Contributors
Michele Abeles lives and works in New York. Her work has appeared in exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; White Columns, New York, MoMA PS1 as well as "ReMap3" in Athens. She received an MFA in photography from Yale University (2007) and a Rema Hort Mann Visual Arts grant (2010). In April of 2013 she will present her second solo exhibition at 47 Canal, New York.
ADDED: December 9, 2012
Louis Abelman is a filmmaker living in Brooklyn.
ADDED: February 22, 2009
Vahram Aghasyan is an artist living and working in Armenia. His work has been shown at the Tenth International Istanbul Biennial; Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, in Helsinki; the First Contemporary Art Biennale of Thessaloniki; and the Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art.
(
"It Had Just Entered Our Valleys")
ADDED: October 17, 2009
Rahel Aima is a writer and editor living in Brooklyn. She is beginning a collaborative exploration of technomagicalities, called
Duende.
ADDED: December 30, 2010
Eda Akaltun is a London-based artist from Istanbul. Her work has been published in the
Telegraph, Laurence King Publishing,
Creative Review,
Time Out, and
Cent. In 2009, she was short-listed for a
V&A Illustration Award. She is a founding contributor to
Nobrow, a new illustration-publishing venture based in East London.
ADDED: November 16, 2009
Yelena Akhtiorskaya is currently at work on a novel and a collection of stories. She lives in New York City.
(
"Esfir")
ADDED: July 6, 2011
Gwen Allen is a writer, researcher, and assistant professor of art history at San Francisco State University. Her book
Artists’ Magazines: An Alternative Space for Art was published by
MIT Press in March.
ADDED: June 27, 2011
Michael Almereyda is a filmmaker living in New York and Los Angeles. His films include
Another Girl Another Planet,
Nadja,
Hamlet,
William Eggleston in the Real World, and
Paradise.
(
"Looking Fast")
ADDED: May 2, 2011
Anna Altman is a writer, editor, and translator based in New York and previously Triple Canopy's editorial and production coordinator. Her writing has appeared in Frieze, Art in America, and Art Asia Pacific, among others.
ADDED: September 13, 2011
Sophia Al-Maria is based in Doha, Qatar, where she is a contributing editor of
Bidoun magazine and Gulf Collection Curator at the soon-to-be-opened-and-renamed Arab Museum of Modern Art. She is currently writing a book for Harper Perennial entitled
Dune Coon or
Al-Amerikiya, depending on her mood at deadline.
(
"Crude Meridian")
ADDED: March 15, 2010
Mario Aspland is a freelance photographer in Gómez Palacio, Mexico.
ADDED: February 27, 2009
Astrom/Zimmer Astrom/Zimmer is a Zurich-based design studio. Anthon Astrom and Lukas Zimmer began working together in 2007, when they initiated the
Café Society Project, which investigates frameworks for reading, writing, and organizing information on-screen and in print. In 2011, they founded
Astrom/Zimmer studio, which works in research, design, and software development. In the past five years, Astrom and Zimmer have won the Swiss Federal Design Award twice, among other accolades.
ADDED: March 14, 2013
Rachel Aviv is a writer based in Brooklyn and a former Triple Canopy contributing editor. Her writing has appeared in
Harper's, the
Nation, and the
New York Times Magazine.
(
"Only Connect")
ADDED: June 14, 2011
Taylor Baldwin is an artist living in Richmond, Virginia, and a former Triple Canopy contributing editor. His work deals with life in the desert, the specter of imminent catastrophe, and the subtle touches of geology, primarily through sculptural installation, drawing, and video.
ADDED: June 14, 2011
Jesse Ball is the author of
Samedi the Deafness (Vintage, 2007),
The Way Through Doors (Vintage, 2009), and
March Book (Grove, 2004). In 2008, he won the Plimpton Prize for a novella,
The Early Deaths of Lubeck, Brennan, Harp & Carr.
(
"You Must Kill Forty in Death...")
ADDED: June 2, 2008
Bidisha Banerjee is based in San Francisco and Kolkata. She is working on a book
about the life, death, and afterlives of the Ganga.
(
"Flash Yr Idols",
"The Age of Dissolution")
ADDED: November 4, 2008
Claire Barliant is a Brooklyn-based writer whose writing has appeared in the
New Yorker, Afterall, Artforum, and
Modern Painters.
(
"The Hanging at Mankato")
ADDED: July 20, 2011
John Barlow is a British writer. His work spans literary fiction, travelogue, crime fiction, and, most recently, dystopian adventure for young readers. He currently lives in Spain.
ADDED: November 7, 2012
Martina Batan is director at Ronald Feldman Fine Arts. Her interests as a collector and independent curator include outsider and self-taught art.
(
"Way of the Righteous")
ADDED: August 31, 2008
Erica Baum lives and works in New York. She has had solo exhibitions at Bureau, New York; Lüttgenmeijer, Berlin; and Circuit, Lausanne. Past group exhibitions include “Subject, Index,” at Malmö Konstmuseum, Sweden. Her work will be included in the upcoming group exhibition “Postscript: Writing after Conceptual Art,” at the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, and the 2012 São Paulo Bienal. Her work was included in the book
Vitamin Ph: New Perspectives in Photography, edited by T. J. Demos (Phaidon Press, 2006). Her artist’s books include
Dog Ear (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2011), with essays by Kenneth Goldsmith and Beatrice Gross,
Sightings (onestar press, 2011), and
Bbabaubaumbaudevin (Regency Arts Press, 2012).
(
"The Melody Indicator")
ADDED: May 11, 2012
Kurt Beals is a PhD student in German at the University of California, Berkeley, focusing on modern German literature, translation, and critical theory. His translations of authors including Anja Utler, Ernst Jandl, and Alexander Kluge have appeared in publications including Two Lines, n+1, and Dimension2. His translation of Utler’s engulf – enkindle was published by Burning Deck in 2010.
ADDED: January 11, 2011
Martin Beck 's recent exhibitions and projects include “Presentation” at 47 Canal in New York and “the particular way in which a thing exists” at Leonard & Bina Ellen Gallery, Concordia University, Montreal, (2012), contributions to the 29th São Paulo and the 4th Bucharest Biennales (2010), and “Panel 2—‘Nothing better than a touch of ecology and catastrophe to unite the social classes….’” at Gasworks in London (2008) and at the Arthur Ross Architecture Gallery at Columbia University, New York (2009). Beck is the author of
an Exhibit viewed played populated (2005),
About the Relative Size of Things in the Universe (2007), and the editor of
The Aspen Complex (2012).
