Hi, my name is Staci Bu Shea and I’m based in Utrecht, the Netherlands. I have a multi-faceted artistic and cultural practice, which mostly takes form by writing, curating, facilitating, supporting, advising and teaching. Broadly, I convene with others over aesthetic, critical, and poetic practices of social reproduction and care work, as well as its manifestations in interpersonal relationships, daily life, community organizing, and institutional practice. 

I’m a queer parent, avid walker, and qigong practitioner.

I am a careworker and support people at times of transformation. For holistic death and grief care, visit the website of my practice stacibushea.care.

I’m the author of Solution 305: Dying Livingly (Sternberg Press, 2025), a series of propositions and encounters in service to an aesthetic, critical, and poetic experience of living life led by death.

In 2019, I embarked on a study trajectory called Poetics of Living with art historian Rizvana Bradley to explore already existing and emerging non-normative forms of living together in consideration of rapidly changing discourses around sexuality, health, communal life, and death. In many ways, this forms the basis of my life practice and my interest in art and culture. It’s at this time that I began care work alongside my professional practice in art and culture.

From 2017-2022 I worked as a curator at Casco Art Institute: Working for the Commons, an art institution based in Utrecht that focuses on collective art projects and organizational experiments. Together with the team I managed the exhibition program from concept writing and organization to working with artists and designing programs, but was also engaged in other areas of the institution. Notably I helped shape the attention to and care for Casco’s analog and digital archive. I also worked to make Casco more accessible by implementing accommodations and fostering a culture of accessibility, testing what’s possible for a social, aesthetic experience of care while learning from and working with disability communities.

In the past, I co-curated Barbara Hammer: Evidentiary Bodies (2017) at Leslie Lohman Museum of Art (NY) with Carmel Curtis, which New York Times art critic Holland Cotter named one of the best exhibitions of that year. I graduated from the Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College with the group exhibition Emphasis Repeats (Andrea Geyer, Barbara Hammer, Alex Martinis Roe, and Tourmaline, 2016) at Hessel Museum of Art (NY). From 2011-2014 I worked as a studio manager and assistant to artist Jim Draper in Jacksonville, Florida.