Cultural Advocacy

Artivism

Centering artists as architects of just futures

Art does what policy briefs and legal arguments alone cannot. It crosses language barriers. It makes the invisible visible. It creates spaces where communities can grieve, imagine, and demand change on their own terms.

ICAAD’s Artivism Program integrates creative practice with legal advocacy to transform lived experience into forward-looking pathways for accountability, healing, and systemic change.

This is art as evidence. Art as strategy. Art as a form of justice.

Agents of Change

Artivist-in-Residence Program

ICAAD selects creatives to engage with our human rights work. Residents receive direct support, research assistance from our legal team, and curation that connects their practice to global advocacy networks.

ARTIVISTS-IN-RESIDENCE TO DATE

Dilpreet Bhullar

Created A Home in the Constant Flux: A Call to the Verb Memory, using photo documentation of the object of the refugees tracing the long history of India rooted in a diverse social milieu.

Katja Phutaraksa Neef

Worked with Banaban communities to co-create the Justice for Rabi exhibition telling the story the displacement from their island home as a result of colonial mining and environmental destruction. 

Vishavjit Singh

Created multi-award winning animation American Sikh. A survivor of genocide, he uses his Sikh Captain America persona to challenge bigotry and foster dialogue on identity and bias.

Queen

Designed a multi-media experience focusing on re:flexing, which brings us back to ourselves as advocates to build practices of reflection and self-accountability that make our movements stronger.

Namita Kulkarni

Created Colonialism and the Climate Crisis exploring how both are rooted in ever-extractive ways of life which stand disconnected from any sense of wonder and humility before the infinite workings of the planet.

Harbani Kaur Ahuja

Created Dicta, a Webby-honored blackout poetry series drawn from U.S. Supreme Court decisions, exposing the gap between law and justice. Dicta unearths the essence of court decisions in order to illuminate the broader societal context in which they were written.

Artivism as Methodology

Our work embeds creative strategy into the core of global human rights advocacy through three strategic pillars:

Pillar I

Narrative Justice

Correcting the silences of the past. We use art to surface lived experiences—from the spirit of resilience to redacted legal truths—ensuring survivor testimonies become part of the permanent record.

Pillar II

Collective Storytelling

Moving from participation to community ownership. We co-design projects with frontline communities, ensuring art remains a self-determined tool for memory, imagination, and mobilization.

Pillar III

Creative Accountability

Translating art into action. We bridge the gap between creative expression and the halls of power, influencing public and private policymakers in places like the UN.

“This exhibit not only highlights what went wrong, but more importantly how advocates can use the story of my people to craft future laws that work.”

Rae Bainteiti, Local Change Maker, Rabi Island

Academy

Sharpening Advocacy Skills

We integrate artivism as a core pedagogical tool in our Advocacy Academy, helping practitioners use creative storytelling to build empathy and unleash the innovative thinking required for systems change.

EXPLORE THE ACADEMY →

Art Changes How We See.
Seeing Changes How We Act.

ICAAD’s Artivism Program creates spaces where art becomes evidence and audiences become advocates.

From Our Archive

Exhibition

Art & Discrimination

ICAAD’s first artivism exhibition in 2013.

Legal Resource

Banaban Handbook

Launched alongside artivism work on Rabi Island.

Merchandise

ARTivism Shop

All proceeds support our human rights programs.

Short Film

American Sikh

Exploring identity and bias through animation.