(
"This Time We’ll Keep It a Secret")
ADDED: November 16, 2012
Zoe Beloff is an artist living in New York. Her work has been featured in international exhibitions and screenings at venues such as the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Freud Dream Museum (St. Petersburg), and the Pompidou Center (Paris). Beloff has been awarded fellowships and grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Foundation for Contemporary Performance Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, and the Jerome Foundation. She teaches at Queens College.
(
"Bodies Against Time")
ADDED: November 28, 2011
Caroline Bergvall is a writer and artist of French-Norwegian origins and currently based in London. She works across art forms, media, and languages, and her projects alternate between books, audio pieces, collaborative performances, and language installations. For 2012-2013, Bergvall was awarded the Judith Wilson Fellowship in Poetry and Drama from the University of Cambridge. Her most recent book is
Meddle English (Nightboat, 2011), and her DVD compilation
Gh<>st Pieces: Four Language-Based Installations was just published by John Hansard Gallery.
(
"Noping")
ADDED: September 10, 2012
Lene Berg is a Norwegian artist and filmmaker currently based in Berlin. Her work includes films, installations, books and collages, and has been shown at, among other places, Whitechapel gallery in London, Art in General in New York as well as at the Sydney Biennale, The Taipei Biennale, Transmediale Berlin and Manifesta.
(
"The Stalin by Picasso Case")
ADDED: November 10, 2008
Rebecca Bird is a painter living in Brooklyn. She studied at the Cooper Union and Kanazawa College of Arts in Japan and sometimes works as an archaeological illustrator in Egypt. She is interested in stage tricks and nonbiological life, especially the kind that happens on paper.
(
"The Riddle of the Traveling Corpse",
"Danny Boy")
ADDED: June 2, 2008
Sonya Blesofsky is a sculptor living and working in Brooklyn. She is an artist-in-residence at CUE Art Foundation in New York. She was formerly a resident at Dieu Donné, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and Smack Mellon. She has exhibited at Transformer, in Washington, DC; Mixed Greens, in New York; and Patricia Sweetow, in San Francisco.
(
"Homemade Memorials",
"Homemade Memorials")
ADDED: August 31, 2008
Roberto Bolaño was a Chilean novelist and poet. He died in 2003 at the age of fifty.
(
"The Caracas Speech")
ADDED: September 2, 2008
Daniel Bozhkov is an artist based in New York. He is a recipient of the 2007 Chuck Close Rome Prize of the American Academy in Rome and of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. His work has been shown at MoMA PS1, New York; Santa Monica Museum of Art, Los Angeles; Skulpturenpark Berlin Zentrum, Berlin; and Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center, Istanbul, as well as in international exhibitions such as the Sixth Mercosul Biennial in Porto Alegre in 2007 and the Ninth Istanbul Biennial in 2005. He is represented by Andrew Kreps Gallery in New York City.
(
"Training in Assertive Hospitality",
"For the Rotation of the Work Never to Stop")
ADDED: June 26, 2010
Lev Bratishenko is a critic living in Montreal. He does research for exhibitions at the Canadian Centre for Architecture.
(
"Gypsy Mansions")
ADDED: May 4, 2009
Emmanuel Broadus is a freelance journalist based in Port-au-Prince and the United States.
(
"Aba Okipasyon")
ADDED: October 23, 2012
Franklin Bruno is the author of
The Accordion Repertoire (poetry; Edge Books, 2012) and
Armed Forces (criticism; Continuum, 2006). He is currently working on a book about bridges, middle eights, and breakdowns in popular music for Wesleyan University Press. His most recent album with the Human Hearts,
Another, was released by Shrimper Records in 2012. He lives in Jackson Heights, Queens.
(
"Wouldn’t It Be Milchadik?")
ADDED: October 16, 2012
Alison Cartwright is based in Brooklyn. She pursues fine-art photo projects while juggling her commercial business, a temperamental bike lock, and pickling experiments.
(
"No Other Home")
ADDED: November 11, 2008
Alejandro Cesarco 's work is currently on display at the São Paulo Biennial and the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna. His solo exhibition “Words Applied to Wounds” opens November 15, 2012, at Murray Guy, New York.
ADDED: December 9, 2012
CF is an artist living and working in Providence. His work has been published in
Bookforum and
Kramer's Ergot. His
Powr Mastrs series of graphic novels is published in the US by PictureBox books, and he has exhibited internationally, including Switzerland, Sweden, and Japan.
(
"The Sacred Prostitute")
ADDED: September 1, 2011
Colby Chamberlain is a Triple Canopy senior editor and a Jacob K. Javits Fellow in the art-history department at Columbia University.
(
"The Balboa Effect")
ADDED: June 14, 2011
Dawn Chan is a writer in New York. She is the guest editor of "Common Minds," Triple Canopy's series of essays and conversations on the contemporary infatuation with the brain. She studied cognitive science at Yale, where she researched multiple-object tracking. She later researched artificial intelligence as a Fulbright scholar at the University of Zurich and studied aphasia patients at the psycholinguistics lab at Columbia University.
ADDED: November 26, 2012
Patrick Clark is a freelance writer living in Queens, New York.
(
"The Dominican Game")
ADDED: February 7, 2009
Gabriella Coleman examines the ethics of online collaboration and institutions as well as the role of the law and digital media in sustaining various forms of political activism. Her first book,
Coding Freedom: The Aesthetics and the Ethics of Hacking, is forthcoming with Princeton University Press; she is currently working on a book about Anonymous and digital activism. She is the Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy at McGill University's Department of Art History & Communication Studies.
(
"Our Weirdness Is Free")
ADDED: November 28, 2011
George Collins is currently setting thirty-three thousand years of environmental indicators to music.
(
"Flash Yr Idols")
ADDED: November 11, 2008
Matthew Connors is an artist based in Brooklyn. He has exhibited in New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Tokyo, Milan, Stockholm, and Madrid. His work can be found in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven. He is an associate professor in the Photography Department at the Massachusetts College of Art & Design in Boston.
ADDED: January 20, 2012
Corina Copp is the author of the poetry pamphlet Pro Magenta/Be Met (Ugly Duckling Presse 2011), and is currently working on the three-part performance The Whole Tragedy of the Inability to Love—based on the work of Marguerite Duras—the first installment of which was presented in this year’s PRELUDE Festival.
