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Tyler Adres

Tyler Adres Tyler Adres is a first-generation student attending the Fairhaven Interdisciplinary College at Western Washington University. While in his third year, Tyler has curated a specialized major around his passion for working with children: Nonprofit Administration: Education and The Arts. He hopes to work in the Philippines with this degree, making art education more accessible to children in these communities. Tyler was born and raised in Sitka and started playing the alto saxophone when he was in the 5th grade. Inspired by his cousin Kristine Banh, he signed up for the Sitka Fine Arts Camp in the 8th grade and continued to enroll until he graduated high school. While being a student at the camp, he also contributed as an elementary camp counselor and a music assistant for the middle school camp. Tyler’s role at camp has evolved over the years; he will be teaching Saxophone Technique, and will work as the Day Student Counselor this summer. Tyler has gotten to play with the Jazz on the Waterfront band for the past two years, and is currently Lead Alto in Western Washington University’s jazz band. Outside of music, Tyler works for an elementary school during the school year, enjoys photography, and plays basketball with his friends.

Jinghong Chen

Jinghong Chen is a cut paper artist currently based in Queens, New York. Born and raised in Fuzhou, China, her works are influenced by Chinese folk traditions. She often uses layers of paper or paper-like materials to play with light and shadow and create a sense of space. She graduated from Rhode Island School of Design with a BFA in illustration. Her works have been exhibited in Hawaii, Louisiana, New York, and Rhode Island. She is a 2021 Contemporary Art Department Fellow of RISD Museum and a 2023 resident at Peter Bullough Foundation.

For more information visit Jinghong's website here.


Jinghong will be teaching Papercutting, Book Making, and Painting at Middle School Camp and Papercutting, Book Making, and Drawing at High School Camp.​

Mike Tuckner

Mike Tuckner is an Army Veteran, entrepreneur, podcast host and professional photographer. He specializes in sports, music and street photography. He estimates that he has taken over 2.5 million photos over his 13 years as a professional photographer. He has photographed many musical acts including Chris Stapleton, Jelly Roll, Tim McGraw, Jason Aldean, Sheryl Crow, The Goo Goo Dolls, Counting Crows and Imagine Dragons. One of his favorite things to do as a photographer is to “capture youth”. He believes in the philosophy that every photo taken appreciates in value over time and that if you don’t think photos are important, just wait until they are all you have left.

​Mike will be teaching Digital Photography at High School Camp.

Niki Saludez

Niki Saludez (he/they) from the DMV to NYC, is a dancer, educator, and choreographer with over a decade of experience in his craft. Niki's artistic style is a culmination of years training in hip hop dance, street styles, contemporary dance, and music. His passions for people, movement, and the arts have taken him along the east coast and across the country in a journey to build community and uplift others, both in their craft and in life. Niki has been a part of works by artists including Don Diablo, Katy Perry, and made his Broadway debut in Hell's Kitchen after performing in the show's opening run at The Public Theater. Niki has also trained and featured in works with the companies tedted Performance Group, directed by Teddy Tedholm, and Soul Project Dance Company, directed by Candace Brown. Niki has taught and worked with a diverse group of students of all ages and experience. He has been a faculty member at Broadway Dance Center, Gibney Dance's outreach program Hands are for Holding, and Sitka Fine Arts Camp, sharing spaces where dancers feel safe to explore and challenge limiting mindsets, and to expand on their skills and unique voices as artists.

Niki will be teaching Hip Hop and Street Dance at Middle and High School Camp.

Cathryn Klusmeier

Cathryn Klusmeier is a writer living and working in Sitka, Alaska. She holds an MFA in creative writing from the University of Iowa, where she was an Iowa Arts Fellow. She also holds a master’s degree in medical anthropology from the University of Oxford, where her work focused on Alzheimer’s and other non-communicable diseases. Cathryn is the recipient of a 2021 Pushcart Prize, the winner of the 2018 MIT Media Lab’s Resisting Reduction Essay Competition, the winner of the 2018 Crazyhorse Creative Nonfiction Prize, and author in the book Against Reduction: Designing a Human Future with Machines. She has twice been a notable essay in The Best American Essays series and has received fellowships and recognition from the University of Oxford, the Banff Mountain Film Festival, the Sitka Fellows Artist Residency, Agni Literary Journal, the Missouri Review’s Jeffrey E. Smith Editor’s Prize, Narrative Magazine’s “30 Below 30”contest, Hunger Mountain’s Creative Nonfiction Prize, and the Southampton Review’s Frank McCourt Memoir Prize. In her spare time Cathryn loves hiking, running, fishing, drawing, and living in Southeast Alaska. 

For more information visit Cathryn's website here.

Cathryn will be teaching Writing Poetry, Creative Nonfiction, and Foundations of Fiction Writing at Middle School Camp.

Kaasteen Jill Meserve

Kaasteen Jill Meserve is a Lingít artist and language instructor. Kaasteen grew up in Hoonah, and graduated from UAS where she earned her BLA in Alaska Native Languages and Studies. As an artist, she specializes in beadwork, and most recently, Ravenstail weaving. Kaasteen has won the Best in Beadwork during Sealaska Heritage Instituteʼs biennial Celebrationʼs Juried Art Show. She has also sold pieces to individuals such as Sterlin Harjo, creator of Reservation Dogs on FX, Bobby Wilson, writer of shows such as Reservations Dogs and Rutherford Falls, and Taboo of the Black Eyed Peas. She has had pieces featured in the hit show Reservation Dogs on FX.

