About
The Tomorrow Archive is a bimonthly publication featuring new or previously unseen art and writing available for sale in print. Future special digital editions are coming soon. Sales of the publications go directly to families evacuating Gaza. The inaugural print issue raised over $3,500 for six families.
The Tomorrow Archive organizers work with Gaza Champions to find families who need aid. Gaza Champions is solidarity collective of volunteers who are linked to families in Gaza as pen pals and champions to raise evacuation funds. This collective was founded by Anam Raheem, a writer and organizer who spent years living and working in Gaza. The Tomorrow Archive also works with their sister project, Gaza Memory Map, to ensure the stories of Palestinians are centered in all aspects of the publication.
Organizers
Cameron A. Granger is an artist and filmmaker from Cleveland, Ohio and an alumni of Euclid Public Schools & the Studio Museum in Harlem residency program. In addition to his own solo exhibitions and curatorial projects, he has helped organize numerous mutual aid events & projects alongside community members in Columbus, Ohio. He’s a member of MINT Collective, a former diy space on the south side of Columbus, and currently lives in Queens, NY.
Paige Laino is an archivist and the longtime Alumni & Archives Manager for Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. In that role she has executed numerous exhibitions, events and publications. In 2016, she co-curated the exhibition Ode to the Sea: Art from Guantánamo Bay. She is currently a student at the Queens College Graduate School of Library and Information Studies. She lives in New York.
Rebecca Shippee is a painter, writer, and graduate of Purchase College and Yale University. She is the founder of Triangle Projects, a curatorial venture which uses unconventional spaces to show artwork. She is currently based in Los Angeles.
And tremendous support from:
William Chan is an artist and activist. He holds an MFA in Photography from School of Visual Arts. He is the author of the book Ten Years After Iraq, a reflection back on U.S. policies in the Middle East from the perspective of a former combat veteran. He has been active in organizing winter item donation drives for asylum seekers arriving in New York City.