BIO

Karen is a cultural artist, educator, and organizer living in Boston, MA.

In her decades-long work as a community builder and performer, artist Karen Young inspires real connection. Her personal story of disenfranchisement compelled her to find her own voice and use it to help others find theirs. Her passion for taiko drumming was ignited the first time she heard it thirty years ago. It is now the center of her work. Turning aspiration into realization, Karen’s approach to taiko inspires marginalized populations to reclaim voice, culture, power, and a sense of belonging.

Influenced by Japanese-American taiko activists of the 70s, Karen is most interested in using taiko as well as organizing strategies to empower, engage, and inspire people into action. She is a Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture/Boston AIR alumna, Brother Thomas Fellow, and Live Arts Boston awardee. She has founded and helped launch many cultural organizing projects on a local, national, and international level including KASA & Friends, Taiko and the Parks, Older and Bolder, The Genki Spark, and the Brookline Cherry Blossom Festival, and has served in an advisory capacity for the Radical Imagination for Racial Justice regranting program and the Emerald Necklace Conservancy's Olmsted Now Parks Equity and Spatial Justice grant. She deeply values joy and is passionate about building an equitable, diverse arts ecosystem in Boston.

Karen got her taiko start as an original member of Odaiko New England founded by Elaine Fong and has many taiko mentors including Tiffany Tamaribuchi and Roy and PJ Hirabayashi. Karen leads taiko workshops and discussions throughout North America and Europe, is a TCA (Taiko Community Alliance) charter member, and has been part of the North American Taiko Community since 1997.

In addition to her role as a social practice artist, Karen founded the leading youth advocacy organization, Youth on Board. She is a principal author of Youth on Board’s 14 Points: Successfully Involving Youth in Decision-Making (1999) and Your Guide to Youth Board Involvement and the Law (2001) and a contributing author to the resource guide Money Talks, So Can We (1997) and the anthology Asian Voices from Beantown (2012). She has served on numerous boards and commissions and has has been part of the United to End Racism delegation at the Tule Lake Pilgrimage honoring Japanese and Japanese American incarcerees since 2009. In 1990, she was appointed by Presidents Bush and Clinton to the 1990 Commission on National and Community Service, which launched the well-known federal program AmeriCorps.  Karen earned her BA in Human Ecology from Humboldt State University.

Her vision and approach to cultural organizing is grounded in the beliefs that each voice offers a valuable perspective and that people thrive on purpose and connection.