MEET PAMELA SNEED

 

“It’s satisfying to help people grow as individuals and in their craft, to Create valuable connections, inspire and save lives.”

Location: New York, New York
Disciplines:
Theater, Poetry, Nonfiction/essays

Pamela Sneed (she/her) is a New York based poet, performer and visual artist. She is the author of Imagine Being More Afraid of Freedom Than Slavery, KONG and Other Works, Sweet Dreams and Funeral Diva published by City Lights in Oct 2020. Funeral Diva was featured in the New York Times, Publishers Weekly, Lit Hub, Art Net, and more. Funeral Diva won the 2021 Lambda Lesbian Poetry Award and recommended by The New York Times alongside Barack Obama’s memoir. Additionally in 2021, she was a panelist for The David Zwirner Gallery’s More Life exhibit, and has spoken at Bard Center for Humanities, The Ford Foundation, The Gordon Parks Foundation, Columbia University, The New School, New York Public Library, The Brooklyn Museum, MOMA, DIA, NYU’s Center For Humanities. She has published in The Paris Review, Frieze Magazine, Art Forum, The Academy of American Poets, The Brooklyn Rail,, THEM, BOMB, and most recently Poetry Magazine. She has appeared in Nikki Giovanni’s The 100 Best African American Poems.  Her visual work was featured at Leslie Lohman Museum, The Ford Foundation, Kates-Ferris, and currently at The Lumber Room in Portland. In 2022, she had a solo show at Laurel Gitlen Gallery. She won the 2021 Black Queer Art Mentorship Award. She participated as a reader in the 2022 Whitney Biennial and was a narrator for Coco Fusco’s film, also in the 2022 Whitney Biennial. She has had keynotes at Yale University, Georgetown University, and SAIC. She has won a BOFFO residency on Fire Island in August 2022. In March 2023, she premiered a solo performance, A Tribute To Big Mama Thorton, which broke a record at the Armory for the earliest a performance ever sold out. Her first book, Imagine Being More Afraid of Freedom than Slavery was reissued by Fordham University Press in Oct 2023. Recently, she premiered a talk with Claudia Rankine at UC Berkeley and performed in Chicago in celebration of Sacred Spells by Assotto Saint. She has won a 2024 NYSCA grant for poetry.


Work

 

mentor profile

What interests you about mentoring?

“It’s satisfying to help people grow as individuals and in their craft, to create valuable connections, inspire and save lives.

Given your experience and interests, what kind of emerging artist do you feel best positioned to support?

“An artist working in poetry, non fiction, autobiographical writing, spoken word poetry and performance.”

As a mentor, what would you like to offer an emerging artist? What would you like to receive?

“I can help them prepare a first manuscript, work on poetry/writing development, point them towards connections and community. I can work on performance and writing as well to help people hone craft and to be an ear and support for their development as an artist.

Have you had mentors of your own? Who have they been?

Jane Lazarre.”

Is there something we didn’t ask that you would like prospective applicants to know?

“I’m interested in people who are interested and open to working on their work.”

This Mentor is open to working with Fellows either remotely or in-person!