Vashti Harrison
Vashti Harrison is an American writer, illustrator and filmmaker based in Brooklyn, New York. Her book, Big, received the 2024 Randolph Caldecott Medal. She was born in Virginia and her films and other artworks are rooted in Caribbean heritage and folklore.
Early life
Harrison was born in 1988 to an African American father and an Indian mother, who is from Trinidad and Tobago. She was in TAG and was described as a "quiet and polite student" by her TAG teacher Ms. Corson. She went to Nandua Middle in ACPS. She earned her BA in 2010 from the University of Virginia as a double major in Media Studies and Studio Art with concentrations in Film and Cinematography. She held the Aunspaugh 5th Year Fellowship in the McIntire Department of Art in 2010. She then went on to receive an MFA in Film and Video from California Institute of Arts in 2014, where she attended Disney and DreamWorks Animation classes.Career
Films
Harrison's films are experimental and rooted in Caribbean heritage and folklore. Her films have been screened at the New York Film Festival, Rotterdam International Film Festival and Edinburgh International Film Festival. She uses public appearances to offer advice for aspiring artists.- Field Notes is a visual guide to the spiritual culture of Trinidad and Tobago. Harrison shares her own stories about shape-shifters and bloodsuckers, alongside the ghosts of the islands' past. In 2014 it won Best Local Short Film at the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival. It was nominated for the Best Short Film at the 2015 Edinburgh International Film Festival.
- Sixteen the coming-of-age story of Harrison's mother; a metamorphosis from a difficult childhood to beautiful adulthood. It premiered at the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival in 2015, where it was nominated for Best Short Film.
- Forged from the Love of Liberty is a poem about curses and superstitions, named after the anthem of Trinidad and Tobago.
- Harrison worked as a character designer on Hair Love, a Pixar-style animated short which celebrates a positive black father-daughter relationships through the usage of black hair. The film received $284,000 Kickstarter funding, after a campaign headed by NFL wide receiver Matthew Cherry. Hair Love won Best Animated Short Film at the 92nd Academy Awards. Harrison also illustrated a children's book based on the film.
Illustration and books