Mission

Little Globe’s multi-generational team works with people to tell their own stories. 

Through partnerships we provide tools, programs, training and platforms to co-create and share artistic works with the wider world. Our collaborative process models a community in which everyone is seen and heard.

Impact

Communities thrive when everyone is seen and heard. Little Globe’s programs bring together diverse perspectives, experiences, and stories, giving collective voice and agency to communities. Using the power of community voice, social change is possible through increased engagement, ongoing dialogue, and policy change.

Team

  • Technology + Digital Media

    Dylan Tenorio, a Visual Development Artist from Kewa Pueblo, started his career at Little Globe in 2019 after studying at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design. He currently serves as Co-Executive Director at Little Globe managing programs, supporting the team, and applying his skills in visual arts, audio engineering, and filmmaking across many of Little Globe’s projects. His responsibilities include project development, managing technical resources, fundraising, and guiding team members and partners towards project goals.

Co-Executive Director

  • Team Artist and Facilitator, Community Storytellers Program Lead

    Originally from a small town in Morelos, Mexico, Anaid immigrated to the U.S. with her family when she was 12 years old. Throughout her life, Anaid has explored many forms of creative expression and realized that video encompassed everything perfectly! Realizing this, Anaid began teaching herself everything she could about video production, which then led her to study under seasoned professionals at the Santa Fe Community College’s Film Program. 

    Anaid’s endless curiosity and hunger for knowledge continues to drive her to hone her craft using the camera as a lens for empowerment, creativity, and positive change. And her deep desire for creating genuine connections is what helps her bring out the essence of your story and your mission to connect with those who need to hear it most.

  • Co-Director, Team Artist and Facilitator

    Chris Jonas has been part of Little Globe's projects since 2000. He is a multi-arts filmmaker, teacher, composer, conductor, creative facilitator, producer and performer who works worldwide on collaborative projects in musical ensembles, documentary and experimental films, stage performances and in a wide variety of other media. He has been producer, composer, director, and team member for many of the organization’s large scale projects.

  • Director of Digital Media, Team Artist and Facilitator

    He has worked as a producer, director, writer, editor, actor and teacher. At Little Globe, Hank is Director of Digital Media, and he supervises Little Globe projects, works with junior filmmakers, mentors local youth, and learns everyday about connection and community from his co-workers and community members.

  • Administration + Development

    Aurora Escobedo, a filmmaker from the Pueblo of Tesuque, began her journey with Little Globe in 2019 as an intern editing films for the Presente project at the Lensic. Since then she became a core part of the filmmaking and administrative team. She now serves as Co-Executive Director, overseeing administration, fundraising, and organizational strategy. Aurora applies her skills in filmmaking and storytelling to support the team and drive the organization’s mission, while fostering collaboration and guiding projects to success.

Co-Executive Director

  • Team Artist and Facilitator, Littleglobe TV Producer

    Ed Radtke is an independent filmmaker, writer, producer, director and a long time educator. He has written, produced and directed three indie features, including BOTTOM LAND and THE DREAM CATCHER. THE DREAM CATCHER garnered 11 prizes at festivals worldwide and was released in numerous countries to critical acclaim. He has decades of freelance media production and filmmaking experience as a writer, producer, assistant director and editor on countless projects including: narrative features, documentaries, TV movies, commercials and music videos.

  • Team Artist and Facilitator

    Jaydin Martinez is an award winning Actor/Filmmaker and youngest constituent of the Santa Fe film council. It’s because of his deep passion for storytelling and advocacy for positive community growth in his hometown of Santa Fe, he continues to advocate for local talent in New Mexico to play a bigger part in the film industry.

Contributing Artists

  • Contributing Artist and Facilitator

  • Sarah Hogland-Gurulé is a dancer, choreographer & educator guided by the belief that dance is a liberatory form of storytelling, medicine & resistance. Sarah is from Albuquerque, NM and is woven into Genízaro, indigenous Mexican and Irish American lineages.


