Gakushūin University in Tokyo. She enjoys the nexuses where visual arts, dance, music, literature, poetry, and theater intersect.
Master Artist, Tatsu Aoki and Apprentice, Jill Kiku Taura
Master Artist City of Residence: Oak Park
Artform: Shamisen - Japanese Lute
Tatsu Aoki
Aoki was born in 1958. The Toyoaki shamisen music is a part of Tokyo geisha music. Its origins are in the famed Edo period (beginning with the ascendancy of the Tokugawa Shogunate in 1603) which was perhaps the most formative era in Japanese cultural history. Within the Toyoaki family, the ozashiki shamisen music that Aoki performs is mainly instrumental and used mostly as interlude music before the featured geisha ladies appear, or to fill time in large parties and gatherings. This particular shamisen style had been looked down from the Kabuki masters as “jamming” music for a longtime, but the contemporary society and music world had re-focused on this unique style of the geisha music.
Jill Kiku Taura
Born in Chicago in 1951, Taura is a third-generation Japanese American. She received her BFA degree at the University of Illinois Champaign-Urbana in 1975 and MFA degree from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1977. In 1987, Taura moved to Japan, studying Japanese language at Waseda University. She also studied shime daiko and Shamisen with nagauta master Mochizuki Saburo. After returning to the US in 2007, Taura began Shamisen studies with Toyoaki Sanjuru (Tatsu Aoki), and joined the Tsukasa Taiko group of AIRMW. Taura is a 9 year recipient of the Illinois Arts Council Grant under the Master Apprentice program with Tatsu Aoki. In 2023, she received ‘Meimei’ certification in Shamisen from Tatsu Aoki’s mother Toyoaki Toyoko, becoming part of the 5th generation of the Toyoakimoto school.
Master Artist, Sean Cleland and Apprentice, Jennifer Mullen Ingerson
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: Traditional Irish fiddle
Seán Cleland
Seán Cleland is an Irish fiddle player, Irish music teacher, and the director of the Irish Music School of Chicago. Growing up on Chicago’s North Side in an Irish-American household, he began classical violin lessons at 7, and at age 9 decided that he would play the Irish fiddle.
His Irish musical education throughout the 1970s was inspired and influenced by the legendary Liz Carroll. There were many Irish musicians who had emigrated to the United States in the 1950s who took Seán under their wings and mentored him. In 1987 Seán founded The Drovers, and in 2000 he co-founded the Irish band Bohola. Seán began teaching Irish music in 1980; in 1998 he began teaching at the Old Town School of Folk Music in Chicago. In 2003, he founded the Irish Music School of Chicago.
Seán has taught at such festivals as the Catskills Irish Arts Week, (MAD) Week, the St. Louis Tionol, Milwaukee Irish Fest, California Traditional Arts Society, Ontario Celtic Roots Festival, and Celtic Colours International Festival. Seán also teaches regularly in Ireland. Seán has been instrumental in fostering traditional Irish music in the city of Chicago.
Jennifer Ingerson
Jennifer grew up a classical violinist and took joy in playing with symphony orchestras, where she was one of many musicians creating one grand, gorgeous sound together. As a young adult, she discovered Chicago's Irish music community and saw how Irish players could turn simple tunes learned by ear into a communal sound that was just as grand and gorgeous. Symphonies brought written compositions to life, but Irish musicians carried on composing as they played! With their freedom to improvise, drawing from their imagination and their musical tradition, each player brought their own magic to the whole.
Jennifer learned what she could of this magic while raising 3 children and working with an organization that serves people experiencing homelessness. In recent years she's found time at last to dive deeper, attending local irish music sessions and taking a style/repertoire class taught by Seán Cleland. A 2022 Master-Apprentice award made it possible to study privately with Sean, and a 2023 award has allowed her to continue. With his expertise and artistry, Seán is helping Jennifer develop the skills and sensibilities that make Irish music Irish, so she can grow as a musician and as a member of this beautiful musical community.
Master Artist, Rika Lin, aka Yoshinojo Fujima and Apprentice, Yukio Nang
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: Taiko - Japanese classical dance
Yoshinojo Fujima
Yoshinojo Fujima began her training in Fujima style Japanese classical dance as a teenager with Grandmaster Shunojo Fujima, the founder of Shubukai (previously Fujima Ryu of Chicago). She has trained with him for over 30 years. She attained her professional stage name and then passed the Grandmaster examination in Tokyo, Japan. Nihon buyou/kabuki buyou, or Japanese Classical Dance, draws from kabuki plays, historical figures, famous characters, and is an essential wellspring of Japanese cultural identity. She is now director of programming for Shubukai, and continues to teach & educate, as well as present and perform Classical Japanese Dance and create contemporary applications that inform modern Asian-American identity.
