SHE WH   

(Left) Brianna Yrene Ramirez (Right) Natasha Shargel

Photos by: Emma McGreevy

Founders

STUNZ

TURNING IDEAZ INTO ART THAT STUNZ

She Who Stunz is a creative studio and multi-medium haus devoted to bold vision, intentional craft, and the kind of work that lingers long after the moment has passed.

Founded by Brianna Yrene Ramirez and Natasha Shargel, She Who Stunz exists at the intersection of discipline and whimsy—where cinematic precision meets fantasy, and fearless advocacy meets imaginative exploration.

At its core is a shared belief: storytelling is sacred.

Together, they create work that stuns not for spectacle alone, but for feeling.

She Who Stunz is a home for bold work.
For stories that refuse to shrink.
For art that lives, evolves, and transforms.

SheWhoStunz@gmail.com

Brianna Yrene Ramirez is an Afro-Caribbean filmmaker, producer, and creative force driven by story and detail. Her work centers the moments that linger—the frames that stay with you long after the screen goes dark. As a producer, she believes in fearless advocacy, wedging doors open so collaborators can move through freely. With experience spanning line producing, creative producing, production management, and art department roles, Brianna creates with intention, urgency, and care. Her work champions bold, femme-forward narratives and treats the creative platform as sacred—meant to be used, challenged, and never wasted.

Natasha Shargel is a Chinese-Jewish multidisciplinary artist who follows whimsy at every turn. Drawn to different fantasies and the beautifully strange, her work pays homage to the weird and the fantastical. Beginning in fine arts but refusing confinement, she continuously adapts—learning new mediums when curiosity strikes. Quick to laughter and led by a large heart, Natasha empathizes deeply with stories of all kinds. To her, art holds a piece of its creator’s soul. It is a living, breathing organism—sustained by the artist and the community surrounding it.

PROJECTS COMING SOON

  • Rewritten Royalty: The Cultural Princess Project

    Photo Series & Experimental Film

    When five women discover the same mysterious storybook, they’re transported into reimagined princess tales rooted in folklore—confronting lineage, identity, and self-definition as myth and reality blur.

    This experimental mixed-media portrait series and expierimental film that explores womanhood and the ways women move through the world—individually, culturally, and collectively. Through reimagined princess narratives rooted in their original folkloric and cultural origins, five young women encounter stories that feel closer to truth than fantasy.

  • Sobremesa

    Photo-Series

    This is a choice—to stay. Sobremesa—the act of lingering, of stretching time just a little longer in the presence of one another. In a world that constantly pulls us apart, asks us to rush, to isolate, to move on—we choose the opposite. We choose to remain. This shoot lives in the inbetween moments: laughter that lingers, conversations that soften into silence, bodies that don’t rush to leave. It is about closeness without urgency, connection without performance, and the quiet rebellion of simply being together. To stay is to resist. To stay is to care. To stay is to live. And like in Mamma Mia—we grow back down again. Rooting ourselves in each other, in memory, in joy. Letting time stretch, letting love take up space. This is not about the moment ending. This is about choosing not to leave.

  • Spirals

    Short Film

    Lucia, a withdrawn 23-year-old cinematographer, spirals after losing a photography job opportunity and discovering she is unexpectedly pregnant. As she grapples with pressure from her long-distance boyfriend, unresolved trauma with her mother, and the weight of her decision, she retreats into photography, memory, and self-destruction. Haunted by the past and overwhelmed by the future, Lucia embarks on an emotional journey toward confronting her pain and reclaiming her sense of self.

  • Salsa A Slow Death

    Spoken Word Poem & Short Film

    “A Slow Death” is a spoken word-style poem that explores the slow fading of Salsa music through the lens of generational conflict. Told in the voice of Mara, an aging Puerto Rican Mother living in the Humbolt Park, the poem is a rhythmic elegy for a genre once pulsing with resistance, love, and cultural pride. As the younger generations dismisses Salsa in favor of viral trap beats and digital clout, Mara laments the loss of connection—not just to music, but to identity, history, and heritage. Blending memory with melody, the poem is both a call to remember and a warning: when we forget our rhythm, we risk forgetting ourselves.

  • Obey

    Photo-Series

    This shoot will represent the defiance of an “obedient woman”. A woman pushed too far, showcasing pure unadulterated feminine rage through her tasks. Cooking. Cleaning. Laundry. These tasks that make the perfect housewife, now I want to turn them on their head and make an audience feel how fed up women are. Through this shoot I want to evoke: Rage and Power. Two traits often associated with masculinity -- however they can be deadly when feminine.