Ania Freer
Ania Freer is an Australian-Jamaican artist, filmmaker, cultural researcher, and curator based in Kingston, Jamaica. She attended The University of Sydney and received a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology and Film Theory. Through installation and video portraiture, as well as her curatorial work, Ania addresses themes central to the Jamaican experience such as Black empowerment, resistance, feminism, environmental justice, and spirituality. All while disrupting imperialist narratives, Ania collects meaningful, lesser-known stories in order to uplift the historical legacies of autonomy, self-determination, and liberation that shape her island home. She is the founder of Goat Curry Gallery, a platform which features an intimate collection of interviews from across Jamaica.
Ania has exhibited at the London CHROM Art Festival (2017) and the National Gallery of Jamaica’s Summer Exhibition (2019). She curated her first group exhibition, ‘All That Don’t Leave’, during her Curatorial and Art Writing fellowship at New Local Space Kingston (2019), which interrogated the line between art and craft, questioning “who can be called an artist”. She is the 2022 Artist In Residence In Everglades (AIRIE), a Caribbean Film Academy Fellow (2021), and recipient of the Black Creative Endeavours Grant (2020) and the Filmed By Bike Grant, (2021).

