LUWAINA AL-OTAIBI, The YES! House Program Coordinator
Luwaina Al-Otaibi (she/her) is a creative event organizer, collaborator, environmental advocate, and artist! Born and raised in the Middle East, she moved to the US at the age of 17 to attend University where she received a degree in Environmental Science. Nine years ago she moved to her mother’s small hometown of Granite Falls, MN for (what was supposed to be) just a short period of time. She ended up falling in love with the riverside town and found her passion embedding herself in the vibrant arts community through her work as Bluenose Gopher Public House’s first Chief Operating Officer. Collaborating with musicians, dancers, foragers, theater artists, and more to help create local events, proving that art of all shapes and sizes is an essential piece of any thriving downtown. Luwaina lives in Granite Falls with her two cats and dog. She enjoys the beauty of the Minnesota River Valley by kayaking the rivers and hiking the land.
HOLLY DOLL, ANPAO WIN (FIRST LIGHT WOMAN), Ignite Rural Program Director
Holly Doll, Anpao Win (First Light Woman) (she/her) lives in North Dakota and is an enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. She is the founder and president of Native Artists United, owner of Five Nations Arts, a public speaker on cultural education and racial sensitivity, and making a shift to having a healing-centered approach to work and life. Holly is also an artist, specializing in traditional Lakota forms of beadwork and quillwork, modern painting with watercolor, and occasionally writing poetry. Her mother taught from the age of two everything she knows when it comes to art and she has kept it up ever since.
A lover of Halloween, astrology, fall scented candles, poetry, baking, fiction books, and crying over Pixar movies. Lives by this quote by spoken word poet Shane Koyczan: “If we ever become who we hope we are, it is because we see how far there is still to go. And if we are none of these things to everyone, then we are none of these things at all.”
BENJAMIN DOMASK-RUH, Activate Rural Program Coordinator
Benjamin Domask-Ruh (he/him) is a practicing Circus and Theatre artist based in Minnesota and traveling all around the world. He is a member of the American Circus Alliance, board member with the International Jugglers’ Association, Director of the Youth Juggling Academy, and Editor with Modern Vaudeville Press. Benjamin is a COMPAS roster artist. He facilitates Circus Arts teaching residencies with rural communities all over Minnesota. He was a Hinge Arts Resident Artist (2018) and New York Mills Resident Artist (2019.) In 2020, he was commissioned by the Arrowhead Library in Northern Minnesota to make 1,045 juggling art kits for their communities and summer programming. This is all very fancy sounding, but in reality, he is just a clown that is curious about creating joy through the art of community. He holds a degree in Psychology from the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. (Very fancy.)
ELISA M. FRANCO, Communications Coordinator
Elisa M. Franco (she/her) is a marketing and communications professional, clinical herbalist, and interdisciplinary artist. Elisa and her partner are currently building an art and herbalism farm residency in an 18th century house, with the intention to serve the surrounding communities as a creative incubator for the arts and small-scale farming. Elisa has an undergraduate degree in International Business, a graduate degree in Digital Marketing, a graduate certificate in Clinical Herbalism, and has done independent art studies and apprenticeships within the mediums of metal, glass, and ceramics.
ASH HANSON, Creative Executive Officer
Ashley Hanson (she/her) has 15 years of experience working with rural communities to activate stories, connect neighbors, and exercise collective imagination. She is a member of the Center for Performance and Civic Practice Leadership Circle and she was an Artist-in-Residence in both the Planning Department at the City of Minneapolis and with the Southwest Minnesota Housing Partnership, where she employed creative community engagement strategies for equitable participation in urban and rural planning and development processes. Previously, she was the Program Director for the Minnesota Theater Alliance—where she managed statewide regional networks and resource sharing—and the Program Director for Public Art Saint Paul—where she produced large-scale participatory public art events and projects, including the Saint Paul City Artist-in-Residence program. In addition to her work with DoPT, she is the founder of PlaceBase Productions, a theater company that creates original, site-specific musicals celebrating small-town life. She holds an MA in Applied Theater with a focus on Rural Community Development, and she was named an Obama Foundation Fellow and a Bush Fellow for her work with rural communities. She believes deeply in the power of play and exclamation points!
HANNAH K. HOLMAN, Creative Operating Officer
Hannah Holman (she/her or they/them) is a Minnesota-based arts and nonprofit leader, interdisciplinary maker, and social practice artist working with communities of all shapes and sizes—rural, remote, urban, and suburban. She is a poetic playground builder and spreadsheet storyteller leaping between art and administration in a single bound. Previously, Hannah has served as Producing Artistic Director of Umbrella Collective, the Program Manager and Interim Executive Director with the Minnesota Theater Alliance, Project Manager for the Rural Arts & Culture Summit and Recovery Network with Springboard for the Arts, and Associate Managing Director with the Loft Literary Center. In 2018, she was named Performing Arts Administrator of the Year by Twin Cities Arts Reader.
SARINA OTAIBI, Activate Rural Program Director
Sarina Otaibi (she/her) is a rural advocate, old building champion and community leader, shaped by her lived experiences in Saudi Arabia and Granite Falls, Minnesota. From organizing around clean water and energy to working with Minnesota’s Main Street communities to establish preservation and arts-based community development approaches, Sarina is driven by her passion for rural community vitality. In Granite Falls, she served as an elected City Council Member and as the founding Board Chair of a local cooperative, Bluenose Gopher Public House, all while dreaming up projects and uses for her old church building. Sarina serves as a Board member of two nonprofit arts and cultural organizations, Springboard for the Arts and Art of the Rural. She holds a master’s degree in historic preservation from the University of Maryland, College Park, and a B.B.A. in marketing from Stetson University in Florida.
SHY MIGUEL, The YES! House Program and Facilities Assistant
Shy Miguel (she/her) is a local artist with a passion for a diverse range of art forms including digital art, drawing, makeup artistry, photography, and more. After earning her degree in Social Work, she returned to her roots in rural Granite Falls 6 years ago. Shy spent several years working as a children’s mental health social worker before welcoming her first daughter in 2023. Combining her lifelong love for art with her commitment to social justice and mental health, Shy discovered her true passion. She found that using creativity as a therapeutic tool not only helped build stronger relationships, but also addressed trauma that words often can’t reach. Moreover, it provided folks with lasting hobbies and skills to support their ongoing growth and healing. Shy is most proud of being a mom to Nelly, a partner to Matthew, and an auntie to her five nieces and two nephews.