    Sarah is the director and choreographer of UNBOUND, a collaborative performance ritual honoring her enslaved indigenous ancestors. UNBOUND was awarded the National Theater Creation & Touring Grant by the New England Foundation for the Arts and is currently touring across New Mexico. Her work has been presented by Peñasco Theater, Santa Fe Playhouse, Wildflower Playhouse, LARVA Forum, Centro Cultural Los Talleres, American Dance Festival’s Emerging Choreographer’s Showcase and the University of New Mexico. 


    Sarah has taught dance to folks in juvenile prisons, dance studios, women’s prisons, after school programs, family shelters and universities, including the Institute of American Indian Arts. She believes dance is a natural right of expression for all people.


    As a Navajo speaker, Natalie has been largely attributed to film and television productions involving Navajo characters and culture. For television, Natalie is currently on AMC’s DARK WINDS as ‘Natalie Bluehouse’. She also played the lead role of ‘Shandiin’, a determined Navajo protestor on FOX’s anthology series, ACCUSED. For film, Natalie’s most notable credit is voicing the role of Dory in the Navajo dubbed version of Disney/Pixar’s FINDING NEMO. She also played a supporting role in the recent Netflix film REZ BALL, as ‘Lily Jackson’. Other notable credits include executive producing and starring in a full-length food documentary, INDIGENIZE THE PLATE, which aired nationally on PBS. She also art directed the acclaimed coming of age film, FRYBREAD FACE AND ME, and worked with director Billy Luther to accurately portray Navajo culture. 


    Natalie also directs, writes, choreographs, and produces original films within her production company, Tse'Nato'. Through her work as both a creative and cultural advocate, Natalie strives to keep amplifying Indigenous voices and representation in media. 

  • Originally from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Mariano Frisoli is a documentary photographer and visual artist passionate about telling stories.

    After his studies in lighting, composition, and photojournalism, he has been developing multiple projects related to personal, social, and political events.

    His passion as a storyteller is to convey emotions and feelings through the use of light and composition.

    At Little Globe he has found the perfect place to develop his abilities as a filmmaker and to connect with his colleagues to continue evolving in the task of bringing to the public the stories that deserve to be told.


    As a Navajo speaker, Natalie has been largely attributed to film and television productions involving Navajo characters and culture. For television, Natalie is currently on AMC’s DARK WINDS as ‘Natalie Bluehouse’. She also played the lead role of ‘Shandiin’, a determined Navajo protestor on FOX’s anthology series, ACCUSED. For film, Natalie’s most notable credit is voicing the role of Dory in the Navajo dubbed version of Disney/Pixar’s FINDING NEMO. She also played a supporting role in the recent Netflix film REZ BALL, as ‘Lily Jackson’. Other notable credits include executive producing and starring in a full-length food documentary, INDIGENIZE THE PLATE, which aired nationally on PBS. She also art directed the acclaimed coming of age film, FRYBREAD FACE AND ME, and worked with director Billy Luther to accurately portray Navajo culture. 


    Natalie also directs, writes, choreographs, and produces original films within her production company, Tse'Nato'. Through her work as both a creative and cultural advocate, Natalie strives to keep amplifying Indigenous voices and representation in media. 

  • Contributing Artist and FacilitatorEhren Kee Natay (Diné/Kewa Pueblo) is a versatile artist with over 25 years of experience as a performer and recording artist, specializing in drums and percussion. Ehren is a resident in his hometown of Santa Fe, and has a passion for creativity that extends to painting and sculpture.  He maintains connection with his community through public works and arts education and outreach.

  • Description text goes hereNatalie Benally is a multi-disciplinary artist and cultural advocate from the Navajo Nation. For the past twenty years she has directed and choreographed numerous theater productions, worked and mentored youth within Native communities, and is also involved in film and television productions, both on and off camera. 


    As a Navajo speaker, Natalie has been largely attributed to film and television productions involving Navajo characters and culture. For television, Natalie is currently on AMC’s DARK WINDS as ‘Natalie Bluehouse’. She also played the lead role of ‘Shandiin’, a determined Navajo protestor on FOX’s anthology series, ACCUSED. For film, Natalie’s most notable credit is voicing the role of Dory in the Navajo dubbed version of Disney/Pixar’s FINDING NEMO. She also played a supporting role in the recent Netflix film REZ BALL, as ‘Lily Jackson’. Other notable credits include executive producing and starring in a full-length food documentary, INDIGENIZE THE PLATE, which aired nationally on PBS. She also art directed the acclaimed coming of age film, FRYBREAD FACE AND ME, and worked with director Billy Luther to accurately portray Navajo culture. 


