
Angela Washko
Directing
Biography
Angela is a famed Associate Professor of Art at Carnegie Mellon University, Cinematographer, writer, and film director. She has many been a part of an extensive number of creative and cultural exhibitions, lectures. and projects. Angela has had multiple exhibitions, some of which have permanent stays, at multiple museums worldwide. Angela is a winner of the Creative Capital Award, the Impact Award at Indiecade and the Franklin Furnace Fund.
Known For

After an unlikely casting onto a reality television show, 47-year old suburban telemarketer Ed Popil leaves his job to pursue a full-time entertainment industry career as his drag queen alter ego, 1960’s era housewife Mrs. Kasha Davis.
Workhorse Queen

In early 2012, Angela Washko founded “The Council on Gender Sensitivity and Behavioral Awareness in World of Warcraft” as a performative intervention within the often misogynistic environment of World of Warcraft (WoW), one of the most popular multiplayer, role-playing games. Instead of continuing to follow the quest structure of the game (killing dragons, getting better equipment, joining more competitive guilds, etc.) and while performing as “The Council" Washko facilitates discussions with players inside the game about the ways in which the community therein addresses women and how players respond to the term “FEMINISM.” Washko is interested in the impulse of the community/player-base to create a somewhat oppressive, misogynistic space for women within a physical environment that is otherwise accessible and inviting.
Playing A Girl

/misplay was a performance made in collaboration with Andre Faupel, Ashin Mandal, Ephraim Schott, Hagen Hiller, Marina Belikova, Meike Halle and Mihail Mihaylov. It was created in conjunction with a course I taught at Bauhaus University called Collaboratively Choreographed Online Interventions through which I worked with students to stage gestural performances in a number of different multi user digital environments.
/misplay (Episode 1: A Scantily Clad Parade of Orcs and Trolls in World of Warcraft)
Mother, Player was supported in part by the Creative Capital Award and the Frank-Ratchye STUDIO for Creative Inquiry's Further Fund.