Jeri Jonise Photography

Making Waves Artist Collaborative was founded in 2023 by Sarah May, Nan Seymour, and Therese Berry, three artists, poets, educators, organizers, and lake-facing humans passionate about creating intimacy and relationship with Great Salt Lake, the creatures that call the lake their home, and our connected waterbodies.

Supporting Artists

  • Sarah May is the 2025 Vigil Director . She is a Salvadoreña artist, weaver, poet, and bruja who has long called the Lake home. As someone who lives in the in-between of multiple worlds and identities, Great Salt Lake is a sacred place where she is seen and held in all she is and where she cultivated her magic into the artist and storyteller she is today.

    Sarah graduated from the University of Utah with her BFA in Photography & Digital Imaging and her MA in Community Leadership with an Emphasis in Art & Culture from Westminster College. Sarah has led designated spaces of healing, connection, and empowerment for BIPOC communities in Salt Lake City utilizing art, knowledge, and wisdom from BIPOC and Indigenous communities.

    One of Sarah’s mediums of choice is cyanotypes and her cyanotype tapestry work led the way for the Making Waves Cyanotype waves, flags, and banners to be created embodying Great Salt Lake.

    Learn more about Sarah’s work:

    sarahlizmay.com

    Making Waves Cyanotypes

Sarah May (she/hers)

Nan Seymour (she/they)

  • Nan is a lake-facing poet, Great Salt Lake celebrant, and vigil keeper. 

    She created the practice of River Writing in order to foster voice and authentic connection. This community-held writing practice is designed for anyone willing to pick up a pen. Everyone is invited. This PBS documentary highlights River Writing as a method of repair for what is broken in our relationship with the natural world.

    In the summer of 2023, Nan was honored by Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall with a Mayor’s Artist Award. As poet-in-residence on Antelope Island, Nan led day-and-night vigils on behalf of the imperiled Great Salt Lake throughout the 2022 and 2023 Utah State legislative sessions.

    During her weeks on the receding lake shore, she composed irreplaceable, a collective praise poem for great Salt Lake, containing over 400 lake-facing voices. The book was published in fall of 2024 by Moon in the Rye Press. The ode is a community cry for the full restoration of the ecosystem.

    Learn more about nan’s work:

    nanseymour.com

Therese Berry (she/hers)

  • Not much is known about the elusive and magnificent Therese. If you are lucky, you may catch her caring for her prize-winning heirloom tomatoes or taking flight with her fellow pelicans.

    Therese is the current Art Director of the vigils, designing and creating the first species-specific puppets such as the hand-puppet brine shrimp, brine fly, eared grebe, and avocet. Some of her most well-known puppets you can see at the Celebrate the Species pagents are the pelican, eared grebe, and bison.

Anna Pocaro (she/hers

  • Anna Pocaro is a photographer and the founder and creator of In-Joy, a Native Garden Reclamation business based in Salt Lake City. Anna combines her love and advocacy for nature as the resident photographer for Making Waves.

    Anna has always had a strong and deep connection to nature and Great Salt Lake in particular. She is motivated in her life and business to cultivate a relationship of respect and reciprocity with nature, always looking for opportunities to learn and understand the world through traditional Indigenous practices, and spiritual connection to the earth’s gifts.

    Anna documented the 2024 vigil and art builds and will continue to document the 2025 vigil. Anna’s photos convey the ritual, ceremony, and jubilant love these waves, banners, and puppets represent and bring to the community spaces they were created to embody. 

    Learn more about Anna’s work:

    annapocaro.com

    injoynative.com

Sav Pearson (they/she)

  • Sav is a writer and community organizer from the unceded Lands of the Tocobaga, Calusa, Miccosukee, and Seminole Nations, today known as St. Petersburg, Florida. They graduated from Columbia University in 2020 with a B.A. in Comparative Literature and Society.

