← Fellowship Alumni

Ainslee Alem Robson

Ainslee Alem Robson is an Ethiopian-American writer-director, media artist and cook who crafts emancipatory narratives and counterimaginings harnessing film, game engine technology, food, memory and archives as her ingredients. Refusing temporal linearity, Ainslee’s work speaks to the liminal spaces between Africa and its diasporas. Scrutinizing sites of erasure within hegemonic discourse, she aims to deconstruct hierarchies and colonial legacies while re-orienting emerging technologies to operate in service to, and from positions of Black consciousness. Juxtaposing both emerging and analog media, she crafts characters, worlds, and meals that center agency, reclamation, resistance and spice.

Ainslee has exhibited her film installation “Ferenj” in the “Guests From the Future” category at the 18th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia curated by Lesley Lokko. Amongst other art spaces her commissions and collaborations have been exhibited by MoMA, the New York Times, Ars Electronica, MU, and Vellum LA. Her debut non-fiction work “Ferenj: A Graphic Memoir in VR” (2020) premiered at Tribeca, SXSW, and was showcased at film festivals internationally. She has guest lectured and led workshops at universities around the world including UCLA, the GSA in Johannesburg, MIT, Cornell, UCSD, NYU, and ZhDK. Her non-fiction writing has been published by eFlux and Guggenheim, Art Africa, Vogue Italia, and OffRamp academic journal. She holds a BA in Philosophy and French from The College of Wooster and an MA in Fiction & Entertainment from SCI-Arc.