MINIVER KUNDRATA editor-in-chief
OLIVIA ZHANG managing editor
SARAI MAXWELL web editor
CHEROKEE TRIMBLE literary editor
EBONY-ANN COCKING editorial editor
KRISTIN ALCORN layout editor
ANA SOFIA ORDAZ art editor
PROFESSOR SANTIESTEBAN advisor
TEAM
Sydney Scott
Tracy Flores
Gabriela Muñiz
CONTRIBUTORS
Ignacio Beroiz is an 18-year-old Argentinian artist. In 2021, art became something very close to his heart, and he hasn’t stopped creating since.
Gabrielle Bullard is trying to navigate the rocky seas of life, using her writing as a map to show the places she’s been.
Jessica Cattanach has been writing stories from a young age and dreams of becoming an author when she grows up.
Yanisse Cauldero takes inspiration from anything in the world and finds ways to incorporate it into her works.
Lunaya Cesar loves to develop life and bible related artworks that inspire others.
Asaphia Connor longs to write as she does to breathe.
Amanda Dawn is an artist whose work is centered around issues of personal growth and social commentary.
Alicia Figueroa’s love for cartoon characters inspires a hope that, someday, she can make her own comic series.
Anastacia Gold’s life is imbued with art, from her studies as a fine art major to concurrent jobs at the South Campus Gallery and Boca Raton Museum of Art.
Rebecca Gonzalez sees writing as a way of expressing emotions that are too big or too difficult to say. She likes to believe that she turns her tears into words on a page.
Arianna Green portrays female fatigue, angst, and melancholy in her characters as a beacon to girls who struggle to fit into the ideal mold of womanhood.
Adriana Hernandez, with a pen and a whole lot of caffeine, reflects her soul in all that she writes.
Melanie Hosein-Finol is an artist whose portfolio explores nature and human connection with various media.
Sofie Kahlig plans to study graphic design—or anything in the arts. She doesn’t know what path it’ll take her down, but in the end, she always knows she’ll be okay.
Dee Laurent‘s love of writing came from her love of reading. She began to wonder if she could be the author instead of the audience.
Iris Lee used to only write because she was forced to. Now she writes in hopes of making a change.
Karis Lee combines real life with the surreal, culminating in a piece that is hard to distinguish between the two.
Tommy Li exists and says what he sees. He also really likes old Hondas.
Sophia Manzor loves telling stories from her own experiences in the hopes that others will find them relatable.
Karla Manzueta is a first-generation Dominican American, born and raised in Miami. She has a passion for reading books and has recently begun to read poetry.
Antonella Marrero only wishes to paint, drink tea, and dream.
Briana Martin has a passion for garnering new perspectives. She hopes to pursue this passion through the lens of a camera in journalism or bold ink on paper in the field of law.
Sarai Maxwell is a lover of stories who dreams up her own whenever possible. She believes that art is what gives life meaning.
Drekaria Miller is a 17-year-old international relations major who enjoys writing, music, and literature.
Shawniek Moore is a lover of the arts and is always open to experimenting with different art media.
Lilian Nuñez believes that, sometimes, even the simplest of pieces are enough to make us feel happy or sorrowful.
Anthony Pacheco dreams of worlds that can’t be described in words but through colors and little scribbles.
Phoebe Potter connects her own life experiences to social issues or pop culture in her work.
Angelina Pozo Marinho creates, believing in the possibility that she could potentially be the creator of a brand-new story.
Alanna Robbert, regardless of the circumstance, plans on never giving up any form of artistic expression.
Danielle Roberts is a lifelong art lover who plans to inject that love into her career, keeping her childhood dream close.
Lillian Sebastian loves to use pens and colored pencils to draw traditional art.
Yewande Shitta-Bey likes to write words that express and evoke nebulous feelings.
Matthew Stander’s creations go from his mind to his hands, skipping the influence of society—a pure form created by the mind and then the body.
Emily Sur wants to show the beauty in the little things misunderstood and overlooked.
Santiago Tapia Torres, despite his love for poetry, plans to pursue a career in screenwriting and filmmaking, always focusing on the beauty we can create in the struggles of being human.
Cherokee Trimble is simply romanticizing the dreadful feelings of life.