A few weeks ago I arrived in North Carolina. I was about to meet some special friends face to face for the 1st time, explore a new country and attend a fabulous conference of artists, where I was excited to be teaching 3 days of workshops. It’s something I’ve dreamt about and been working towards for a couple years and had finally arrived. However, this dream didn’t become a reality and actually quickly turned into a pretty nasty experience. On arriving at the airport my passport was confiscated, I was ushered into the immigration department, interrogated, several fingerprints and mug shots taken, searched rather invasively by a scary lady, held in custody and sent back to the UK on the next flight home. I wasn’t allowed my passport until I was on UK soil and its now stamped with ‘refused entry to the USA’. I had enquired about visas before making plans and booking my flight, way back in February. Following all the advice I was given I applied for an ESTA Visa Waiver. I stated that I was going to America on business as an artist. My application was ACCEPTED and I thought I’d done all I needed to do. It was only on arriving in America that I was informed that this wasn’t the right visa requirement. Then why was my application accepted in the first place? Why didn’t they reject it and tell me the right type of visa I needed, while I had enough time to do something about it? Why is this in any way my fault or fair? A baffling, traumatic & exhausting experience. 17hrs flying in a 22hr window. 40hr traveling with a diversion to the American embassy who wouldn’t let me in the door to plead my case. Gutted doesn’t cover it! Since returning I have heard of a multitude of other creatives that this has happened to and here is an article explaining something of the issue: 'Why are artists being denied entry into the US? How did it come to this and who do we blame?' A story with a happy ending But the story does not and must not end there! The amazing thing was that I was able to still teach my workshops at this conference in America via Zoom, from my back garden in the UK! AND I was paid as planned, so my expenses were covered after all! I learnt how to teach using Zoom and was thrilled that it actually worked - a new tool in my tool bag! I had a fantastic facilitator in the room to be my hands and feet for each session - they set everything up and reassured people, we dialogued through Facebook messenger with photos and ideas of alterations as the days when on. My face was beamed into the room larger than life on the big screen where I was able to share my powerpoint slides and videos and do demonstrations as planned. We were even able to have a roaming camera so I could be ‘taken’ close to people and art work and join in with group discussion as if I was there in the room. It was an interesting experience straddling 2 continents for the week - they are 5 hours behind us in the UK, so their 9-5 was my 2 - 10pm but it was fine. I’m still receiving feedback from my students on what they’ve learnt and are now putting into practice from what I taught them in those classes. This was an ordeal that knocked the stuffing out of me, it was costly and I was robbed of the incredible week in America that I had planned, but this whole experience has actually put a fire in me to not accept this as a dead end. I’m more passionate than ever to travel the world as an artist - sharing my art and inspiring creativity in others.
3 Comments
16/11/2019 10:35:27 am
Lovely to hear your latest art news Kate! Proud of you for not letting recent disappointing events get you down! Have a blast enjoying your Fine Art studies at Cambridge! :)
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17/12/2019 02:20:17 pm
Visa application in the US sure can be very difficult for anyone. Beside that the processing time could vary per individual so every application's outcome may not be the same with the other.
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