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Melissa Skolnick-Noguera

Contributor

BSR Contributor Since August 25, 2015

Melissa Skolnick-Noguera is a multimedia artist and writer. Since 2010, she has been working with nonprofits and arts organizations throughout Philadelphia, while using a range of tools for community building and storytelling. She holds a Master of Social Work degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology from the University of Delaware.

Melissa Skolnick-Noguera is a documentary filmmaker and multimedia storyteller, who uses these platforms to bring awareness to social justice and human rights issues that are often ignored. She holds a Master of Social Work degree from the University of Pennsylvania, and a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology from the University of Delaware. Since 2010, she has been working with nonprofits and arts organizations throughout Philadelphia, while using a range of tools for community building and storytelling. Currently, she is pursuing a PhD at Penn’s School of Social Policy and Practice (SP2), and is interested in the intersection of social justice policy, visual ethnography, and the arts.

By this Author

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Page 1
Philly poet laureate Raquel Salas Rivera reads at the We (Too) Are Philly kickoff show. (Photo courtesy of the artist.)
2017 MWA Women in Animation film fest 500x500 full
New Automatic Arts artist-in-residence Sarah Knittel rehearses for a 2016 Nice and Fresh show. (Photo by Said Johnson.)
The new El Corazón Cultural Center. (Photo by Simón Bolívar.)
A photograph from Hannah Price's Cursed By Night exhibition. (Image courtesy of PPAC)
Nimisha Ladva will perform her solo show at this year's First Person Arts Festival. (Photo by Jen Cleary)
A skater tries out a dizzying digital landscape at the original Phenomenal Radness. (Photo courtesy of the Pearlstein Gallery.)
MACS students onstage at PTC for Philly Reality 2015. Image courtesy of PTC.
'SOLOnely Together' is coming January 15. Image by Felicia Vo Photography.
Youngsters at September's El Corazón Cultural Center groundbreaking. Photo by Luis Vargas.
Scott Sheppard and Jenn Kidwell in 'Underground Railroad Game.' Photo by Tamara Rodriguez Reichberg.