ADDED: November 19, 2012
Michael Corris Michael Corris began his career as a member of the collective Art & Language. He continues to pursue an integrated practice of writing, organizing exhibitions, making art and teaching. Recent exhibitions include The Dallas Biennale (April 2012) and The Heide Museum of Art, Victoria, Australia (August 2012); recent publications include Ad Reinhardt (2008) and Art, Word and Image: 2,000 Years of Visual/Textual Interaction (Reaktion Books, 2010). Since November 2009, Corris has held the post of Professor of Art and Chair of the Division of Art at the Meadows School of the Arts/SMU.
ADDED: November 1, 2012
Jordan Crandall is a media artist and theorist based in Los Angeles and an associate professor in the visual arts department at University of California, San Diego.
(
"Unmarked Box on a Counter")
ADDED: June 26, 2010
Sarah Crowner is an artist and erstwhile set designer based in Brooklyn. Her recent solo exhibitions include shows at Galerie Nordenhake, Stockholm; Catherine Bastide, Brussels; and Nicelle Beauchene in New York. She is currently working on an artist's book to be published by Primary Information in September 2012 and her work will be included in an upcoming 2013 exhibition at the Walker Art center about new directions in painting.
(
"The Blind Man")
ADDED: May 14, 2012
Keren Cytter spent her childhood in Israel and lives in Berlin. Her work has been shown at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York and at museums and galleries throughout Europe.
(
"Brush",
"Brush")
ADDED: January 27, 2009
Nancy Davenport is an artist living in New York. Her work has been shown at a number of galleries and museums including Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, NY, the Liverpool Biennial, Sao Paulo Biennial. She recently opened a permanent installation at the Military History Museum in Dresden.
ADDED: January 20, 2012
Moyra Davey lives in New York City. Her "Copperhead" series is currently on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in a show titled "After the Gold Rush."
(
"Receivers, 2003")
ADDED: May 3, 2011
Adam Davies is a photographer whose work explores the edges of American urban and rural landscapes. He recently completed residencies at Yaddo and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and is currently a resident at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. He was born in the United Kingdom.
(
"What Is the Antique in Truro: A Portfolio")
ADDED: April 28, 2009
Clare Davies studies art history at the Institute of Fine Arts and divides her time between Cairo and New York.
(
"This Little Lard")
ADDED: February 10, 2009
Arias Abbruzzi Davis is an artist studying at Columbia University. She is an editorial and production assistant for Triple Canopy.
ADDED: May 24, 2011
Tim Davis lives in Tivoli, New York, and teaches photography at Bard and Yale. He is the author of four books of photographs and two books of poems. His work is in the collections of the Guggenheim, Metropolitan, Whitney, Hirshhorn, Walker, High, and many other public institutions.
(
"Original Ideas in Magic")
ADDED: November 4, 2008
Helen DeWitt is author of
The Last Samurai (2000) and, with Ilya Gridneff, coauthor of
Your Name Here (2007).
ADDED: April 26, 2011
Dignity Sister is an anonymous hobby artist based in Paris Berlin New York.
ADDED: September 7, 2011
Manal Al Dowayan was born and raised in Saudi Arabia and works out of her hometown, Dhahran. Her artworks are part of the permanent collections of the British Museum, the Jordanian National Museum of Fine Art, the Abdullatif Jamil Foundation, and the Delfina Foundation.
(
"Crude Meridian")
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Lívia Drummond lives in Salvador, Brazil. She has a degree in history from the State University of Bahia and is currently pursuing her master’s degree in literature and culture at the Federal University of Bahia with a fellowship from CAPES.
ADDED: October 16, 2012
Keller Easterling is an architect, urbanist, and writer and an associate professor at the Yale School of Architecture. Her work has been widely published in journals such as
Artforum,
Domus,
Grey Room, and
Cabinet. Her work has been exhibited at the Rotterdam Biennale, the Queens Museum, and the Architectural League. Her latest book is
Enduring Innocence: Global Architecture and Its Political Masquerades (MIT, 2005).
(
"The VPL Authority")
ADDED: October 18, 2009
Tor Eigeland is a writer and photographer. His work has been published in
Fortune,
Time,
Newsweek,
Smithsonian Magazine, the
New York Times, and
Saudi Aramco World. He has also worked on eleven books with the National Geographic Society.
(
"Crude Meridian")
ADDED: April 21, 2010
Seth Erickson is the development coordinator for Triple Canopy and a student of information studies at UCLA.
ADDED: November 11, 2008
Jan Estep is an artist, writer, and educator. She explores the relationship between mind, behavior, and visual expression, with particular interest in the relationship between sensory experience and conceptual thought. She is an associate professor of art at the University of Minnesota.
(
"Semblance of Fact")
ADDED: October 2, 2012
Roe Ethridge is a photographer who has shown extensively in the United States and internationally. He was included in the Whitney Biennial in 2008, and in 2010 was in the New Photography show at MoMA and the "Les Recontres D’Arles Photography Show." He was recently short-listed for the Deutsche-Boerse Prize for Photography.
(
"Studio with Red Bag, 2009")
ADDED: April 22, 2011
John W. Fail is a Web developer for Triple Canopy.
ADDED: May 21, 2010
Ryan Falkowitz is a photographer based in New York.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Michael Famighetti is an editor and writer. He's currently working on a relaunch and redesign of Aperture magazine. He has edited numerous photography books, including volumes by William Christenberry, Robert Adams, John Divola, Jonas Bendiksen, and a series based on the website Tiny Vices. His writing has appeared in Frieze, Bookforum, Aperture, and OjodePez, among other publications. Famighetti has degrees from Bard College and Columbia University, where he has also taught. He has served as a judge for the American Society of Magazine Editors National Magazine Awards and has been a guest reviewer and speaker at many international photography festivals and institutions, including the Bamako Biennial; Krakow PhotoMonth; GuatePhoto; Rhubarb Rhubarb, Birmingham, U.K.; Festival de la Luz, Buenos Aires; Museet for Fotokunst, Odense; and Fotografiska, Stockholm.
ADDED: December 9, 2012
Elizabeth Feidelson writes and makes dances. She is an associate editor at Triple Canopy.
ADDED: January 25, 2013
Peter Fend is an engineer, businessman and artist. His work has appeared at the Venice Biennale and Documenta IX. He has had solo exhibitions with Esther Schipper, Koln; Christian Nagel, Berlin; Anne de Villepoix, Paris; George Kargl, Vienna; American Fine Arts, New York and elsewhere. His project with Essex Street, New York,
Uber Die Grenze has since traveled to the Fondazione Giuliani, Rome and the Gemeentemuseum at the Hague.
