Joan Marie Kelly possesses extensive and diverse experience as a collaborator, designing art practice as a research methodology in conjunction with scholars from diverse fields, including environmental science, linguistics, tourism studies, and vernacular cultural heritage. She has engaged with linguists and various tribes in Nagaland, India, to create children’s literature aimed at preserving oral languages. Additionally, Kelly conducted a series of workshops with the Kayan and Big Ear peoples in Thailand, near the Myanmar border, in collaboration with Chiang Mai University. Her collaborations extend to the Earth Observatory Singapore, focusing on urgent environmental issues.
In September 2024, Kelly will be a Fellow at the Ballinglen Art Foundation, Ireland. In 2024, her proposal was accepted at the United Nations climate change conference COP29 to conduct a side event leveraging arts and creativity to enhance civic engagement on climate issues. In 2023, Kelly led trauma-informed storytelling workshops for earthquake survivors in Türkiye, in collaboration with Balikesir University. In November 2024, Kelly was a guest of the Algerian Ministry of Culture and Art at the Algeria International Festival for Contemporary Art. Her solo exhibitions have been held in Sri Lanka, Singapore, Blue Mountain Gallery, New York City, Fez, Morocco, Smith College, USA, and New Delhi and Kolkata, India. Recent Biennales include Beijing, Bangladesh, Izmir, Turkey, Korea, and Casablanca.
Her 2nd book, Invisible Personas 2019, includes 52 images and four essays of distinct perspectives by scholars who have worked closely with Kelly. Dr. Bhaskar Mukhopadhyay, a cultural theorist; visual artist Sarah Schuster; Dr. Pamela Karimi, an Iranian art historian; and David Cohen, a prominent art critic in New York City.