Her work can mainly be found on her Instagram page, @jill.kaasteen, or on her website here.

Kaasteen will be teaching Beading and Northwest Coast Woolen Weaving at High School Camp.

Jennifer Drake

Inspired by the power of music to connect people, ideas and communities, Jennifer Drake is a conductor, violist, teacher, clinician, and camp director. One of the most enthusiastic musicians you will ever meet, Jennifer is known for her versatility, humor, and energy. Jennifer is the Music Director of the Serenata Orchestra and the Boise Philharmonic Youth Orchestras She has been a guest conductor for the Idaho State Civic Symphony and Opera Idaho. Jennifer is the principal violist for the Boise Baroque Orchestra, as well as a section violist for the Boise Philharmonic. Jennifer has enjoyed an international chamber music career, performing at the 33rd International Viola Congress in Reykjavik, Iceland and the International Bass Clarinet Convention in Rotterdam, Holland. She has performed concerts in Iceland, Holland, Denmark, Romania, Spain, Italy, Germany, Austria and Canada. Jennifer is the founder of Idaho Viola Camp. She is also the co-artistic director for the Idaho Orchestra Institute. Both camps provide students with unique outdoor experiences, in addition to high quality musical engagement. Jennifer is a highly sought after teacher and clinician. As a clinician, she is known for her infectious energy and ability to engage with ensembles of all levels. Recent All State orchestras conducted include Texas, Alabama, Nevada, Indiana, South Carolina, New Mexico, and Minnesota. She has also done MEA clinics in Minnesota, Oregon, Texas, Montana, Colorado and  Idaho. She has also been a featured clinician for Music for All and The Midwest Clinic. She has also been the cover girl for HerLife magazine. When she is not living the obviously glamorous lifestyle that being a conductor and cover girl must afford, she is cruising around in her 1985 Volkswagen camper van, calling the vet for her not-exactly-Corgi dogs Fergus and Cameron, thinking of how to avoid grocery shopping, and planning trips with her husband, Chad Marvin. Jen and Chad climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in January 2016. Jen is a very mediocre CrossFitter, cyclist, and hiker, and will gladly talk your ear off about any of these endeavors.

For more information visit Jennifer's website here.

Jennifer will be teaching String Technique, Orchestra, and Chamber Music at High School Camp.

Eliana Athayde

Eliana Athayde is a bassist, singer, and composer living in Los Angeles. She has the pleasure of performing and recording with a wide range of artists including Madison Cunningham, Jon Batiste, Tim Heidecker, the Blasting Company, Weyes Blood, and Pomplamoose, as well as her own original music project, Jacaranda. Eliana is currently touring nationally and internationally with Waxahatchee and Tim Heidecker & the Very Good Band. ​

Claire Shea Duncan

Claire Shea Duncan (she/her/elle) is an interdisciplinary costume designer and researcher from Granville, Ohio. She aims to collaborate with a guiding framework of cultural humility and empathy. She has a strong interest in the intersection of art, linguistics, and education and she believes the convergence of these concepts is storytelling. Claire has been based in France as an educator for the past two years and is incredibly excited for a third summer at SFAC.

For more information visit Claire's website here.

Claire will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Costume Design, Upcycled Fashion, and Stitch Lab at Middle and High School Camp.
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Nat Dickey

Nat Dickey serves on the Concordia College faculty as chair of the music department and professor of music, teaching low brass and conducting the Cobber Athletic Band. During the summer, he serves as jazz trombone instructor at the International Music Camp. He is an SE Shires Trombone Artist. Dickey is currently principal trombonist of the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony, trombonist of the Post-Traumatic Funk Syndrome, and trombonist and leader of The Skipjacks jazz quartet. He has performed with the IRIS Orchestra, Minnesota Opera, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Vermont Symphony, and Boston Ballet. An active chamber musician, Dickey was a founding member of the Orion Trombone Quartet (winner of the Coleman Competition) and the Brass Mosaic, with which he performed at Carnegie Hall. Dickey performs frequent solo recitals and has performed as a soloist with the U.S. Army Orchestra, the Fargo-Moorhead Symphony, and numerous collegiate and public school ensembles. He appears on recordings with the IRIS Orchestra, the Post-Traumatic Funk Syndrome, the Paramount Brass, and Boston Symphony Orchestra principal trombonist Ron Barron. Dickey's first solo CD, "Collaborations," was released in 2014 and includes original compositions by Dickey himself, as well as by colleagues and former students. His second solo CD, "Reflections," was funded by a McKnight Fellowship and was released in May 2018. Both albums can be heard on Spotify and YouTube. As a conductor, Dickey has commissioned and premiered works from numerous renowned composers, including Benjamin Taylor, David Avshalomov, Andrew Boysen, Jr., Stephen Paulus, Elliott Schwartz, Mark Camphouse, Carol Barnett, Mary Ellen Childs, and Allen Feinstein. With the Symphonic Band, he directed the annual Composers Concert series, featuring contemporary music, including the work of student composers. Dickey previously served as assistant director of bands at Harvard University. He is a frequent band clinician and adjudicator. Dickey holds degrees from Oberlin College and Conservatory (B.A. mathematics, B.M. music performance), Rice University (M.M. music performance), and the University of Minnesota (D.M.A. music).

