Faculty Spotlight: Pearl Mei Lam

Headshot of Pearl Mei Lam, an Asian American woman in her 20s, with shoulder-lenght hair, smiling at the camera.

We’re excited to welcome Pearl Mei Lam is one of Arts Corps’ new teaching artists for the 2025-2026 school year.

Pearl, you’re such an active artist! You perform for stage and screen, write, and are a filmmaker. What made you want to become a storyteller?

I watched A LOT of TV. My childhood was filled with Hong Kong TVB soaps and YouTube sketch comedy titans like smosh and nigahiga. My entire high school experience was spent binge watching shows and obsessively giffing them on my multiple Tumblr fandom pages. One of these shows, Orphan Black, was actually the reason I began acting. Seeing Tatiana Maslany effortlessly play so many roles inspired me to take up Drama 101 in 11th grade, and I’ve been acting ever since. 

It all boils down to being fully and utterly immersed in stories — being so surrounded by them that I couldn’t stand just consuming them any more and had to create for myself. Absorbing art is how I still stay inspired these days. Watching new films, shows, plays, as well as reading new books, listening to new music — all of that keeps me feeling open and excited to create!

Much of your work lives in comedy and satire, but has social and philosophical ruminations and a deep heart. What is it that attracts you to these genres?

Heart and humor go hand in hand. There is always sincerity in the face of absurdity. In crazy comedies, characters don’t know they’re in absolutely bonkers situations but they do everything in their power to handle the circumstances truthfully. And that’s what I think makes comedy, especially absurd comedy, so compelling — it’s both a tool to disarm and a vessel for truth. 

I was also a film major (and if you think that sounds pretentious — you’re 100% correct). We spent a lot of time reading critical theories while studying films, which is why I often use philosophical texts as a springboard for my work. Film as a medium feels so tangible to me; it’s an image that can be coaxed, manipulated, and packaged into meaning. I love thinking about them as visual texts or essays!

During your in-person interview, you led us through some theatre exercises, and we were all a little nervous despite the fact two of our staff are also theatre people! It was silly, but also many of our students who are growing up in the midst of social media are scared of performing, because they’re scared of being judged. What are some of your tools to deal with nervousness both in yourself as a performer, and in others as a teaching artist?

Everyone CRUSHED it! But I also completely understand this fear of being judged — it’s something I feel all the time.

Fear is just attention in the wrong place. As a performer, I’ve learned to redirect my focus from “what if I look stupid?” to “what am I getting from my scene partner?” and that always drops me into the work. I’ve also found that getting into my body helps ground me, such as breathing exercises prior to performances or big physical choices that get me out of my head.

As a teaching artist, these are tips and skills I implement into lessons in the form of low stakes, silly games that get students in their bodies. This is a great way to practice learning to be present in the moment and listening to your impulses — and before you know it, you’ll be thinking less about nerves. I’ll also always lead by example and be the first to jump in to demonstrate that there isn’t a right or wrong answer. It’s just about doing!

As you start your journey with Arts Corps, what are you most looking forward to?

I’m so excited to be working with young artists in the making, whether they go on to pursue it professionally or not. I believe that artistry lives in every single person — it’s a state of being. And youth, especially, have an easier time accessing this instinctual, creative state than adults. I’m constantly looking for ways to practice tapping into this open river of inspiration, and I’m really looking forward to being in space with other explorers!

Do you have any upcoming projects you’d like to share about?

Thank you for asking! There are two projects in the pipeline I’m super stoked about…

The first is Exotic Deadly: Or The MSG Play by Keiko Green, directed by Mimi Katano (and Production Managed by the one and only Grecia!). It’s a delightfully absurd script with an incredible cast and production team, full of the humor and heart I cherish — and you learn lots about MSG. The play runs September 6 – 20 at Theatre Off Jackson. 

The second is my feature film, Wild Ragerz, an absurd dark comedy on reality TV featuring an all queer cast, coming 2026! We shot for two weeks in June across WA and are now in post — it’s got jello wrestling, mud attacks, and is inspired by philosopher Jean Baudrillard (so you know it’s some real high brow stuff). For updates, follow us on Instagram @wild.ragerz.