Yukio Nang
Yukio Nang started Fujima style Japanese classical dance when he was about 8 years old. He grew up watching the training at the studio of Shubukai founder Shunojo Fujima, these rehearsals often included his mother, older brother, and his now current teacher, Yoshinojo Fujima. For the last 12 years he has continued to dance, and with continued training, hopes to acquire his professional stage name in the Fujima style.
Master Artist, Subhadra Natarajan and Apprentice, Achintya Ram
Master Artist City of Residence: Naperville
Artform: Taiko - Indian Carnatic vocal music
Subhadra Natarajan (she/her/hers)
Subhadra Natarajan began her musical journey at the early age of three and has trained for several years with many legendary music teachers. She has acquired a rich and varied repertoire of songs, many of them rare compositions handed down by yesteryear musical stalwarts of Carnatic Music. With her eclectic taste for music of all genres, she has also learnt bhajans (devotional compositions) in several Indian languages.
Subhadra is also a creative music composer. She has composed music for dance productions like Kalidasa's 'Meghdoot' and 'Ritu Samhaar', and Kavi Kunjara Bharathi's 'Azhagar Kuravanji.' She has also created several musical arrangements for orchestras (Indian and Western) that play Indian music.
In addition to being an accomplished musician, Subhadra has had several years of dance training. She has performed lead roles in the dance-dramas 'Bhārathi Kannan,’ Jayadeva's 'Geetha Govindam,' Tulsidas 'Rāmāyan,' and Rabindranath Tagore's 'Chitrāngada.'
She is also a scholar in the Tamil language, and has conducted in-depth research on 'Musical forms in ancient Tamil literature.' As the music director of Samskriti Foundation in Naperville, IL, Subhadra trains aspiring students in the intricacies of Carnatic Music.
In her spare time, Subhadra enjoys oil-painting and designing and creating one-of-a-kind handcrafted jewelry.
Achintya Ram (he/him/his)
Achintya is an Indian American based in Naperville, Illinois. He attended Waubonsie Valley High school and graduated from the University of Illinois - Urbana Champaign in 2019 with his Bachelor's in Mathematics & Computer Science. He has learned Carnatic music since the age of 5 from his grandmother, Subhadra Natarajan. He has also had an opportunity to spend his middle school years studying in Chennai, India, where he got a more immersive exposure to Indian culture. The intensive training has helped him explore different aspects of classical Indian music. He is also an avid singer of both Indian film and classical music as they blend together many similar elements.
Master Artist, Daniel Rojas and Apprentice, Claire Happel Ashe
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: Venezuelan/Colombian joropo music for harp
Daniel Rojas (he/him/his)
Colombian llanera harpist Daniel Rojas has toured throughout the United States and Europe with groups such as Europa Group Los Llaneros, Tardes Llaneras, and most recently under his own group, Arpa Café. Performances at festivals and concert venues include the 2021 Arpafest (Cancun, Mexico), the Old Town School of Folk Music (Chicago), 2010 Western Alliance Music Conference (Los Angeles), 2010 Festival Mundial del Arpa (Asuncion, Paraguay), 2010 Association of Performing Arts Presenters (New York City), and 2009 Encuentro International Arpas al Fin del Mundo (Concepcion, Chile). As an educator, he has presented and taught at colleges and universities through the Arts Latinas Entertainment Company and given local workshops and lessons through Harp Folklore Inc. Cultural Foundation in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, the Llano y Joropo Academy in Bogotá, and the Débora Arango High School of Music in Medellín.
Claire Happel Ashe (she/her/hers)
Claire Happel Ashe performs on both modern and historical harps with ensembles throughout the Midwest including the Saint Louis and Milwaukee Symphony Orchestras, the Newberry Consort, and her own chamber ensembles, River Town Duo (bass/harp) and Immer Neu (harp/oboe). She holds degrees from Yale University and the University of Illinois and was a 2007–2008 Fulbright Scholar in Prague.
Master Artist, Angela Tam and Apprentice, Judy Liu
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: Taiko - Chinese classical dance
Angela Tam (she/her/hers)
Angela Tam is the founding Artistic Director of Yin He Dance. She is a dancer, choreographer, and teaching artist. A Chicago native, Angela began dancing as a child under Qiu Yue Jin. Since then, Angela has studied Chinese dance under Margaret Yuen and Grant Zhuang among others. She has also received instruction in ballet, jazz, contemporary, and classical Japanese dance. She has performed as a featured soloist at Choose Chicago's citywide Chinese New Year Kick Off events at Chicago Cultural Center presented by Chinese Fine Arts Society. She is a multi-year recipient of the Ethnic & Folk Arts Master Apprentice Grant from Illinois Arts Council Agency, most recently in 2023. She received her BA in East Asian Studies from New York University and holds a certificate in Arts and Culture Strategy from the University of Pennsylvania. Since founding Yin He Dance, Angela has been devoted to sharing her love of Chinese dance as a performer and educator. She also choreographs folkloric and contemporary work.