Nat will be teaching Brass Technique, Symphonic Band, and Jazz Band at Middle School Camp.

Medar de la Cruz

Medar de la Cruz is a Dominican-American cartoonist and illustrator based in Brooklyn, New York. A graduate of ArtCenter College of Design, he has contributed to The New York Times and The New Yorker. In 2024, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Illustrated Reporting for “The Diary of a Rikers Island Library Worker,” a striking black-and-white comic capturing his experiences delivering books to incarcerated people. Currently Medar volunteers with the Brooklyn Public Library’s jail-and-prison services and teaches zine-making and visual storytelling across NYC.
​

For more information visit Medar's website here.

Medar will be teaching Landscape Painting and Pen & Ink at High School Camp.

Charlie Havenick

Charlie Havenick is a musician, writer, and composer from Los Angeles. She plays drums and guitar for several indie rock outfits and does regular session and touring work. Charlie grew up in the LA DIY music scene and went to UCLA for Comparative Literature where she wrote essays centered around musicology and the contemporary music industry. She has scored and played guitar on several feature films and has been on several North American tours. Charlie has a home-studio where she produces and engineers music for her own band and others. She was previously a percussion Teaching Artist for the Los Angeles Philharmonic's YOLA, taught rock camp and songwriting at School of Rock, and teaches at Bloom School of Music in LA. Charlie is a big believer in holistic and accessible music education and loves playing indie rock, jazz, and classical, and anything in between. 

Charlie will be teaching at Elementary Camp and Rock Band and Songwriting at Middle School Camp.

Sarah Diamond

Sarah Diamond is an audio producer for The New York Times, based in New York. She has worked in journalism for nearly a decade at NPR, PBS and as a freelancer for HBO and Showtime productions. Her writing has also appeared in The Washington Post. Before joining The Times in 2021, she worked as an associate producer for National Geographic Studios in Washington. A film she worked on there, “Going Viral: Beyond the Hot Zone,” won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Science and Technology Documentary in 2020. She has a bachelor’s in business with a minor in international relations from American University and a master’s in journalism from Columbia Journalism School.

She was born in New Delhi and raised in a small town north of San Francisco called Sebastopol. She now splits her time between Brooklyn, NY and Princeton, NJ.

Website: https://www.nytimes.com/by/sarah-diamond

Sarah will be teaching Narrative Nonfiction, The Art of Storytelling, and Reporting 101 at High School Camp.

Kyle Athayde

Kyle Athayde is a San Francisco Bay Area-based composer, arranger, performer, teacher, and bandleader. A native of Orinda, California, Kyle primarily plays vibraphone, piano, trumpet, and drums, as well as bongo, congas, timbales, string bass, bass clarinet, sousaphone, and vocal percussion.  He is the leader, conductor, and principal writer for the San Francisco/New York-based big band, Kyle Athayde Dance Party, a group acclaimed for its versatility in the wide scope of styles it performs.  He is also a keyboard, trumpet, and percussion player for the Bay Area collective Jazz Mafia, and is the pianist for The New York Trumpet Ensemble. Influenced by the music of J. S. Bach, Duke Ellington, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, Eric Dolphy, Dmitri Shostakovich, Louis Armstrong, Igor Stravinsky, Charlie Parker, Olivier Messiaen, Art Tatum, and many others, Athayde composes and arranges music in a variety of genres, with an emphasis on jazz, classical, salsa, and electronic. While an undergraduate student at Juilliard, Kyle was heavily immersed in an interdisciplinary arts environment which included dance, drama, and music, which provided him the opportunity to further develop and refine his programmatic approach to composition. Athayde’s recent commissioned compositions and premieres include a double concerto for the New York Sinfonietta, a tone poem for Bobby Sanabria and The Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra (the title track of their most recent album, ¡QUE VIVA HARLEM!), two pieces for choir and band for The University of Scranton’s performing ensembles, and music for the ending credits of the film Diller, Scofidio + Renfro: Reimagining Lincoln Center and the High Line. He also arranged the music for the halftime show for the University of California at Berkeley Marching Band in their final performance of the 2013 season. Kyle is currently working on commissions for the Canadian Brass, The New York Trumpet Ensemble, Manhattan School of Music Trumpet Ensemble, and the San Francisco Conservatory Brass Choir. Committed to interdisciplinary educational outreach in the arts, Kyle has offered classes, clinics, lessons and masterclasses at schools, workshops, and camps in California, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Alaska.  A regular visiting faculty member of the Sitka Fine Arts Camp, he recently developed and taught a class on video game music history and composition there, and directed the jazz band and a vocal hip hop class.  He is the Director of Curriculum at the Lafayette Summer Music Workshop, and regularly offers clinics and masterclasses to middle school and high school bands throughout Northern California. Kyle has a wide range of interests, and loves to teach and learn about a variety of subjects, which brings a wide stylistic variety to his music, as his diverse interests inspire his work. A passionate fan of American football, the ruthless power and strategy of the sport influence his exciting writing style. An avid gamer, the music of these video games has inspired some of his most unusual and engaging compositions.
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For more information visit Kyle's website here. 