ADDED: March 18, 2013
Danyel Ferrari is a graduate student in New York University's department of visual culture.
(
"Brown Skin, Blue Masks")
ADDED: October 26, 2010
Ryan Ffrench is an Australian filmmaker based in Portland, Oregon.
(
"Aba Okipasyon")
ADDED: September 10, 2012
Yevgeniy Fiks is a Moscow-born, New York-based artist. His work deals with intersections between the histories of the twentieth century international leftist movements, American history, Modernism, and legacy of the Cold War.
(
"Moscow")
ADDED: November 18, 2011
Zlatan Filipović is an assistant professor of multimedia, film, and video art at the American University of Sharjah. He has taught at the Academy of Fine Arts in Sarajevo, where he created the school's first video lab. He continues to organize workshops fostering interactive media production in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
(
"Dubai Dream Houses")
ADDED: October 18, 2009
Bryan Finoki is a writer and the author of
Subtopia: A Field Guide to Military Urbanism. He is also the proprietor of the blog Subtopia.
(
"The Anatomy of Ruins")
ADDED: October 18, 2009
Jim Fletcher has worked with Richard Maxwell and the New York City Players for more than twelve years, most recently in Early Plays, a joint production with the Wooster Group. He is a member of the cast of Gatz, the Elevator Repair Service production based on The Great Gatsby, and has worked with Bernadette Corporation, Claire Fontaine, the English group Forced Entertainment (Sight is the Sense That Dying People Tend to Lose First, Quizoola!), and Sarah Michelson (Devotion). In 2012, he received an Obie award for sustained excellence of performance.
ADDED: November 19, 2012
Adam Florin is a Triple Canopy Web developer but not a technocrat.
ADDED: March 11, 2010
Dan Fox is a writer and musician living in New York. He is senior editor of
Frieze magazine and, with Andy Cooke and Nathaniel Mellors, runs the label
Junior Aspirin Records.
ADDED: September 7, 2011
Kimmy Eliot Fung makes, writes, reads, sees, understands. Runs painting room, an atelier based in Brooklyn.
ADDED: September 2, 2008
Ellie Ga explores the limits of photographic documentation through her artwork, often incorporating exploratory writing and culminating in performative lectures, videos, and installations. Her work has been exhibited in New York at Bureau and the Swiss Institute; Galerie du Jour, Paris and Hong Kong; Konstmuseum, Malmö, Sweden; and Projekt 0047, Oslo, Norway. She has performed at RISO-Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Sicily; Institute for Cultural Inquiry, Berlin; Bétonsalon, Paris; and in New York City at PS1 and for the Edifying Series. Recent projects include a solo exhibition at Milliken Gallery, Stockholm and performances at the Kitchen, New York; Power Plant, Toronto; and Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton, Paris. She is a founding member of Ugly Duckling Presse.
(
"A Hole to See the Ocean Through")
ADDED: December 30, 2010
Keith Gessen is a cofounder of n+1 and the editor of It’s No Good: Poems, Essays, Actions by Kirill Medvedev, due out from n+1 and Ugly Duckling Presse in December 2012.
ADDED: September 10, 2012
Rob Giampietro is a designer, writer, and principal at
Project Projects.
ADDED: November 30, 2010
Simone Gilges is a photographer and artist living in Berlin. Since 1995 she also realized numerous exhibitions with the collective Honey-Suckle Company.
(
"Information Age")
ADDED: April 23, 2011
US Girls (Meg Remy) has released two albums,
Introducing and
Go Grey, both on Siltbreeze, and singles and CD-Rs on Chocolate Monk, Not Not Fun, Hardscrabble Amateurs, Cherry Burger, and Atelier Ciseaux.
ADDED: May 10, 2011
Renee Gladman 's most recent work of prose is
The Ravickians, published this fall by Dorothy, a Publishing Project. She lives in Providence and teaches fiction and book arts at Brown University.
(
"Calamities")
ADDED: September 1, 2011
Beka Goedde is a printmaker and sculptor whose work explores the perception of change, duration, and the physical body in space. She is currently artist in residence at PS122 in New York City and an MFA candidate at Bard College.
(
"Stoppages")
ADDED: February 8, 2011
Goldin+Senneby is a framework for collaboration established in 2004 by artists Simon Goldin and Jakob Senneby to explore juridical, financial, and spatial constructs through notions of the performative and the virtual. Goldin+Senneby's work has been exhibited at Neuer Aachener Kunstverein (Aachen, Germany), Kadist (Paris), Index (Stockholm), The Power Plant (Toronto), Manifesta 9 (Genk, Belgium), Witte de With (Rotterdam), and Moderna Museet (Stockholm).
ADDED: September 10, 2012
Billy Gomberg is a musician and video artist living in Brooklyn.
ADDED: February 22, 2009
Daniel Gordon received a bachelor of arts from Bard College in 2004 and an MFA from Yale School of Art in 2006. He has exhibited his photographs in solo exhibitions at Zach Feuer Gallery and Leo Koenig Inc. in New York City and Claudia Groeflin Gallery in Zurich. He has been included in exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the CCS Museum at Bard College, and Gallery 400 at the University of Illinois, and in 2010 his work was featured in Greater New York at MoMA PS1. Gordon is the author of
Portrait Studio (onestar press, 2009) and
Flying Pictures (powerHouse Books, 2009). He lives and works in Brooklyn.
(
"Revolving Portrait")
ADDED: January 13, 2011
David Graeber is an anthropologist. He teaches at Goldsmiths College in London and is the author of five books, including
Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology,
Direct Action: An Ethnography, and
Towards an Anthropological Theory of Value: The False Coin of Our Own Dreams. A new book,
Debt: The First 5,000 Years, will be published in January by Melville House.
(
"To Have Is to Owe")
ADDED: November 15, 2010
Neil Greenberg has been drawing maps since he was in high school. He currently lives in Detroit, where he runs a transit system for students at the University of Michigan and schedules buses for Southeast Michigan’s Transit Authority.
(
"Boom, Bust, Burn, Blame: Fake Omaha")
ADDED: April 30, 2009
James Grimmelmann is an associate professor at New York Law School and a member of its Institute for Information Law and Policy. He studies how the law governing the creation and use of computer software affects individual freedom and the distribution of wealth and power in society. He writes about intellectual property, virtual worlds, search engines, online privacy, and other topics in computer and Internet law. He blogs at the
Laboratorium.