 

Pearl Mei Lam (she/her) is an actor, comedian, and filmmaker. Stage credits include: Seattle Shakespeare Company, Dacha Theatre, Jet City Improv, ComedySportz, the You’re Wrong About and American Hysteria podcast tour, and Seattle Public Theater, where she received a 2024 Gregory Award for her performance in Unrivaled. Onscreen, she has appeared in regional commercials, Pure Flix’s Going Home, and independent films, including her debut feature Wild Ragerz. Kindled by absurd humor and daring artistry, she is committed to redefining representation for queer people of color through work that sparks laughter, joy, and community

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Board Spotlight: Jason Ehlenfeldt

Headshot of Jason Ehlenfeldt, a man in his 30s with a trim beard and balding, short hair, wearing a blue collared shirt

Arts Corps is excited to welcome our new board member, Jason Ehlenfeldt! 

We were lucky enough to meet Jason earlier this year when he came to the Arts Corps offices with the Best Buy Foundation for a grant application meeting, talking with our staff and seeing photos and art pieces from our programs. After the meeting, Jason decided to become involved with Arts Corps. He volunteered for our end-of-year celebration, Art & Sol, taking part of the chaotic magic that is running an event–– setting up merch tables and art stations, greeting students, and event directing traffic under a light rain. “Honestly, it was kind of relaxing!” he laughs. At the beginning of this month, Jason was officially voted into our board. 

At first glance, Jason might not fit the picture you typically assume when you think arts education. Growing up in the Midwest, he majored in Computer Network Security through Dakota State University before trying programming and officially switching to software development, which he’s made his career. But Jason is an art kid, through and through. He’s been singing for as long as he can remember, and he’s managed to be involved in theatre through various stages of his life and across multiple states. He’s acted, designed, done run crew, and even stage managed. You name it, and he’s probably done it in theatre.

Jason’s engagement in the arts and his willingness to try new roles comes from a formative experience in his youth. Jason was always a quiet kid, he shares. Then, in the first day of summer vacation after his sophomore year, he got into an accident with his 4-wheeler. He spent 3 days in the ICU. While there, he had a realization, “I don’t want to live my life afraid of doing things”. Once he was back in school, his choir teacher encouraged him to audition for Phantom of the Opry, a spoof of Phantom of the Opera. He was nervous but remembered his resolve. He got the lead role of Lt. Fairleigh Good, and the rest is history.

Beyond his deep connection with the arts, Jason simply loves helping. He volunteers with Child’s Play, a non-profit that brings gaming systems into hospitals, integrating play into the pediatric patient experience. This work has personal significance to Jason, as he remembers how the gaming cart helped him through his own hospital stay as a youth. He also volunteers at the Pacific Science Center, participating in their National Engineering Week and summer camps. He loves it because of the excitement, energy, and curiosity he gets to witness. 

Curiosity is a unifying thread for Jason, which continues to motivate him and connects all that he does. Art and tech are often seen as separate and different disciplines, but the reality is they have a lot of commonalities and help advance each other. Curiosity lets you see this. “Curiosity is one of the biggest things that can benefit a person” Jason says. “It’s the ever-dreaded question, right? The ‘why?’ But if you are always asking why, you never stop learning”. 

Through his new position as an Arts Corps board member, Jason is looking forward to fostering curiosity. He wants to help create spaces for youth to feel like they fit in, like they can ask all their question, and become who they want to be. After all, Jason understands the power of art to shape us. “Without it, I’d be a completely different person”.

–By Grecia Leal Pardo
Development and Communications Manager

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Faculty Spotlight: Jéhan Òsanyìn

Jéhan, a black person wearing pink boots and a white scarf, in the middle of a brick-lined road beneath an arched bridge.
Jéhan walking along the Peak Forest Locks in Marple, UK February 2025.

 

Arts Corps is happy to introduce our new Director of Arts Education, Jéhan Òsanyìn!

Previously, you have been part of Arts Corps as a teaching artist. What made you return as an administrator?

One of the reasons I left Arts Corps as a Teaching Artist was because while working as a Creative Schools Initiative Teaching Artist in dual language classrooms, I learned what it meant to teach young people in a language other than English and fell in love with it.  It helped me more deeply root my pedagogy in anti-colonial theory through understanding my relationship with language and learning.  I knew I wanted to be a more proficient educator when teaching in Spanish speaking communities. I also wanted to investigate what it meant to be West Indian (St. Johnian and Jamaican) and think about how the Spanish colonization that occurred in 1455 in Jamaica. What residue remains after the Spanish left? What are the remnants of British colonization? Where does that live in body? In my practice? In my curriculum? While my work as an Arts Corps teaching artist helped me understand the depths of colonization and internalized racial trauma in an arts integrated classroom, I wanted to work with the adults who worked with young people to provide more advanced professional development opportunities. I needed to sew together the theories I’d discovered in the classroom. Returning to Arts Corps as administrator is an opportunity to support Teaching Artists and the young people they serve by creating systems around them. I’d love for the entire world to see teaching artistry as a career you can retire from. 