Kyle will be teaching Music Composition, Jazz Combos, and Electronic Video Game Music at Middle School Camp.

Zeke Blackwell

Zeke Blackwell has been involved in over 100 productions as a director, performer, writer, designer, and technician, and has had the joy of making theater in Sitka, Fort Worth, New Haven, New York, and Costa Rica, where he directed the world premiere of the Spanish-language version of Once On This Island! With almost two decades of improv comedy experience, he’s performed/taught improv around the country, and most recently at the Boston Comedy Arts Festival and the Wasatch Improv Festival in Salt Lake City. His original play, Still Life, was produced in the 2013 New York International Fringe Festival. He graduated from Yale University with a B.A. in Cognitive Science. He served two years on the board of directors for Far Corners Community Musical theater, a non-profit dedicated to providing arts opportunities for underserved youth in isolated regions of the world. Once, he beat-boxed for Lin-Manuel Miranda. This is his 10th season year-round at SFAC as the Young Performers Theater Director.​

Zeke will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Clown Theater, Acting, and Shakespeare at Middle School Camp and Directing for the Stage, Shakespeare, and Musical Theater at High School Camp.

Joe Burck

Joe Burck studied History Education for grades 5-12 with a minor in Theater Arts at Augustana College. Originally from Aurora, Illinois, Joe started learning about technical theater as a middle school camper at the Sitka Fine Arts Camp and is eager to return to Odess Theater and the Sitka Performing Arts Center. In his time at Augustana, Joe has worked on productions such as Macbeth (Assistant Sound Designer), Threepenny Opera (Sound Board Operator), Cabaret (Sound Designer), most recently Nine (Sound Designer), and worked as a Scene Shop Supervisor in charge of managing set production. In the summers of 2022-25, Joe worked on the technical theater team at the Sitka Fine Arts Camp. Joe collaborated on the 2022 SFAC production of Mamma Mia as the Pit Sound Board Operator and on the 2023 SFAC production of Cinderella as the Technical Director.

​Joe will be teaching Live Event Production at Middle and High School Camp. 

Olivia Cerullo

Olivia Cerullo is a musician, music director and educator. She started at Inspire in 2020 as the vocal music, musical theater and choir teacher. Olivia was raised in Chico and attended Chico State where she received a bachelors in music with a focus on vocal performance. As a musician Olivia has worked for many local theater companies including Theater ETC, Blue Room, Slow Theater and is currently the resident music director for California Regional Theater. From 2012-2018 Olivia was based in the Bay Area where she worked as a freelance music director for professional theater companies as well as a pianist for a collection of orchestras. When Olivia is not teaching she enjoys hiking, traveling, being outdoors and of course making music with friends and family.

Olivia will be teaching Piano, Broadway Song Workshop, and Musical Theater at Middle School Camp.

​Cleo DeOrio

​Cleo DeOrio (she/her) is a Physical Theatre and Dance artist-teacher from Cleveland, Ohio. Cleo received a BA at Baldwin Wallace University, where she focused her studies in Directing and Choreography and an MFA from Dell’Arte International School of Physical Theatre, where she developed works such as Citizens of Nowhere and Visions of a Crying Girl. Cleo specializes in storytelling through movement, physical character development, emotional embodiment, and devising. She is on faculty at Dell’Arte teaching Dance and Movement classes.

Cleo will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Acrobatics & Partnering, Mask Theater, and Slapstick Comedy at Middle and High School Camp.

Marissa Childers

Marissa Childers is a ceramic artist residing in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. She was born in Florence, Alabama where she earned her BFA from the University of North Alabama. Upon graduating, she worked as a ceramic intern at Anderson Ranch Arts Center and soon after received her MFA from the University of Oklahoma. Her work explores moments of connection and intimacy while celebrating femininity and craft found within domestic spaces. She is often inspired by things that society deems as a ‘craft’ or ‘feminine’ such as quilting, sewing, and decoration. Marissa has exhibited her work at numerous galleries and has received various grants and awards to support her research, including support from the Oklahoma Visual Arts Coalition and the National Council for Education in the Ceramic Arts. She was chosen as one of Ceramics Monthly’s Emerging Artists of 2022, was an Emerging Artist for NCECA in 2023, and was a long-term Artist in Residence at Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts in 2023/2024. She is an educator and studio technician at the University of Oklahoma and enjoys traveling around the US to teach ceramics. 

For more information visit Marissa's website here. 

​Marissa will be teaching Ceramic Handbuilding and Wheel Thrown Pottery at Middle and High School Camp.

Gaz Ehrreich

Gaz Ehrreich is a multidisciplinary artist and illustrator from California, currently residing in New England.  Gaz graduated from Rhode Island School of Design where he carved out a path to study miniature modeling within the Illustration Department, alongside traditional drawing and painting. Professionally, Gaz is an accomplished architectural renderer, illustrator, muralist, and craftsman with a love for teaching and a lot of knowledge to give.  He specializes in handmade art, fine craftsmanship, drafting, perspective, and lighting. He is also passionate about the connections between art and music, creative writing, humanity, AI, and apocalyptic fiction.  He is currently working on a graphic novel and a series of scientific posters with the goal of better understanding the natural world. This summer he will be teaching courses in drawing perspective, stop motion animation, and miniature modeling.