ADDED: June 12, 2012
Barry Harbaugh lives in Brooklyn. He was a research editor at the defunct
Condé Nast Portfolio and has written for
Wired.
(
"Bullion with a Mission")
ADDED: November 4, 2008
Jiminie Ha is an independent designer and founder of
W/—— project space in Chinatown.
ADDED: November 30, 2010
Heatsick is the solo moniker of Berlin-based musician Steven Warwick, also known as one half of Birds of Delay.
ADDED: August 15, 2011
Adam Helms is a New York–based artist and a former Triple Canopy contributing editor. He is obsessive, a collector of ephemera, and a friend to all animals.
(
"Milestones: The Noble Lie")
ADDED: June 14, 2011
Sheila Heti is the author of five books: the story collection
The Middle Stories; the novels
Ticknor and
How Should a Person Be?; a book for children titled
We Need a Horse; and with Misha Glouberman, a book of spoken philosophy called
The Chairs Are Where the People Go. She is the creator of the
Trampoline Hall Lecture Series. She lives in Toronto.
(
"A Logical Love Story")
ADDED: September 19, 2011
Sean Higgins is a writer and critic living in Portland, Maine, and an editorial and production assistant for Triple Canopy. He writes an irregular column for the BOMBlog on sound, media, and sound art. His work has appeared in
Deep Leap, Sounding the Virtual: Gilles Deleuze and the Theory and Philosophy of Music and
The Official Catalog of the Library of Potential Literature.
ADDED: January 24, 2011
Hilda Hilst (1930–2004) is widely recognized as one of the most important lusophone authors of the twentieth century. Born in the state of São Paulo, Hilst obtained a law degree from the University of São Paulo in 1952 and, a few years later, moved to a small family estate; for the rest of her days, she lived in near seclusion and devoted herself to literature. Hilst published more than fifty works of poetry, fiction, and theater.
(
"Crassus Agonicus")
ADDED: October 16, 2012
Antonia Hirsch is an artist living and working in Berlin. Her work has been exhibited at the Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver), The Power Plant (Toronto), Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Tramway (Glasgow), and ZKM Museum of Contemporary Art (Karlsruhe). She is a contributing editor of
Fillip.
ADDED: March 18, 2013
Orra White Hitchcock (1796–1863) was a diarist and self-taught scientific illustrator of flora, fauna, fossils, and geological formations in Amherst, Massachusetts. Included in Issue 14 are charts she painted for classroom use.
ADDED: September 10, 2011
James Hoff is an artist living and working in Brooklyn. He is also a founder and editor (along with Miriam Katzeff) of
Primary Information, a nonprofit arts organization devoted to publishing artists' books and publications by artists.
ADDED: July 21, 2011
Karen Holmberg is an archaeologist specializing in volcanic regions who has taught at Brown and Stanford Universities.
(
"Hand Held Lava")
ADDED: July 10, 2011
Karl Holmqvist is an artist, poet, performer, and atypical activist. He works with various media and supports, creating installations, sound pieces, videos, performances, collages, and artist’s books. He has shown at Galerie Giti Nourbakhsch, Berlin; Gaga Arte Contemporaneo, Mexico City; Marabouparken, Sundbyberg, Sweden; and the Fifty-Fourth Venice Biennale; and a collection of his writings was published in 2009 by BookWorks in London under the title What’s My Name? "You Beat Me" was recorded and mixed by Stefan Tcherepnin in New York, 2010.
ADDED: September 7, 2011
Cathy Park Hong ’s first collection, Translating Mo'um, was published in 2002 by Hanging Loose Press. Her second book, Dance Dance Revolution, was chosen for the Barnard New Women Poets Prize and was published by W.W. Norton in 2007. She is the recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, and a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship. Her writing on politics and her reviews have appeared in the Village Voice, the Guardian, Salon, Christian Science Monitor, and New York Times Magazine.
(
"Forecasts")
ADDED: March 19, 2012
Dan Hoy lives in Brooklyn, NY and is the author of the poetry collections
Omegachurch (Solar Luxuriance, 2010),
Polaroid (Wrath of Dynasty, 2010), and
Glory Hole (Mal-O-Mar, 2009). He previously co-edited
SOFT TARGETS (2006-2007), a magazine of art, philosophy, and literature, and currently contributes to the collective blog
www.montevidayo.com. His personal site is
www.thepinupstakes.com.
(
"Basic Instinct: Poems")
ADDED: September 19, 2011
A. B. Huber is a professor at NYU's Gallatin School for Individualized Study whose current work is focused on the force and form of critique in times of war.
(
"The Flash Made Flesh")
ADDED: February 14, 2011
Travis Jeppesen is a novelist, poet, and art critic based in Berlin. His books include
Victims (2003),
Poems I Wrote While Watching TV (2006),
Wolf at the Door (2007), and a collection of art criticism,
Disorientations: Art on the Margins of the "Contemporary" (2008).
ADDED: April 26, 2011
D. H. Johnson is a stage and screen actor in New York City.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
David Joselit
ADDED: April 18, 2012
Adela Jušić is an artist working in video, installation, and performance and living in Sarajevo. She is a founding member of the
Crvena Association for Culture and Art. In 2010 she received the Zvono Award for best young artist in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Her work has been exhibited at Manifesta 8, Kunstmuseum (Bonn, Germany), El Parqueadero (Bogotá, Colombia), Espace Appolonia (Strasbourg, France); the Goethe-Institut Los Angeles, and Gallery P74 (Ljubljana).
ADDED: March 21, 2013
Howie Kahn has written for
GQ and the
New York Times, among other publications. He lives in Brooklyn.
(
"Akhmatova in Azerbaijan")
ADDED: June 14, 2011
Craig Kalpakjian is an artist living in Brooklyn. His work has been exhibited extensively in the US and abroad. His most recent solo show took place at the Baukunst Galerie in Cologne, Germany, in the summer of 2007.
(
"Tunguska International")
ADDED: January 27, 2009
Dana Kash enjoys bright colors and white noise.
ADDED: December 7, 2009
Seth Kelly is an artist and curator. His artwork includes drawings, collages, sculptures, videos, and installations; recently he has also been giving performative lectures. Since receiving his BFA from the School of Visual Arts, Kelly has exhibited extensively in New York, at venues such as Artists Space and PS1.