Beyond Arts Corps, you have so much experience as a transdisciplinary artist, educator, and facilitator! Can you tell us about some of the work you’ve done in the past and some of the practices you’ve learned from it?

Sure! I’ve had the lovely opportunity to work with a lot of organizations who made me sign an NDA before working with them. Feel free to make a guess of which companies and you’ll likely be right.  I’ve worked locally as a Director or on the team with The 5th Avenue Theatre (Into the Woods, The Wiz, Afterwords, Wonder Boy!, Yoko’s Husband’s Killer’s Japanese Wife, Gloria). I directed Wonderful Wizard of Oz at Seattle Children’s Theatre, I adapted and directed the World Premiere audioplay of N.K. Jemisin’s short story The Effluent Engine for Book-It Repertory Company, I’ve also worked with ACT Theatre, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Village Theatre, and Intiman theatre.  I wrote and performed Yankee Pickney with a now defunct theatre company, Theater Schemeater. Yankee Pickney explored state sanctioned violence against Black bodies.  I trained in Cultural Somatics and Psychological First Aid with Resmaa Menakem. Some of the practices I’ve learned from that training was slowing down and moving the speed of discernment.  How slowly do I have to move to make sure I’m moving in alignment with the behaviors I’ve learned and practiced and not the ones taught to me by teachers with practices and values that no longer served me?

Something that ties a lot of your work together is theatre. Why theatre?  

This is hard to explain, but theatre has, historically, been the only place where I get to be in the fullness of my body and be believed. When folks are watching the journey of a character I’m playing from the beginning of the story to the end they believe what’s happened to them (with lights, sound, costumes, and supporting characters). As a big Black-bodied sometimes femme, people don’t often believe my life. I find they struggle to empathize without qualifying questions that dilute my experiences. Theatre was the only place where I could fully exist and breathe and be believed. Being believed is validating so I kept going on my path of validation until it diverged in a wood.  

What is something that excites you as Director of Arts Education?

The Teaching Artists. I was in the office during Art 4 Life and listened as Yaz and Atticus taught students how to read the symbolism in Steven Universe. I’m in the office as Teaching Artists gather supplies and laugh with the program managers. I’m on this planet to work in service of young people and to fund the Arts in perpetuity. Those are what excited me as the Director of Arts Education. 

What is something that excites you or is bringing you joy as a human?

Food.  I love cooking and baking. The week before I started in the office I perfected my “from scratch” croissant recipe, perfected my shortcrust recipe, and baked bialys and sourdough boules for my neighbors. My grandmother was the sweetest human and the best cook. Now my brother (who lives in Pennsylvania) and I bond over FaceTime while cooking and baking for our respective loved ones.  If you want to hear or see me in my happy place, talk to me about food. The highlight of my week is customizing my CSA box.  Truly, it’s the little things these days.  

 

A Batik tapestry of a person sitting on a rock, fishing, with a tree, a volcano, and a red sky behind them
A Batik tapestry Jéhan made while in Yogjakarta, Indonesia in January 2025
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Faculty Spotlight: Jacqueline Barbosa

"they tell you to turn into a new leaf but then complain about your faded color" around drawing of a leaf, part brown, part green

Jacqueline Barbosa is an alum from our Interagency Arts Program and our Art 4 Life @ CAM internship. Since fall, she has also been one of our new Classroom Assistants, working with our New Futures and Out of School Time programs! It’s been so wonderful having Jacqueline back in the classroom as faculty, and seeing the way she is able to connect with our young students. We’re so excited to witness all the ways she continues to grow!

What made you decide to become a Classroom Assistant?

I decided to become a Classroom Assistant because of Adam and my teacher at Interagency Southwest, Ms. Mary, who both have been role models I’ve always looked up to. I loved making art with Adam and saw how much he enjoyed working with students while doing something he was passionate about. So many students, including myself, couldn’t wait to get to school just to vibe with Adam and create some art with him. Seeing the positive impact he had on everyone around him inspired me to want to make that same kind of impact for youth, be someone they can look up to and can’t wait to create art with.