    Sav writes speculative short stories that explore issues of ecocide, queerness, and disability. In their writing and research, they been inspired by the work of adrienne maree brown, Sunaura Taylor, and Linda Hogan, theories like emergent strategy and degrowth, the philosophies of Buddhism and Taoism, various activist handbooks and manifestos, ecological novels like The Deluge and A Tale for the Time Being, and radical climate justice movements. Sav is especially interested in the role of art, poetry, and performance in nonviolent direct action.

    As a community engagement fellow in the Environmental Humanities Program at the U, they are collaborating with local artists and activists in their efforts to save the life of Great Salt Lake.

    Learn more About Sav’s work:

    EH Community Engagement Spotlight: Sav Pearson

Amy Brunvand (she/hers)

  • Amy Brunvand is a librarian, environmental activist, and writer in Salt Lake City, Utah. She has an undergraduate degree in geology that taught her to see deep time. Her children tease her because she writes poetry about brine shrimp and talks to rocks. She is currently the Brine Shrimp Accordionist for the Great Salt Lake Vigil. 

    Many years ago on a whim she bought a small button accordion at Accordion-O-Rama in New York City and taught herself to play. The accordion is raucous and loud even without amplification so it comes in handy for music to Celebrate the Species. In their visionary book, "Bloodtide: A New Holiday in Homage to Horseshoe Crabs" Eli Nixon writes (all caps), "DON'T BE FOOLED INTO THINKING RECORDED MUSIC WILL SOUND BETTER.  It might sound better but it will suck the life out of your parade, pageant or play."   This is true. 

    If you have an instrument, come play with us!  

John Meier (he/him)

  • John Meier, an Emmy award-winning documentarian who has earned accolades for producing roles on "This is Utah" on PBS Utah. His debut producing role on "Llama Nation" achieved acclaim at national film festivals, winning the Audience Choice Award at the Omaha Film Festival and Best Documentary at the Utah Film Festival. Passionate about the environment, John employs storytelling to reconnect people with their surroundings.

    Throughout his career, he's dedicated time to document Utah's pressing issues. John aims to inspire a deeper connection between individuals and the natural world, fostering a greater appreciation for our environment at this time of imperiled waters and ecosystemic collapse. 

    John has been documenting the vigil for Great Salt Lake since 2022. He has been working on a documentary about the vigils called “Skymirror”.

    Learn more about John’s work:

    www.greatsaltlakefilm.com

    Skymirror Instagram

Guest Artists

Eli Nixon (they/theirs)

  • Eli Nixon builds portals and gives guided tours to places that don’t yet exist.

    They are a settler-descended transqueer clown, a cardboard constructionist, and a maker of plays, puppets, parades, pageants, suitcase theaters, and low-tech public spectaculah. Eli collaborates with artists, activists, and the more-than-human world to create performances, installations, and civic choreography on street corners and stages. 

    For 20 years Eli has also been concocting theater and parades with schools, senior centers, libraries, and addiction recovery and mental health programs. Eli’s current creative efforts include identifying opportunities to dismantle Manifest Destiny, foster intra and interspecies kinship, probe the ethics, perils and possibilities of anthropomorphization, and parent a 13-year-old human.

    Eli has collaborated with Making Waves since 2023, their book Bloodtide: A New Holiday in Homage to Horseshoe Crabs is a huge inspiration for Making Wave’s art, species-specific puppets, and Celebrate the Species. They led an art build creating the first brine shrimp and an art build in collaboration with Zoe P Wagner to create large-scale pelican puppets

    Learn more about Eli’s work:

    elinixon.com

Zoe P Wagner (they/them)

  • Zoe P Wagner is a visual artist based in the San Francisco Bay area, CA. They primarily work in printmaking and paper mache, with an emphasis on large-scale puppetry. Their work tends to be inspired by the natural environment and is moving towards the world of activist art.

    Zoe co-led an art build with Eli Nixon designing and creating the four large-scale pelican puppets.

    Learn more about Zoe’s work:

    zoepwagner.com

Photo Highlights

Featuring Anna Pocaro Photography