    Natalie also directs, writes, choreographs, and produces original films within her production company, Tse'Nato'. Through her work as both a creative and cultural advocate, Natalie strives to keep amplifying Indigenous voices and representation in media. 

  • Team Artist and Facilitator

    Jazmín Harvey is a queer Latinx artist, director and cinematographer from the borderlands of New Mexico. Jazmín’s path into the film industry began at the ACLU of Southern California, where she used her passion for social justice and storytelling to create short documentaries for the ACLU. She is a member of the International Cinematographers Guild (ICG Local 600) and was most recently accepted to NYU to pursue an M.A. in Individualized Studies, where she will be focusing on representations of the US/Mexico border in film.

  • Erica Nguyen is a first generation Vietnamese-American filmmaker and traveler. Her interdisciplinary studies at UC Berkeley revolved around Anthropology, Ethnographic Film, Sociolinguistics and Spanish; ultimately framing her filmmaking process as an extension of an ongoing query into the nature of how estrangement from our origins manifests in our bodies. Increasingly familiar with her outsider status both at home and abroad, her personal experience of loss around cultural identity motivates a desire to encounter urgent stories and collaborate through mutual self study. She embraces reciprocal methodologies by approaching storytelling with reflexivity and subject participation in mind. As a Director, Erica’s vision is to celebrate the intersections that leave us spanning worlds and making meaning in between.

Partners

Santa Fe Indigenous Center

Earth Care

Chainbreaker Collective

Santa Fe Art Institute 

City of Santa Fe: Arts & Culture Department, Economic Development Department, Historic Preservation Department

Santa Fe Recovery Center

Santa Fe Southside Teen Center

Santa Fe Gloom Futsal Team

Santa Fe Public Schools

Nambe Pueblo Tewa Roots Society

New Mexico Community in Schools “Newcomers” Project

New Mexico Higher Education Department / GEAR UP

Public high schools across Northern New Mexico (name them?)

LANL Foundation

New Mexico PBS

Board

  • Mario is a young filmmaker, photographer, and creative from Espanola, New Mexico. He came to Littleglobe as a participant in the Stories of Learning program. His focus is on advocating for free speech and expression through all forms of media, and is currently a student at NMSU. Martinez’s journey has only started and will expand rapidly.

  • Katy has been working with Little Globe since 2016. She came to Little Globe through her work at Youth Media Project, where she worked as the Program Director for four years. Katy has fulfilled a variety of roles at LG including co-director and now serves our board. Katy is a photographer, educator, multimedia producer, and mother.


  • Attorney at The Bennett Law Group (entertainment, intellectual property and non profit law); President and Founder at NM Lawyers for the Arts. Former Chair IP Section of New Mexico Bar. Former Board member of Warehouse 21, Creative Santa Fe, Intermezzo (Santa Fe Opera) and Global Center for Cultural Entrepreneurship.

  • (MPH, MOTR/L) Katy was born in northern New Mexico and lives in Santa Fe with her family, including her mama, in the house she grew up in. She worked in public health for 25 years – locally, on both coasts and internationally, before becoming a pediatric occupational therapist. She loves words, stories and New Mexico, and is a poet, a writer and a photographer.

  • Treasurer. (DNP, FNP-C, APHN-BC) Advanced Practice Holistic Nurse, Director of Interprofessional Education, UNM Health Sciences Center. Served as a Program Liaison, “Inside/Outside” Project in 2013/2014. Heidi has been a member of the Littleglobe board since 2015. Albuquerque native.

  • Filmmaker, originally from Mexico City and a New Mexico resident for nearly thirty years. Miguel has produced and directed numerous award-winning documentaries, music videos and commercials with national and global distribution. A founder of Santa Fe’s Desert Academy, he served on its board of directors for ten years. A participating member of the Community Building Institute of the Sol y Sombra Foundation, he has also served as a trustee of the Carrie Tingley Hospital Foundation.

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