For more information visit Gaz's website here. 

Gaz will be teaching Making Miniatures, Drawing Perspective, and Painting at Middle School Camp.

Brandon Fillette

Brandon Fillette (he/him) is thrilled to be returning to Sitka Fine Arts Camp. He is a New York City–based music director, writer, pianist, and educator with over a decade of experience in professional, regional, and youth theater across the U.S. and internationally. His work spans Off-Broadway, touring productions, concerts, and educational settings, with credits at Ars Nova, 54 Below, and Playwrights Horizons. In 2025, he completed a residency at Drama Club Camp, developing his original show J.O.Y. He is a 2022 Jonathan Larson Grant Finalist and a finalist for Circle in the Square Theatre School’s 2026 Emerging Writers Residency. Music direction and performance credits include multiple productions of Million Dollar Quartet, as well as Into the Woods, Gypsy, The Addams Family, Spring Awakening, Assassins, SpongeBob SquarePants the Musical, and Beauty and the Beast Jr. His work also includes touring productions, cruise ship entertainment, and international projects. A passionate educator, Brandon has trained and mentored thousands of students in voice, acting, and musical theater through his private studio and organizations such as TADA! Youth Theater, Imagine Works, and the Dwight School. This past year, he served as a music teacher at a New York charter school, directing the K–12 choir and guitar ensemble. He is known for creating high-energy, supportive learning environments that balance professional-level training with joy, curiosity, and collaboration. Brandon holds an MA in Creative Media & Technology from BerkleeNYC and a BFA in Musical Theatre from East Carolina University. He is a certified Voice Body Connection practitioner.

Brandon will be teaching Acting, Broadway Song Workshop, and Musical Theater at High School Camp and will be the Music Director at Musical Theater Camp.

Teaghan Gokey

Ever since perusing a copy of D’Aulaires’ Book of Greek Myths, Teaghan Gokey has been profoundly inspired by the countless ancient tales of sword and sorcery throughout humanity’s shared history, and has since strived to craft weird and wild myths from his own collection of worldly interests. An avid researcher and insatiable bookworm, Teaghan has been eternally mesmerized by the wonders of nature, and usually finds himself drawing from the fields of paleontology, geology, and marine biology as a limitless well of inspiration billions of years in the making. Through modern methods of digital painting, Teaghan seeks to revive the mysterious and grand visions of the Old World with a distinct twist of eerie surrealism. Since graduating with honors from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2022, Teaghan has picked up freelance work designing all manner of creatures and critters for tabletop RPG games such as Battlelords of the 23rd Century and, of course, Dungeons & Dragons.

For more information visit Teaghan's website here. 

Teaghan will be teaching Creature Art, Illustrating Magical Worlds, and Character Design at Middle School Camp.

Alexis Joy Hagestad

Alexis Joy Hagestad (she/they) was born and raised in Missoula, Montana. As a child, she believed she lived on half of the Earth because of the vastness of the sky. Her true passion lies in exploring the prairies and snowy mountain peaks of her childhood home. In her interdisciplinary practice, she utilizes photography, video, sculpture, and installation to examine the environment that surrounded her during her upbringing. Alexis holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography from the Savannah College of Art and Design (SCAD) and is currently pursuing a Master of Fine Arts in Photography, Video, and Imaging (PVI) at the University of Arizona in Tucson.

For more information visit Alexis's website here. 

Alexis will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Darkroom Photography at Middle and High School Camp.

Will Healy

Will Healy (he/him) is a composer, pianist, and improviser based in New York City whose music bridges classical, jazz, and hip-hop traditions. A 2023 recipient of the Leonard Bernstein Prize from the ASCAP Foundation, Will has performed at venues including Carnegie Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center, and National Sawdust, and his compositions have been featured by ensembles like the Minnesota Orchestra, Contemporaneous, and Mivos Quartet. He is the founder and artistic director of ShoutHouse, a genre-defying collective described by US Poet Laureate Billy Collins as “sweetly and smartly off the rails.” Will’s recent work includes Passages, a 30-minute composition for wind ensemble and multi-genre soloists premiered at the CBDNA Conference, which won the 2024 Beeler Prize. He has arranged for the New York Philharmonic, Donda, and the Albany Symphony, and his music has been performed internationally. He plays with Pathos Trio and Upstream, a violin-piano duo with George Meyer, and is the composer-in-residence with Midsummer’s Music in Wisconsin. Will is a Yamaha Artist, a PhD candidate in Composition at Princeton University, and holds an MM from The Juilliard School.
For more information visit Will's website here. 

Will will be teaching Piano, Music Composition, and playing piano for Opera Scenes & Songs at High School Camp.

Brendan Jones

Raised in Philadelphia, Brendan Jones attended Columbia and Oxford Universities, and teaches creative writing at University of Alaska, Irkutsk Technical University in Russia, and Stanford University, where he was a 2013-15 Wallace Stegner Fellow. He has published work in The New York Times, The Guardian, Washington Post, GQ, Smithsonian, Patagonia, Ploughshares, Fine Woodworking, National Fisherman, Adventure Journal, Narratively, The Seattle Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Narrative Magazine, and recorded commentaries for NPR. His novel, The Alaskan Laundry, published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, won the 2017 Alaskana prize, was recognized by Oprah, and was nominated for the Center of Fiction debut prize. He recently returned from Siberia, where he spent a year with his family as a Fulbright Scholar. His novel, Whispering Alaska, published with Penguin/Random House in October 2021, received a starred review from Booklist, and won the 2022 Green Earth Book Award for Young Adult Eco-lit. He lives in Sitka, with his wife and three daughters, one dog, and six chickens.