What has been a surprising lesson you have learned in your new role?

A surprising lesson I’ve learned in my new role is how much the students have taught me about patience. While I came in expecting to guide them, I’ve realized the importance of really listening to each of their unique experiences. Many of them have their own challenges, but they handle each day with strength, which has inspired me to be more open minded. It’s been a wholesome experience to grow with them.

What excites you about continuing to CA this quarter?

What excites me about continuing as a Classroom Assistant this quarter is the opportunity to grow and become better in my role. I’m looking forward to gaining more experience, learning new skills, and finding ways to connect with the students even more effectively. It’s exciting to know that each day is a chance to improve and make a bigger impact.

You were a student both at our Interagency Arts Program and our Art 4 Life internship at CAM. Can you tell us a little about your experience in these programs?

In the Interagency Arts Program, Adam didn’t let us use our phones for inspiration when drawing or painting. Instead, he pushed us to think for ourselves and be creative. At first, it was hard because I was used to looking up ideas, but over time, I realized how much it helped me grow. I started making things I didn’t think I could, and it taught me to trust my own process. I’m glad I had that experience. In the Art 4 Life internship at CAM, I learned to take my time and be patient with my art. I focused on doing things step by step and picked up new techniques that helped me grow. I also met many talented artists who inspired me to keep improving and exploring my creativity.

What are some of your own creative practices or current projects?

Lately, I’ve been taking my time with art and exploring new techniques. I’m learning a lot from Maryem, which has helped me grow. Im really interested in color blending and cutting out shapes, making experiments like diy lava lamps, diy bookmarks, and using pastels for drawings, and more!!!

Is there anything else you’d like to share?

I just wanted to say thank you to everyone for making this such a great experience. I’m really grateful to be part of such a friendly and supportive community here at Arts Corps.

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Student Spotlight: DJ echo emerald

Headshot of a white teen whit blond hair and headphones, with text "DJ Emerald Echo" beneath, and graphic of sound waves
Photo by Carlos Cruz

KEXP’s Youth Radio Program allows youth to work with KEXP DJs, to gain knowledge and training in music curation, board operation, physical and digital asset management, and basic broadcast DJing skills. The youth also become one of the rotating hosts for 90. Teen, a show programmed and produced by teens which airs on Saturdays, 6:00-7:00am.

One of our interagency students, DJ emerald echo, is part of the program and just hosted his first show on Saturday, Nov. 23! He shared his set list with us below.

Listen to his show through KEXP’s archive, by going to Nov. 23 and then Youth DJ.

I grew up in Seattle on many of the songs from my sets. I fell in love with 80s 90s rock on my Walkman and expanded from there. I have been exposed to all different types of music since before I could talk and I love the impact it has on the community. My favorite genre currently is house and 90s hip hop/ rap but you can never forget the classics. I’m looking forward to the opportunity to share my favorites with listeners like you and I hope you like my show 🙂 

NOV. 23 SET LIST

Modjo – Lady (Hear Me Tonight) 
MODJO

Holly – True 2 Me 
TRUE 2 ME

Stardust – Music Sounds Better With You 
MUSIC SOUNDS BETTER WITH YOU

MC Conrad, Seba – Words 2B Heard Meets Planetary Funk Alert
VOCALIST 01

Joey Bada$$ – Righteous Minds 
1999

Cypress Hill – Insane in the Brain
BLACK SUNDAY

Skee-lo – I Wish
I WISH 

The Pharcyde – Passin’ Me By 
BIZARRE RIDE

Ezra Collective, Yazmin Lacey – God Gave Me Feet For Dancing
DANCE, NO ONE’S WATCHING

Kelly Finnigan – Be Your Own Shelter
BE YOUR OWN SHELTER

INXS – Never Tear Us Apart
KICK

Walter the Producer – Now We’re Getting There
PLEASE HELP ME I’M SCARED

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Faculty Spotlight: Yaz Williams

A selfie of Yaz, a black person in their 20s on a sidewalk, wearing white sunglasses and their shaped in 5 points

Yaz joined Arts Corps last winter as a Classroom Assistant and this year they are stepping up as a Teaching Artist. Recently, they were kind enough to share some of their thoughts, experiences, and practices of being a teaching artist.

