biographical overview | Melina Nicolaides
Founding Director of ACTIVATE

As her life was shaped by repeated relocation between different regions of the world and diverse cultures,
her work and other endeavors were also equally informed by this reality of constant reorientation


Melina Nicolaides, originally from the island of Cyprus, was born in Washington, D.C. and moved to New Delhi at the age of seven. Her childhood years were spent in South Asia, followed by secondary education in Geneva, Switzerland, and completion of her studies at the St George's British International School of Rome (Head Girl). She obtained a Bachelor’s degree in History from Princeton University with the thesis ‘A Problem of Authenticity and Representation in a 19th Century Vision of the Orient’, as considered through Verdi’s opera ‘Aida’.  Following an extended training-period in Brussels at the European Union in the sectors of communication, information, audiovisual and culture (D.G. X), she went on to earn a multi-disciplinary MFA from Baltimore’s Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) which she attended as an A.G. Leventis Foundation Scholar, and where she received the institution’s Graduate Award in Painting.

As a visual artist, her work has been exhibited in solo and over 50 group exhibitions internationally, in the USA, Europe, Middle East/N. Africa, and Asia, and she has received multiple governmental and institutional exhibition grants (painting—film—installation) in Cyprus and art fellowships in the USA, including three from the D.C. Commission on the Arts & Humanities of the NEA.  Her work has been reviewed in very diverse publications, such as the Washington Post, ArtNews Magazine, Contemporary Practices Journal, and can be found in public and in private art collections in the USA, Europe, and in the Middle East. Parallel to these endeavors, she also contributed to publications, cross-disciplinary workshops and conferences with topics such as art, culture, and identity; art for conflict resolution; art as activism; and art to communicate the sciences, which over the years expanded the scope and purpose of her arts practice towards curating cross-disciplinary and research-based projects.

A move to live for the first time in her homeland of Cyprus was motivated by a desire to focus on themes inherent to the region of the Eastern Mediterranean, Middle East & North Africa. In this new context, her enquiry was directed specifically towards the exploration of the environmental challenges faced by countries of this region. Such issues include a growing demand on natural resources, the decreasing availability of fresh water, degraded agricultural landscapes and declining food productivity—many of which have been exacerbated by ongoing political and societal changes. Through this investigation and research, the objective of her professional work developed into something broader in context and marked a new trajectory in her career.

Drawing upon her personal experiences as a starting point, she established the Nonprofit Arts Organization ACTIVATE with the intention of creating a ‘zone’ in which to present projects developed through the exchange of knowledge between people with varied disciplinary knowledge and backgrounds. The ongoing aim is to create collaborative possibilities for people with a similar approach and commitment to related causes, and to develop initiatives that can be more creative and effective than if carried out single-handedly. On a regional level, the objective is to undertake purposeful projects that are strengthened by this cross-over participation, and which can help highlight the ‘connected points’ between the environmental, social, and political issues of this geographical area.

As Director of ACTIVATE, she is currently focused on creating cross-disciplinary projects that specifically address climate change-related challenges of the Eastern Mediterranean & MENA area. As science-based initiatives that bring together people from across this region and diverse spheres of knowledge, the aim of these projects is to build creative and solution-oriented collaborations related to water, food and energy security. In addressing such interconnected topics, the primary objectives include unifying the diverse efforts being carried out across the region – from within the scientific community and academia to individuals working on the ground – while also highlighting the multiple environmental, social, and cultural ‘connected points’ or commonalities shared between the countries and peoples of the MENA region. The underlying principle, while also encouraging public awareness, is to illustrate how working as a broader community – and acknowledging and integrating these factors – will ultimately benefit the crafting of appropriate strategies and applicable environmental policies for this region.

In 2019, the Government of the Republic of Cyprus launched the Eastern Mediterranean & Middle East Climate Change Initiative (EMME-CCI) an international initiative to help coordinate the efforts of this region to ameliorate climate change and its impacts. This Initiative began with its first phase, spearheaded from 2019-21 by The Cyprus Institute, which included the compiling of extensive research by 13 Thematic Scientific Task Forces made up of over 240 scientists and experts contributing from across the region. These Task Forces collected knowledge to produce EMME-focused research Reports that identify gaps in research and policy needs, and also proposed ‘toolkits’ of possible actions and recommendations to address the region’s unique climate challenges with EMME-specific polices.

Having been a member of the Task Force for the Built Environment, Melina then served at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as Advisor for the President’s Initiative on Regional Climate Action for the second and intergovernmental phase of the EMME-CCI, with the specific mandate to forge new communicative and cross-disciplinary pathways within the Climate Action Diplomacy strategy for the Cyprus Government Initiative, in collaboration with the countries of the Eastern Mediterranean & Middle East region.

Melina Nicolaides is internationally Permaculture Design certified (PDC), is an active member of the Advisory Board of the Future Earth MENA Regional Center (FEMRC), and served on the Steering Committee for the European Union Interreg MED Program Aristoil, now in its on-the-ground capacity-building stage. She is currently serving on the Scientific Advisory Committee of the upcoming 3rd International Water Forum that will take place in Athens in May, and on the Organizing Committee of the upcoming Climate Crisis In the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East scheduled for September of this year in Cyprus. Last year, she was invited to serve on the Board of Directors of the Tassos Papadopoulos Research Center, an academic institution devoted to the study of the Republic of Cyprus, and to the archiving of historical, political and diplomatic primary source material.

 

Banner Image: Still from the short film Homo Bulla: 18 Days produced within the Program of Cultural Exchange between
Cyprus & Egypt (2011
© M. Nicolaides)
.