For more information visit Brendan's website here. 

Brendan will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Spoken Word Poetry and Science Fiction & Fantasy at High School Camp.

Ilse Kapteyn

Ilse Kapteyn has been a professional dancer for over ten years and loves it more and more each year. She grew up in Deerfield, Massachusetts and started taking dance classes as a toddler, training more seriously as the years progressed. For her senior year of high school, Ilse traveled to Moscow to study at the Bolshoi Ballet Academy and then joined the New Jersey Ballet Company the following year. She has performed many featured and principal roles in the classical repertoire, including Sleeping Beauty, The Nutcracker, Don Quixote, and Giselle. She has also performed works by George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Justin Peck, Christopher Wheeldon, Harrison Ball, Lauren Lovette, Roderick George, and Gustavo Ramirez Sansano. She is a certified instructor of BodyCode System, an innovative training method that helps improve body awareness and function, and has traveled to Italy to train with the founder. As she continues her own journey as a dancer and artist, Ilse finds it incredibly rewarding to share what she has learned so far with people of all ages.​

Ilse will be teaching Ballet, Modern Dance, and Body Conditioning at Middle and High School Camp.

Ed Littlefield

Ed Littlefield is a freelance percussionist, educator and composer based out of Seattle, WA. He is Lingít originally from Sitka, Alaska and has released three albums featuring traditional native melodies with the Native Jazz Quartet called Walking Between Worlds, NJQ: Stories and most recently NJQ: Southeast: Northwest. Ed is also involved in composition and sound design for national theaters such as La Jolla Playhouse, Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and Arena Stage.

For more information visit Ed's website here. 

Ed will be teaching Jazz Band, Drums Around the World, and Sonic Boom at Middle School Camp and Jazz Band, Jazz Combos, and Sonic Boom at High School Camp.

Stephen Meyer

Stephen Meyer is currently the Director of Bands and Associate Professor of Music at Northern Arizona University. He is also the music director for The Tempe Winds and on the conducting staff for the Phoenix Youth Symphony Orchestras. While at NAU, the Wind Symphony has been twice invited to perform at the College Band Directors National Association Regional Conference, and the Lumberjack Marching Band will perform at the 2025 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Meyer previously served on the faculties of the Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam and the University of South Carolina. During his tenure as Director of Bands at Clear Creek High School, the Clear Creek Wind Ensemble was a featured performer at The Midwest Clinic (2013), a three-time National Winner in the National Wind Band Honors project, and a two-time national finalist for The American Prize in Wind Ensemble Performance. Before Clear Creek, Meyer taught at Harrison High School in Cobb County, Georgia, where he assisted with performances at The Midwest Clinic (2007), the Georgia Music Educators Association, and the University of Georgia. With Meyer as co-director of the marching band, the ensemble was a consistent Bands of America Regional and Super Regional Finalist, a BOA Grand National Finalist in 2007, and invited to perform at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade in 2009. Meyer graduated magna cum laude from the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music with a bachelor’s degree in music education. He earned a master’s degree in music education and a doctorate in wind band conducting from the University of Michigan. Meyer is the author of Rehearsing the High School Band, volumes 1 and 2, Rehearsing the Middle School Band, and Rehearsing the Marching Band.​

Stephen will be teaching Symphonic Band, The Wizarding World of Conducting, and Chamber Music at High School Camp.

Eric Parchen

Eric Parchen is a freelance percussionist who lives in Seattle, WA. He has played in various jazz bands, musical theaters, rock bands, and symphony orchestras. Additionally, he coaches percussionists at many middle and high schools in the Seattle area along with maintaining a private lessons studio. Eric has done extensive work with drumlines including teaching multiple ensembles, giving clinics, teaching at camps, and writing music for marching percussion groups.​

Eric will be teaching Percussion Technique at Middle School Camp and serving as SFAC's Percussion Technician for the summmer.

Cassidy Russell

Cassidy Russell (she/her) has been improvising since middle school (cool!). Cassidy is a member of the Second City National Touring Company, traveling the country performing and writing sketch and improv comedy (It’s very fun). When not traveling, she performs, teaches, and directs all over Chicago—at Second City, the Annoyance Theatre, the Revival Theater, Northwestern University, and the University of Chicago. She has acted in plays, movies, TV shows, and commercials, has been featured at theater festivals internationally, and has been interviewed about comedy in print publications and on NPR. Additionally, she has an MS in Library Sciences and an MFA in Printmaking from Savannah College of Art & Design and works as a children’s book reviewer while maintaining an active studio art practice. Her teaching philosophy focuses on bringing emotion and vulnerability to the stage, whether you’re doing drama or comedy. Cassidy won a lot of high school theater awards, so she knows what she’s talking about.

For more information visit Cassidy's website.

Cassidy will be teaching Improv at Middle School Camp and Improv, Advanced Improv, and Sketch Comedy at High School Camp.

