Performance art Piepzna-Samarasinha has been performing spoken word since 1998. As a spoken word artist, they have performed widely in the United States, Canada and Sri Lanka and have been featured at Bar 13,
Michelle Tea's RADAR Reading Series, The Loft, and
Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, as well as at universities including Yale, Sarah Lawrence, Oberlin, Swarthmore and the University of Southern California. In 2001, frustrated with the racism of the local white-dominated queer and trans poetry scene and the homophobia in the local poetry spaces for people of color, Piepzna-Samarasinha began Browngirlworld, a reading series with the goal of creating a poetry and performance space for queer and trans people of color. Initially held weekly, the event became a biannual, large-scale poetry event in partnership with the
Toronto Women's Bookstore, bringing artists such as Mango Tribe and
D'Lo. Piepzna-Samarasinha began teaching writing to queer, trans and Two Spirit youth at Supporting Our Youth Toronto's Pink Ink program. In 2004, inspired by radical Asian and Pacific Islander American (APIA) arts and poetry youth education programs at the APIA Spoken Word Summit, Piepzna-Samarasinha and Gein Wong started the Asian Arts Freedom School. The following year, Piepzna-Samarasinha traveled to the
San Francisco Bay Area to study poetry with
Suheir Hammad at
Voices of Our Nations, an experience they credit with changing their life as a writer. In 2006, Piepzna-Samarasinha wrote and premiered their first one-person show,
Grown Woman Show, in which they discuss being "a queer girl of Sri Lankan descent" who is a survivor of incest perpetrated by their mother.''
Grown Woman Show'' has since been performed at the
National Queer Arts Festival,
Swarthmore College,
Yale University,
Reed College, and
McGill University. Later that year, Piepzna-Samarasinha met Ctheirry Galette on Friendster and created Mangos With Chili with the goal of creating an annual tour of performance artists who are queer and trans people of color. Piepzna-Samarasinha is also involved with the biannual Asian Pacific Islander Spoken Word and Poetry Summit. They were the 2009-2010 Artist in Residence at UC Berkeley's June Jordan's Poetry for the People. From 2009 to the present, they have been a commissioned performer with
Sins Invalid, the national performance organization of queer people with
disabilities and
chronic illnesses. While in Toronto, with
Syrus Marcus Ware, they co-created Performance.Disability.Art (PDA), a performance-based disability arts collective. Through PDA, the pair co-curated Crip Your World: an Intergalactic Mad, Sick and Disabled Extravaganza for Mayworks Festival.
Teaching In 2001, Piepzna-Samarasinha taught writing to LGBTQ+ youth at
Supporting Our Youth Toronto (SOY) through the Pink Ink program. This included working with the zine
10 Reasons to Riot which won Best Zine in Toronto in 2006. For this work they were awarded the Community Service to Youth Award from the City of Toronto in 2004. In 2005, along with Gein Wong, they co-founded the Asian Arts Freedom School. They were also involved with The Canadian Sri Lankan Women's Action Network, an activist group seeking to promote peace with justice through a feminist lens to end Sri Lanka's 24 year civil war. In 2007, Piepzna-Samarasinha returned to the US and studied at
University of California Berkeley's June Jordan's Poetry for the People (P4P) Program.
Writing Piepzna-Samarasinha has published nine books independently, been included in ten anthologies, and edited two anthologies. Their work has also appeared in
Yes,
Vice,
Room,
Autostraddle,
ColorLines, NOW, Xtra, Bitch, theirizons and other publications.
Healing Piepzna-Samarasinha is a member of Bad Ass Visionary Healers, a
California-based activist healing collective, and has an "intuitive counseling" practice, Brownstargirl Tarot. They have been involved in organizing healing justice practice spaces at the Allied Media Conference, Safetyfest and other spaces. == Personal life ==