Judy Liu (she/her/hers)
Judy's interest in dance began at five years old under the instruction of Pao Ling Ling. She was previously the president of Jade, the Chinese dance club at Walter Payton College Prep. Her team received a platinum ranking at the Tao Li Cup Midwestern Regionals in the 2017-18 school year and to the gold ranking at Tao Li Cup in New York in 2019. Her time with Yin He exposed her to the various genres of Chinese dance and even ballet. Currently, she is a student at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She plans to have a career in the dental industry as well as continue to dance with Yin He.
Master Artist, Vanitha Veeravalli and Apprentice, Nikitha Velavan
Master Artist City of Residence: Naperville
Artform: Taiko - Bharatanatyam, Indian classical dance
Vanitha Veeravalli (she/her/hers)
Vanitha Veeravalli is a dance artist, choreographer and teacher of Bharatanatyam, an ancient classical dance form of India, with over three decades of performance and teaching experience. She is the Founder & Artistic Director of Bharatam, a premier institution in Naperville, dedicated to nurturing and propagating Bharatanatyam.
She has choreographed many productions including ‘ANYA: The Other’, exploring Indian heritage narratives in new perspective, ‘PALAM: Bridges Across …’ experimenting with cross-cultural stories and rhythms, and ‘Growing into Bharatanatyam’, a retrospective into journey through arts. Vanitha has received many honor grants, including the Master Artiste award from the state of Illinois, multiple times. She is the recipient of ‘Acharya Kala Vipanchee’ and the ‘Dr. Saraswati’ awards for excellence in arts education, at the renowned Music and Dance Festival, Chennai India. Vanitha has served on select judge’s panel by the invitation of Illinois Arts Council.
As a torchbearer of classical traditions, Vanitha strives to kindle in her students the joy of self-expression through Bharatanatyam. To this end, many of her students have been recognized internationally, and by the State of Illinois for advance learning in arts. Vanitha, and Bharatam dancers, are well-recognized ambassadors of this rich culture.
Nikitha Velavan
Nikitha Velavan is a rising junior at University of Indiana this fall. She is currently studying supply chain management and healthcare management.
From a very young age, Nikitha has had passion for dance. This passion was nurtured through 14 years of Bharatanatyam training under the guidance of Ms. Vanitha Veeravalli, Artistic Director of Bharatam. Along the way, Nikitha has had the privilege of representing Bharatam at many diversity events and community programs.
Nikitha not only enjoys learning dance, she also loves to share her love of it. She was selected into Bharatam’s Helping Hasta©, a student leadership program, where she mentors younger students. She takes pride in helping younger students find their joy of dance, the same way she does.
Nikitha feels that Bharatanatvam has helped her gain a deeper appreciation of her Indian culture. The many years of learning, practicing and performing - and specially the arangetram training and recital - have helped her understand the importance of dedication, discipline, and hard work.
She wishes to keep learning, helping and dancing with Bharatam for many more years in the future.
Master Artist, Wanees Zarour and Apprentice, Clara Mikhail
Master Artist City of Residence: Chicago
Artform: Taiko - Traditional Arabic Maqam music
Wanees Zarour (he/him/his)
Wanees Zarour is an award winning Palestinian-American composer, arranger, buzuq virtuoso and multi-instrumentalist steeped in maqam and jazz music. His compositional and arranging styles transcend borders and draw from traditions spanning the entire globe. As a community leader, he believes in creating a conducive environment to artistic expression and collective music-making. Zarour directs the Middle East Music Ensemble at the University of Chicago, co-directs the Chicago Immigrant Orchestra, and leads 'East Loop,' a septet that explores the intersections between maqam and jazz.
Zarour started his Western classical training on the violin at the age of 7 at the Edward Said Conservatory of Music displaying fast advancement in his musical education. A few years after, he began training in Maqam, Middle Eastern Repertoire, the Arabic violin and picked up the buzuq, a long-necked microtonal fretted instrument. Learning from the masters, Zarour was able to acquire extensive knowledge in this genre.
Wanees Zarour has performed, collaborated and recorded with renowned artists such as Simon Shaheen, Dave Leibman and Amir ElSaffar and was featured in major festivals in the US and internationally. Wanees holds an MFA in Jazz Composition from DePaul University.
In 2021 Wanees Zarour was award the Chicago Esteemed Artist Award.
C Mikhail (they/them/theirs)
C Mikhail is a bassist and singer born in Chicago to an Assyrian father and German mother.
A recent graduate of the University of Chicago with a degree in Assyriology and Music, C was initially trained in the western classical music tradition. Joining the Middle East Music Ensemble during their studies, however, quickly turned their focus. C has now played bass and sung with MEME for 5 years, and recently joined the Chicago Immigrant Orchestra to bring their burgeoning expertise to the table and dive into the music of other cultures. Through C’s lessons with Wanees Zarour studying the Arabic modal system maqam, they hope to further rediscover their own roots and eventually become a cultural representative.
Outside of Arab music, C plays in an indie/punk band and works as an audio engineer, preferring to keep music close at all times.