ADDED: May 26, 2010
Peter Kerlin is a musician/artist/educator from Brooklyn. His ongoing musical projects include Minetta, Source of Yellow, Chris Forsyth's Ideal Heads, and Christmas Decorations. He is an adjunct professor in the Electronic Design and Multimedia Department at the City College of New York.
(
"Between Scans")
ADDED: January 30, 2009
Jon Kessler is an artist living in New York. He teaches at Columbia's School of the Arts and plays guitar in the X-Patsys, the band he formed with Barbara Sukowa and Robert Longo.
(
"You Have 33 Friends")
ADDED: June 2, 2008
Sarah Kessler is a writer and a former Triple Canopy senior editor. She divides her time between Los Angeles and the comparative literature department of the University of California, Irvine.
(
"Tunguska International")
ADDED: December 14, 2010
Murad Khan Mumtaz is an artist currently based in Lahore, Pakistan, where he is an assistant professor at the National College of Art. He graduated from Columbia University on a Fulbright scholarship in 2010. He is represented by Tracy Williams Ltd. in New York.
(
"Origin, Departure")
ADDED: July 5, 2011
Jacob Kirkegaard is a Berlin-based Danish artist who focuses on the scientific and aesthetic aspects of resonance, time, sound, and hearing. His installations, compositions, and performances deal with acoustic spaces and phenomena that usually remain imperceptible. He has presented his works at exhibitions and festivals around the world and has released five albums (mostly on the British label Touch). He is also a member of the sound-art collective freq_out.
(
"The Sea of Trees")
ADDED: March 17, 2010
Ish Klein is the author of the poetry books
Moving Day (2011) and
Union! (2009), published by
Canarium Books. She lives in Amherst with Greg Purcell, where they produce a poetry podcast called
Noslander.
A compilation of her videos, entitled
Success Window, has been released by
Poor Claudia of Portland, Oregon.
(
"Like on the Subject of the Icebreak")
ADDED: August 24, 2011
Melanie Claire Koch is the founder and editor in chief of the online arts & culture magazine
Beekiller. She lives in New York and enjoys gothic novels, 1970s Italian horror films, sea monsters, and strange discoveries.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Wayne Koestenbaum has published thirteen books of poetry, criticism, and fiction, including
Humiliation, Best-Selling Jewish Porn Films, Hotel Theory, Moira Orfei in Aigues-Mortes, Jackie Under My Skin, and
The Queen's Throat. He is a Distinguished Professor of English at the CUNY Graduate Center.
(
"Outside In")
ADDED: September 19, 2011
Lara Kohl is an interdisciplinary artist leading a transdisciplinary life in Brooklyn. Her work has been shown in galleries in the US and abroad. She teaches at Pratt Institute.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Prem Krishnamurthy is a graphic designer, curator, and founding principle of New York-based design studio Project Projects.
ADDED: January 26, 2012
Christy Lange is associate editor of
Frieze.
(
"After the Fact")
ADDED: May 3, 2011
Ingrid Langston is a graduate of the Institute of Fine Arts living in Brooklyn.
ADDED: September 16, 2011
John Latta wrote
The Everyday in a period of one hundred days, one section per day. He is the author of
Rubbing Torsos (Ithaca House, 1979) and
Breeze (Notre Dame University Press, 2003). He writes regularly at
Isola di Rifiuti.
(
"From ‘The Everyday’")
ADDED: March 3, 2009
Susanne Leeb
ADDED: April 18, 2012
Jessica Lee studies film and documentary. She currently resides in Brooklyn.
ADDED: September 16, 2011
Margaret Lee is an artist who, in 2009, founded the exhibition space 179 Canal, New York, which has since evolved into 47 Canal, operated in collaboration with Oliver Newton. Lee's past curatorial projects and exhibitions have been hosted by White Columns, X-Initiative, and Performa '09, among other venues. Her first solo show took place at Jack Hanley Gallery in 2011. This fall, her work will be included in the exhibition New Pictures of Common Objects, curated by Christopher Lew, at MoMA PS1.
ADDED: November 6, 2012
Zoe Leonard is a New York–based artist who works with photography, sculpture, and installation. Recent exhibitions include those at Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland; Museo Nacional Reina Sofía, Madrid; Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich; Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna; Dia:Beacon, Beacon, New York; Dia at the Hispanic Society, New York; Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio; and Documenta 12. She is co-chair of the graduate program in photography, Bard College. She has an upcoming solo show in 2012 at the Camden Arts Centre, London.
ADDED: January 26, 2012
Alex Lesy is a graphic designer living in Brooklyn. He is design director at Bookforum and senior designer at Artforum.
ADDED: March 6, 2012
Per-Oskar Leu lives and works in Oslo. His recent solo exhibitions include “Vox Clamantis in Deserto,” 1/9 Unosunove, Rome; “Part Thirteen,” Vanish, Frankfurt; “BFF,” Johan Berggren Gallery, Malmö, Sweden; and “Ideal Setting (with Fredrik Værslev),” Ping-Pong Gallery, Malmö, Sweden (all 2010). In 2009, he was commissioned by Frieze to create a site-specific work. Leu has studied at the Städelschule, Frankfurt (2008–2009), Glasgow School of Art (2006), and National Academy of Fine Art, Oslo (2002–2006).
(
"A Forcing of Barriers",
"Sixty-Five Years of Treason")
ADDED: November 9, 2010
David Levine is an artist based in Brooklyn and Berlin. His performances and projects have been presented at MoMA, Mass MoCA, Documenta 12 (with
Cabinet), and the Townhouse Gallery (Cairo), as well as Galerie Feinkost (Berlin) and François Ghebaly Gallery (Los Angeles).
(
"Matter of Rothko",
"International Art English")
ADDED: July 19, 2011
Justin Lieberman is an artist based in Brooklyn.
(
"State Changes")
ADDED: May 2, 2011
Michelle Lim is a studio art major at New York University.
ADDED: September 12, 2011
Tan Lin is the author, most recently, of
7 Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004 The Joy of Cooking and
Insomnia and the Aunt. The recipient of a Getty Distinguished Scholar Grant and a Warhol Foundation/Creative Capital Arts Writing Grant to complete a book on the writings of Andy Warhol, he is also working on a novel called
Our Feelings Were Made by Hand.
(
"The Patio and the Index")
ADDED: August 29, 2011
Gareth Long is an artist based in New York. He holds a BA in visual studies and classical civilizations from the University of Toronto and an MFA from Yale University. Recent solo exhibitions include those at the Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Lethbridge; Kate Werble Gallery, New York; Michael Benevento, Los Angeles; and Torri, Paris.
