Xander Marro

Xander Marro (born 1975) is an American artist, underground puppet maker, and arts non-profit director based in Providence, Rhode Island.

Xander Marro
Alma materBrown University
Known forperformance art, activism, film animation
Websitexandermarro.com

Work

She is a member of the Dirt Palace, a feminist art collective, where she makes movies, puppet shows, prints, and phone calls. She curated the long-running "Movies with Live Soundtracks" series and toured with "Bird Songs of the Bauharoque," a two-woman puppet operetta starring her alter-egos, Lady Longarms and Madame von Temper Tantrum, as well as the alter-ego of Becky Stark, who is Marro's other half in the band Lavender Diamond.[1] In her spare time she works as the Managing Director of Providence Not-for-Profit arts organization AS220. She graduated from Brown University in Art/Semiotics.[2][3]

Marro is described by the Providence Phoenix as a "puppet-maker and projectionist steeped in the underground."[4]

gollark: It also actually has working autoreconnect.
gollark: SPUDNET is the Super PotatOS Update/Debug NETwork.
gollark: The HV channels, I mean.
gollark: Do you really want to go there? *Really*?
gollark: Skynet has:- very simple publish/subscribe mechanism- actual protocol documentation- good performance- working client codeSPUDNET has:- vastly complicated node.js monolith which fails to scale- client code rewritten repeatedly because it's more complex and needs different environment things- documentation scattered across random Discord channels, some of which doesn't mention important features, plus similarly scattered code samples- 17249182649124 kilofeatures such as private channels, comm mode, the reporting system, HTTP-only mode- better acronym- potatOS

See also

Pippi Zornoza

References

  1. "Blood from a Turnip Late Night Puppet Cabaret". www.ridance.com. Retrieved 2016-02-08.
  2. Tannenbaum, Judith, and Maya Allison. (2006) Wunderground: Providence, 1995 to the Present. Providence, R.I.: Museum of Art, RISD. Print.
  3. "Art:21 Preview and Artist's Talk". Rhode Island State Council on the Arts. Retrieved 2016-02-08.
  4. "Rhode Island's Most Influential". The Providence Phoenix News. Retrieved 2016-02-08.
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