“Being a teaching artist to me is being able to have influence and be influenced by the youth without being necessarily in a traditional educational setting”.

Yaz had always wanted to be a professional creative but they never expected to be an educator. To them, traditional educational settings place teachers in a loop, bound by a list of requisites they need to teach in a set amount of time. In their mind, this seemed taxing and problematic, because it often leads to difficult conversation being dismissed in the classroom due to a lack of time.

However, Yaz realized there are alternative routes to be an educator, giving them the opportunity to be someone who can have these difficult conversations, “We all come from different backgrounds. I’m not going to shy away from the experience of your background in comparison to mine. We come from different backgrounds, and sometimes we have stigmas against people with certain backgrounds. We’re gonna talk about that.”

Yaz’s practice centers the power of voice, the power of choice, and teaching responsibility through action. When they set rules, they explain the reasons behind the rule by discussing how each action is a choice and how each choice has consequences for ourselves and others. “I’m not gonna be like, oh, you did this wrong. I’m gonna say we don’t do these things because of this. We should not do that because these are the consequences of that action.”

This also leads to teaching youth how to advocate for themselves and respect others’ boundaries, “I want [them] to be learning how to ask for help. I want [them] to learn to say ‘I’m not okay with that, I’m not comfortable with that, you made me feel this way’”.

Yaz uses art as a way for students to practice their power. When Yaz presents an activity they say, “I’m gonna show you how I do it. I’m gonna give you the tools for that. But then it’s up to you how you wanna achieve that goal. And you might not even want to achieve the same physical goal that I would.”

The most challenging thing about using art as a medium is that a lot of people, regardless of age, view art as a skill or as a privilege.

“Art is a right”, Yaz says, “Everybody has the right to create…[But] a lot of times kids will not pick up a paintbrush, pick up an activity because of that inherent, ‘Oh, I’m not gonna be good at it’. I’m not asking to be good. I’m asking you to try.”

So the focus of their art lessons is not just about improving certain skills, but also about pushing through the fear of failure, the fear of success, the “taking yourself too seriously”.

“In my space I want you to participate, and participation is success. Working through your frustrations is success. I like anything you give me. But I’m gonna defy some things because I want you to see your own progress.”

Challenging what art or success might look like allows Yaz to approach learning as a process rather than a product, recognizing students as individuals with their own needs and skills. For example, Yaz might say, “I wanted you to try tracing it, because this is teaching you how to hold a pencil. I’m looking at how you’re holding your pencil, so I can see if I can correct the way that you do it. Even still, if you hold your paintbrush up here, that doesn’t mean you’re better than someone that holds your paintbrush down here. It’s that you have different versions of control, of how you use your paintbrush.”

For this upcoming year, Yaz wants to lean into the sense of limitlessness that art as a whole has to offer and so for their for first curriculum as a teaching artist they choose the topic of world-building.

“I’m really, really excited to see what comes out of this entire course because I might have painters, I might have story writers, I might have people that build a little tribe of dolls because they have that skill set. I’m just excited to see a new generation of artists that have the freedom of being whoever they want to be, because they were taught the techniques of something, the definitions of something, rather than how you should create with it.”

Something else they’re excited about being a new Arts Corps Teaching Artist?

“At the excuse being a sap, I’ve literally waited my entire life to be this person. It was never a dream that I thought was accomplishable. So like, I’m giddy just imagining being in a space as this version of myself and being ready to be with kids. And I’m just really, really excited to see how my students receive me, and my excitement. I’m excited for it all”. 

Yaz Williams is a multi-disciplinary artist from Raleigh, North Carolina who is Black, AFAB, and queer and as such, their work is centered in Black and Afro-centric standpoints. Some of their practices are graphic novels, storytelling, prints, and stickers. Yaz moved to Seattle in 2022 as a Montessori school teacher and has since worked with South End Stories and LAUNCH. They got a BA in Child Adolescent Psychology from the HBCU, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in order to learn what techniques were historically created as marginalization tools, how to move away from them, and how to better serve BIPOC students. As an artist and a person, they are interested in sustainability, third spaces such as libraries and tool workshops, learning different communication styles, and cultural education. They want to increase their own cultural knowledge and that of others in order to help build a better sense of community. They enjoy visiting new places and sitting in parks.

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