Sabrina Dorsainvil

Studio Resident at Boston Center for the Arts

Sabrina Dorsainvil is a highly experienced design strategist and creative practitioner, currently serving as the Director of Design Strategy and Creative Practice at Agncy since November 2022. In parallel, Sabrina holds the position of Studio Resident at the Boston Center for the Arts and works as a Civic Designer and Public Artist with See You in the Future since July 2021. Previously, Sabrina contributed significantly to the City of Boston, first as Director of Civic Design and later as Civic Designer and Program Director with the Mayor's Office of New Urban Mechanics. Sabrina was instrumental in the Mayor's Housing Innovation Lab, focusing on innovative housing solutions. Additionally, Sabrina has served as co-chair and adjunct faculty at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, and has been involved in various artistic initiatives, including the Undesign the Redline project. Sabrina holds a Master of Science in Design and Urban Ecologies from Parsons School of Design and a BFA in Industrial Design from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, along with certificates from prestigious international programs.

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Boston, United States

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Boston Center for the Arts

Mission Boston Center for the Arts (BCA) is a not-for-profit performing and visual arts complex that supports working artists to create, perform and exhibit new works, develops new audiences, and connects the arts to community. The Complex The BCA’s 190,000 square foot campus consists of: • Four theatres. These include the BCA Plaza Theatre with 142 seats; the BCA Plaza Black Box with up to 90 seats, as well as the new, state-of-the-art Stanford Calderwood Pavilion, which houses the Roberts Studio Theatre with up to 209 seats and the Wimberly Theatre with up to 370 seats. • Rehearsal and education space. Rehearsal Hall A and Deane Rehearsal Hall in the Calderwood Pavilion are the main rehearsal spaces for larger companies and are also used for performances, events, and meetings. • The Mills Gallery. The premier, independent non-profit gallery in Boston, showing the work of local and national, established and emerging artists • The Tremont Estates Building. The Artists Studio Building is the working home for over 50 artists. • The Cyclorama. Opened in 1865, the Cyclorama is on the National Register of Historic Places. Featuring a copper skylight dome atop a round brick-lined 23,000 square foot space, the Cyclorama can host up to 1,200 visitors. • The Boston Ballet Building. This Graham Gund-designed building has been home to the Boston Ballet for 16 years. • The Community Music Center of Boston (CMCB). Now in its 99th year, CMCB has positively impacted the lives of thousands of children and adults each year, many of them underserved, through lessons and classes on site, in the Boston Public Schools, through social service agencies and at community centers. • Beehive Jazz Café, is nestled in the BCA complex in space that was once occupied by a black-box theatre at street level and a basement. Now, a dining room on the upper level overlooks the lower level café and stage where live jazz is featured nightly.


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