Abel Ryan

Abel Ryan was born in Ketchikan, Alaska in 1978. He was raised in Metlakatla on the Annette Island Reserve in Southeast Alaska. Abel is half Tsimshian, a member of the Metlakatla Indian Community, and a member of the Laxgiboo Clan. In May of 2006, Abel graduated from Sheldon Jackson College with a B.A. in Liberal Arts and a minor in Art. In May of 2009, he graduated from University of Alaska Fairbanks with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Native Arts Studio and Printmaking. Abel studied traditional Tsimshian art under master carver Jack Hudson of Metlakatla. He has carved in Metlakatla, Sitka, Juneau, and Fairbanks for over 30 years. Working in the medium of wood and metals, Abel produces masks, bowls, spoons, pipes, ladles, plaques, combs, bracelets, rings, pendants, drums, and other hand-carved items.  He is also proficient in two-dimensional graphic design using Northwest Coast formline art. In June 2013, Abel was invited to an international carving competition in Beijing, China. Abel has taught classes at Sheldon Jackson College and the University of Alaska in Sitka, Juneau, and Fairbanks, Sitka Fine Arts Camp, and the Alaska Native Heritage Foundation in Anchorage, as well as done artist demonstrations at the Sheldon Jackson Museum in Sitka, Museum of the North in Fairbanks, Washington DC, and the Alaska State Museum in Juneau, AK. Abel’s work is sold in galleries in Juneau, Fairbanks, Ketchikan, and Sitka. He also has work in private collections.​

Abel will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Northwest Coast Carving at Middle School Camp.

Danny Ryan

Danny Ryan (he/him) began his creative career as a child, bringing life to G.I. Joes, making baseballs out of rags and duct tape, and playing soldier in the forest on summer camping trips. It was the fascination of taking a little bit of magic and imagination to create something from nothing that attracted him to the arts and specifically to dance. Danny began his professional ballet training at the age of fifteen in his hometown of Milwaukee, WI with Rafael Delgado. From that humble beginning, he was able to further his studies at the Joffrey Ballet School (NYC) with teacher and mentor John Magnus. Through that training he secured a ten year professional career with major companies Louisville Ballet, Kansas City Ballet and Texas Ballet Theater to name a few, as well as international performance credits. Since retiring from the stage Danny has cultivated a thriving career as a Dance Educator - serving students nationwide, Community Engagement Manager - creating curriculum and working with students in their classrooms to support their academic studies through movement at Title 1 Elementary Schools, and eventually as Associate Artistic Director of the Colorado Conservatory of Dance.  In 2018 Danny and his family relocated to Milwaukee where he stepped outside of his career in the arts and for 6 and a half years thrived as Operations and Specialty Assistant Store Manager for the Home Depot. It was with Home Depot that he honed his skills around business acumen, leading people through a values based lens, and serving his community. ​These diverse experiences bring Danny back to the Sitka Fine Arts Camp (SFAC) where he served as Dance Faculty for 5 consecutive summers beginning 2014, and co-founded Dance Alaska Project with long-time collaborator Adam W. McKinney. Danny works year-round for SFAC as Operations Coordinator.

Danny will be teaching dance at Elementary Camp.

Leslie Shows

Leslie Shows is a Los Angeles-based artist whose mixed media paintings explore materiality, abstraction, and representations of nature. She works with acrylic and oil paints, glass, metal, collage and assemblage, casting and relief. Leslie grew up in Juneau, Alaska and has taught in the visual arts for 14 years at the pre-college, undergraduate, and graduate levels. Her work has been exhibited at institutions like the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, the Berkeley Art Museum, and the Anchorage Museum. Her recent public commissions include a 35-ft glass artwork for the San Francisco Central Subway, and she is currently working on her 12th solo exhibition.

For more information visit Leslie's website here. 

Leslie will be teaching Painting, Abstract Painting, and Collage & Mixed Media at High School Camp.

​Susan Wingrove-Reed

Pianist Susan Wingrove-Reed enthusiastically embraces any and all opportunities to collaborate with singers and instrumentalists. She plays keyboard with the Anchorage Symphony, is the collaborative pianist with the Alaska Chamber Singers & the annual Alaska All State Choir, performs at the Sitka Summer Music Festival, and regularly works with the West, Dimond and Bartlett HS choirs plus countless solo and ensemble festivals/competitions. Susan has been part of the SFAC team since 2011. She has been the resident music educator (pre-concert lectures and program notes) for the Sitka Summer Music Festival and the Anchorage Symphony for over thirty-five years, sharing stories about composers, music and history. A graduate of Indiana University with Piano Performance and MAT degrees, she returned home to Alaska to work with Anchorage Opera and the Alaska Repertory theater. She is a retired choir/drama teacher (Bartlett) and received an Alaska Governor’s Award for her contributions in arts education. When Covid began, she joined the Alaska Black Caucus to further her commitment to anti-racism and concert programming that is inclusive of historically neglected voices and serves on the Justice Committee.  ​

Susan will be one of SFAC's collaborative pianists at Middle School, High School, and Musical Theater Camp. 

Christina Woo

Christina Woo is a filmmaker, writer, and story artist from Los Angeles. She is a recent alum of CalArts with a BFA in Character Animation. From parallel parking, problems at work, and online dating, she enjoys writing stories about those small nuances of life and exploring different art techniques in animation. Her films have gained recognition at SIFF, Santa Fe International, Fine Cut, TAAFI, Annapolis, etc.