(
"Literary Asses")
ADDED: September 21, 2012
Jordan Lord is a writer and video artist, studying at Columbia University. He is also an editorial and production assistant for Triple Canopy.
ADDED: June 3, 2010
Laurence Lowe is a writer based in Brooklyn and a former editor of Triple Canopy. His work has appeared in the New Republic, GQ, the New York Times, n+1, and Metropolis M.
ADDED: June 14, 2011
Mina Loy (1882–1966) was a writer, artist, actor, and lamp designer.
(
"The Sacred Prostitute")
ADDED: September 7, 2011
Anna Lundh is a visual artist, born in Sweden and based in Stockhom and New York. Lundh’s work investigates cultural phenomena, social agreements, technology, and language and takes the form of video, text, installation, and various experiments. In recent years she has participated in residency programs such as LMCC Workspace and Flux Factory, New York, and Omi International Arts Center, Ghent; and shown her work at Bonniers Konsthall, Haninge Konsthall, Kalmar Konstmuseum, and Norrköpings Konstmuseum in Sweden and X-Initiative (Rhizome), Marian Spore, Leo Koenig Inc. Projekte, and Apexart in New York.
(
"The Tale of the Big Computer")
ADDED: July 10, 2011
Matthew Lusk is an artist based in Brooklyn.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Christopher Lyon is an art writer and editor living in Brooklyn. He is editor in chief of Prestel Publishing.
(
"Notes in Time")
ADDED: October 29, 2010
Tony Maimone is a Brooklyn-based composer and musician. He embraces the language of Morton Feldman, the chance of improvisation, and the obscurity afforded by a brief bio. He plays in the band And the Wiremen and was a founding member of Pere Ubu.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Hedia Maron is a filmmaker living in Brooklyn, NY. Her first feature documentary,
Before Us, about her strange and beautiful family, is currently in production.
(
"The Dynasty Handbag Show")
ADDED: November 7, 2012
Russell Martin is an artist and writer in London. Working with group dialogue as a medium, he creates one-off events that are not recorded or exhibited.
(
"Transit")
ADDED: January 27, 2009
Rachel Mason is a sculptor and musician. She has composed 8 full length albums and 5 operas. Her work has been shown at Park Avenue Armory, Empac Performance Center in Troy, Kunsthalle Zurich, Swiss Institute, School of the Art Institute Chicago, Art in General, Detroit Museum of Contemporary Art. She will be releasing two albums in 2012 on Shatter Your Leaves Records.
(
"Campaign Journal")
ADDED: September 19, 2011
Harry Mathews is the author of six novels and several collections of poetry; his most recent publications are The Human Country: New and Collected Stories, The Case of the Persevering Maltese: Collected Essays, Oulipo Compendium (edited with Alastair Brotchie), and My Life in CIA: A Chronicle of 1973.
ADDED: December 8, 2010
Nick Mauss is an artist based in New York. His exhibition “Perforations” is on view at Midway Contemporary Art in Minneapolis until November 15, 2011. Release of the LP compilation Crystal Flowers on Dial Records forthcoming.
ADDED: September 7, 2011
Andrew Maxwell is a linguist and taxonomist working on machine learning and classification problems at Google. A self-described "friend of the poets," he's edited several little magazines, including the
Germ and
Double Change, and programs reading and lecture series in the Los Angeles area, most recently as codirector of the
Poetic Research Bureau.
(
"Literary Product Trials")
ADDED: June 2, 2008
James McCourt is the venerable author of
Mawrdew Czgowchwz, the tale of the ultimate diva;
Kaye Wayfaring in Avenged;
Time Remaining, an AIDS lament;
Delancey's Way, a Washington saga;
Wayfaring at Waverly in Silver Lake;
Queer Street, the Rise and Fall of an American Culture; and
Now Voyagers, Book
One: The Night Sea Journey. "The Canticle of Skoozle" is a segment from his eventually forthcoming
On Life So Far & The Pathetique. He lives in New York City, Washington, Dublin, and Crossmolina, County Mayo, with the novelist and
renowned picture editor Vincent Virga.
(
"The Canticle of Skoozle")
ADDED: September 1, 2011
Joseph McElroy is the author of nine novels, including
A Smuggler's Bible,
Hind's Kidnap,
Ancient History: A Paraphase,
Lookout Cartridge,
Plus,
Women and Men,
The Letter Left to Me,
Actress in the House, and
Cannonball (forthcoming). He lives in New York.
ADDED: May 10, 2010
Kirill Medvedev is a socialist, antifascist, and poet living in Moscow.
(
"America: A Prophecy")
ADDED: September 10, 2012
Rustam Mehta is an architect practicing in New Haven and teaching at Wesleyan University.
(
"The VPL Authority")
ADDED: October 18, 2009
Adam Michaels is a founding principle of the New York-based design studio Project Projects, and the editor and designer of Inventory Books.
ADDED: January 26, 2012
Dawn of Midi is an ensemble composed of Qasim Naqvi (percussion), Aakaash Israni (contrabass), and Amino Belyamani (piano). Based in Paris and New York, the group melds free jazz, minimalism, and musique concrète. Its debut album,
First, was released this year by
Accretions.
ADDED: November 20, 2010
Nadja Millner-Larsen is a writer based in Brooklyn. She is a PhD candidate in the Department of Media, Culture and Communication at New York University, where she teaches courses on global visual culture and media theory. Her dissertation research is about the visual rhetorics of leftist militancy in the postwar era.
(
"Brown Skin, Blue Masks")
ADDED: October 25, 2010
Joe Milutis is a writer and media artist and an assistant professor of interdisciplinary arts at the University of Washington, Bothell. He is the author of numerous multimedia essays and the book
Ether: The Nothing That Connects Everything.
(
"R, Adieu",
"The Quiddities")
ADDED: March 15, 2010
Isabelle Moffat is an independent scholar living in Berlin. She received her PhD from MIT in 2002.
ADDED: March 18, 2013
Amir Mogharabi is an artist and the editor of
Farimani, a new critical journal. His editorial and artistic practice derives from an interest in how progress is conceptualized historically and the various ways in which history can be rewritten when approached as invention. He lives in New York.
(
"Heraclitus Series")
ADDED: November 4, 2008
K. Silem Mohammad is the author of Breathalyzer (Edge Books, 2008), A Thousand Devils (Combo Books, 2004), and Deer Head Nation (Tougher Disguises, 2003). He is editor of
Abraham Lincoln.
