Biographies
So-Hyun Bae is a Korean-French graphic designer and typographer. As she spent her childhood moving around between Korea, France and the United States, learning new languages were for her a way to survive in different environments. Eventually, these linguistic adaptations lead her to develop a deeper interest for languages. Realizing that typography is at the intersection of her interests for graphic design and languages, she creates her typeface Syllaba as her master’s graduation project at the Haute école des Arts du Rhin in Strasbourg. Between 2018 and 2020, she conducted research on multilingual design at the ANRT (Atelier National de Recherche Typographique, Nancy, France), focusing on her own trilingualism. Today, she is co-founder of the German-French design studio ÉTÉ and teaches at her alma mater in Strasbourg.
Tim Brookes is the founder of the
Endangered Alphabets Project, an international initiative dedicated to preserving and revitalizing minority and Indigenous writing systems. As a writer and researcher, his work explores the cultural, ecological, and political dimensions of scripts, technology, and infrastructure, highlighting the vital link between language, identity, and community.
Carina Fernandes is a spoken word artist, singer-songwriter, host, and cultural organizer. She is a sparkling Renaissance woman whose creativity is a vehicle of revolution. With her mix of Soul, Funk and Her sound feels like the love child of Sade, Macy Gray with a touch of Prince. Intertwining heritage, social themes, vulnerability and soulful sounds - her music is perfect Thursday afternoon drinks or a Sunday with tea.
Hansje van Halem is a graphic designer, internationally recognized for her experimental typography and intricate digital patterns. Her work spans print, digital media, and architectural applications, exploring the boundaries between ornament, rhythm, and structure. With a strong focus on process and materiality, she creates visual systems that oscillate between strict frameworks and playful complexity. Van Halem’s distinctive designs have been commissioned by cultural institutions and public projects, and her practice has become a touchstone for contemporary explorations of type and pattern in design.
Anushah Hossain is Research Director of the
Script Encoding Initiative (SEI), a project that prepares proposals for historic and minority scripts to be added to the Unicode Standard. Her work as a historian of the internet focuses on the development of text-technologies, script encoding, and the politics of language digitization.
Franco Jonas (Chile, 1995), Nunzio Mazzaferro (Italy, 1995) and Ariq Syauqi (Indonesia, 1994) are postgraduate student at ANRT in Nancy. All three are participating in
The Missing Scripts, a research project conducted in partnership with
Designlabor Gutenberg (Hochschule Mainz) and the
Script Encoding Initiative (UC Berkeley).
Sarojini Lewis is an artist and researcher whose work interweaves film, photography and archival material from a decolonial perspective on memory, diaspora and oral history. Her current exhibition at West Den Haag,
Labyrinth Within (co-curated with Razia Barsatie), invites audiences into an immersive site-specific installation exploring themes of intergenerational silence, migration, and cultural identity.
Marianne Markelo is a Surinamese-Dutch artist, cultural historian, and Winti priestess. Through her artistic and spiritual practice, she brings attention to Afro-Surinamese heritage, oral traditions, and the living presence of Winti culture in contemporary society. She is widely recognized for her contributions to strengthening cultural awareness and dialogue on spirituality, identity, and community.
Marianne Mispelaëre is a French visual artist working with drawing, performance, and research. Her practice addresses the social and political significance of gestures, language, and silence, exploring how communication and non-communication shape structures of power and community. Through subtle, often minimal interventions, she investigates the ways in which collective memory and identity are inscribed in everyday acts. Her work has been presented in exhibitions and contexts across Europe, reflecting a commitment to art as a space for critical reflection and shared experience.
Nunzio Mazzaferro (Italy, 1995), Franco Jonas (Chile, 1995) and Ariq Syauqi (Indonesia, 1994) are postgraduate student at ANRT in Nancy. All three are participating in
The Missing Scripts, a research project conducted in partnership with
Designlabor Gutenberg (Hochschule Mainz) and the
Script Encoding Initiative (UC Berkeley).
Ariq Syauqi (Indonesia, 1994), Franco Jonas (Chile, 1995) and Nunzio Mazzaferro (Italy, 1995) are postgraduate student at ANRT in Nancy. All three are participating in
The Missing Scripts, a research project conducted in partnership with
Designlabor Gutenberg (Hochschule Mainz) and the
Script Encoding Initiative (UC Berkeley).
Louwrien Wijers (Aalten, 1941) is visual artist and writer. Since the 1960s she has been working as Fluxus artist at the intersection of art, philosophy, and society. Her symposium
Art meets Science and Spirituality in a changing Economy (Stedelijk Museum, 1990), featuring Robert Rauschenberg, David Bohm the Dalai Lama, John Cage, Ilya Prigogine, Raimon Panikkar among others, is considered a landmark in reflecting on the role of art in social transformation.