​For more information visit Christina's website here.

Christina will be teaching Animation at Middle School Camp.

Elizabeth Jean Younce

Elizabeth Jean Younce (b. 1993 Newport, RI) is a visual artist working primarily in Printmaking and Illustration. Specifically, through the mediums of lithography and graphite, her work functions as a psychological investigation of the flora and fauna inhabiting our world. While primarily (and proudly) a printmaker, Elizabeth has produced her prints in conjunction with installation, sculpture, bookbinding, found object, drawing, and painting. In addition to her Fine Art studio practice, Elizabeth is also the owner of Mustard Beetle where she sells mainly screenprints, relief prints, and giclée prints, on paper and on fabric. Because of Mustard Beetle, Elizabeth is able to simultaneously function as a fine artist and a commercial illustrator. Elizabeth received her MFA in Printmaking from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 2018 and her BFA in Illustration and Printmaking from the Savannah College of Art & Design (SCAD) in 2015. Elizabeth has master-printing experience from Gemini G.E.L. and Tandem Press. Elizabeth currently resides in Los Angeles, CA, where she is pursuing her fine art as well as her small business.

​For more information visit Elizabeth's website here. 

Elizabeth will be teaching at Elementary Camp and teaching Drawing the Natural World, Printmaking, and Design & Printmaking at Middle and High School Camp.

Adam Grim

Adam Grim is an award-winning photographer from Savage, Minnesota. His love for photography began at the age of 6 and carried on through junior high and high school. In 2004, Adam parted ways with film photography and started his digital career.  During that time his focus was on landscape, wildlife and architecture.  His images netted him multiple awards including Minneapolis Star Tribune’s Travel Images of the Year four straight years. 15 years ago, Adam’s photography shifted to concerts and entertainment where he has photographed over 700 national acts and 2,000+ concerts.  Some of the artists he has photographed include Taylor Swift, Elton John, The Who, Aerosmith, Kid Rock, Imagine Dragons and Garth Brooks to name a few. In 2018, Adam was awarded the Paul Harris Fellow Award for his 10 years of photography work and contributions with Lakefront Music Fest.  In that same year, he was named Southern Minnesota Magazine’s Artist of the Year and was given Honorable Mention Photographer of the Year in 2018 and 2019.  His images have been featured in multiple publications such as Rolling Stone Magazine, People Magazine, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post and Minneapolis Star Tribune.

Adam will be teaching Digital Photography at Elementary Camp.

Meg Takata

Meg Takata is a Los Angeles-based art instructor, illustrator, and character designer. She is an Illustration faculty member at ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, CA, teaching illustrative painting and costume drawing. She has worked with animation studios like Warner Bros. and Bento Box, and also loves working with kids teaching foundational drawing and painting. With her sketches, designs, and illustrations, she loves to tell specific and humanistic stories. She also loves to go people-sketching at cafes, swimming in her free time, and listening to her highly specific music playlists.

For more information visit Meg's website here.

Meg will be teaching Figure Drawing, Drawing the Portrait, and Watercolor at Middle School Camp.

Jordan Phillips

Jordan Phillips is a theatrical/ film actor proudly hailing from West Virginia. She earned her BFA in Acting from West Virginia University and is a working actor based in Atlanta, GA. She loves teaching the ideas of vulnerability, taking risks, and the importance of going back to the basics of theatre – it’s all just playing pretend after all! Along with teaching at the camp, she fills the role of Director of Students for the middle and high school camps. 

Jordan will be teaching theater at Elementary Camp.



​
​2026 Faculty

Tyler Adres
Eliana Athayde
Kyle Athayde
Javier Barboza
Lizabeth Barnett
Zeke Blackwell
Joe Burck
Andrés Caballero
Olivia Cerullo
Jinghong Chen
Marissa Childers
Ling Chun
Medar de la Cruz
Cleo DeOrio
Sarah Diamond
Nat Dickey
Claire Shea Duncan
Jennifer Drake
Gaz Ehrreich
Brandon Fillette
Eric Fredrickson
Kai Gietzen
Teaghan Gokey
Katy Green
Adam Grim
Alexis Hagestad
Charlie Havenick
Will Healy
Brendan Jones
Kaasteen Jill Meserve
Ilse Kapteyn
Cathryn Klusmeier
Aurelia Lawson
Ed Littlefield
Aaron McDonald
Stephen Meyer
Karen Neal
Samantha O'Brien
Eric Parchen
Jordan Phillips
Erika Port
Noatak Post
Cassidy Russell
Abel Ryan
Danny Ryan
Niki Saludez
Leslie Shows
Meg Takata
Mike Tuckner
Susan Reed
Christina Woo
Tammy Yi
Elizabeth Jean Younce
Matt Zebley
Julie Zhu

Location

Campus Map Download

2026 Camp Dates

Elementary June 8-12
Middle June 14-27
High June 28-July 12
Musical Theater July 13-August 2

Main Office Hours

9:00am - 5:00pm
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110 College Drive
Suite 111
Sitka, AK 99835

Phone: 907-747-3085
​Hostel Bookings: 907-623-2229
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