ADDED: November 6, 2012
Thomas Moran is a graduate of the Yale School of Architecture and a practicing architect.
(
"The VPL Authority")
ADDED: October 18, 2009
Jacob Carpenter Morris grew up with a full view of the night sky in rural Vermont. He studied composition at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and has been recording and touring since moving to New York City in 2001. His composition “VWB 373: Theme for ‘De Tribus Impostoribus’” was assembled without the use of any digital editing.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Sam Moyer was born in Chicago, raised between Los Angeles and Hanover, Massachusetts, and presently lives and works in Brooklyn. Her work has been included in several shows in New York including Greater New York 2010, at MoMA PS1, and the current Public Art Fund show “Total Recall.” She is represented by Société in Berlin and Rachel Uffner Gallery in New York.
ADDED: September 10, 2011
Nicholas Muellner is a photographer and writer based in West Danby, New York. His recent book projects, including
The Amnesia Pavilions (2011) and
The Photograph Commands Indifference (2009), explore the role of photography in autobiographical narrative.
(
"Amnesia Pavilions")
ADDED: November 18, 2011
Matt Mullican was born in 1951 and currently resides in Berlin. Working in performance, installation, digital technology, and sculpture, and employing tools ranging from hypnosis to cartography, Mullican seeks to develop a cosmological system based on his personal visual and symbolic vocabulary. His work has been exhibited extensively in the US and internationally.
(
"Planetarium")
ADDED: October 27, 2010
Eileen Myles 's
Inferno (a poet's novel) is just out from OR books. For the essay collection
The Importance of Being Iceland (2009), she received a Creative Capital/Warhol Foundation grant.
Sorry, Tree (2007) is her most recent book of poems. In 2010, the Poetry Society of America awarded her the Shelley Prize.
ADDED: April 26, 2011
Joanna Neborsky is a maker of jittery ink drawings and 1960s-stung collage; someone who wasn't, remarkably, Joanna Neborsky, said her work suggests a blend of "Shel Silverstein,
Yellow Submarine, and Cy Twombly." (She would gently add Monty Python.) Her first book,
Illustrated Three-Line Novels: Félix Fénéon, a collection of gruesome turn-of-the century news items translated by Luc Sante, was published by
Mark Batty Publisher in September 2010. Her clients include Farrar, Straus & Giroux,
W Magazine, and the
New York Times.
(
"The Riddle of the Traveling Corpse")
ADDED: June 2, 2008
New Humans is Brooklyn-based artists Mika Tajima and Howie Chen. Under the New Humans moniker, they have worked with sound, video, sculpture, and installation in performances at such venues as Ballroom Marfa, the Whitney Biennial, and the Walker Art Center. They have collaborated with Vito Acconci, José León Cerrillo, Philippe Decrauzat, Matt Suib, and C. Spencer Yeh, among others.
(
"New Black")
ADDED: February 9, 2009
Joshua Noble is a writer, designer, and programmer based in Portland, Oregon, and New York City, as well as the author of, most recently,
Programming Interactivity.
ADDED: November 16, 2010
David Noriega is a writer and translator who spent his childhood in Bogotá, his adolescence in Binghamton, New York, and his young adulthood in Providence. He currently lives in New York.
ADDED: May 29, 2008
Ken Okiishi is an artist who lives between New York and Berlin. His books include
One Season in Hell (2007) and
A Fair to Meddling Story (2008), and his writing has appeared in
Bidoun and
Artforum.
ADDED: October 10, 2012
Jena Osman 's books of poems include
Public Figures (Wesleyan University Press, 2012),
The Network (Fence Books 2010, selected for the National Poetry Series in 2009),
An Essay in Asterisks (Roof Books, 2004), and
The Character (Beacon Press, winner of the 1998 Barnard New Women Poets Prize).
(
"Popular Science")
ADDED: October 22, 2012
Wazhmah Osman is a filmmaker and PhD candidate in New York University’s Department of Media, Culture, and Communication. Her research looks at the politics of representation and visual culture around issues and imagery pertaining to the so-called war on terror and Afghan women, and how they reverberate globally as well as locally, in her native Afghanistan. Her critically acclaimed documentary,
Postcards from Tora Bora, has screened in film festivals nationally and internationally.
(
"Brown Skin, Blue Masks")
ADDED: November 4, 2010
Arthur Ou is an artist and writer based in New York. His work has been featured in publications including
Blind Spot,
Art on Paper,
North Drive Press,
Art in America, and
The Photograph as Contemporary Art, new edition (Thames and Hudson). His writings have been published in
Aperture,
X-Tra,
Afterall.org,
Bidoun,
Words Without Pictures, and
artforum.com.
(
"To and From R.F.")
ADDED: April 23, 2011
Rachel Owens lives and works in Brooklyn and is represented by ZieherSmith gallery. She received her MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1999 and was awarded a fellowship by Socrates Sculpture Park in 2007. She has previously exhibited at Bellwether Gallery, Jack the Pelican Presents, Lehmann Maupin Gallery, and apexart.
(
"Reconstruction")
ADDED: November 3, 2008
Boru O’Brien O’Connell is an artist based in Brooklyn. He works primarily with film and video installation, photography, and writing. Recent projects include a three-channel video work and writing for
And lose the name of action, a performance by Miguel Gutierrez that has been shown at Walker Arts Center (Minneapolis), Brooklyn Academy of Music (New York), and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago. His work has been published by
Blind Spot,
Bidoun,
Vice, DIS, and Triple Canopy, and written about in the
New Yorker, the
New York Times, and
Frieze. O'Brien O'Connell's first solo exhibition in New York will be in 2014 at the Kitchen. He received an MFA from Bard College in 2011.
(
"State Changes",
"Adaptation after Metalogue (Part 2)")
ADDED: May 2, 2011
Meghan O’Hara is a San Francisco-based filmmaker who holds an MFA in documentary production from Stanford University. Her current work focuses on the contemporary relevance of representations of the cold war. Along with Mike Attie, she is in production on a documentary that follows a group of Vietnam War reenactors, many of whom are veterans of recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
(
"Tektite Revisited")
ADDED: July 17, 2011
Prudence Peiffer is a senior editor of Artforum.
ADDED: April 18, 2012
Ben Phelps-Rohrs recently completed an internship at National Public Radio's
Day to Day and now lives in Pittsburgh. He plans to travel to Siberia this winter to visit the third-largest ice city on the planet.
(
"I Knew Then It Was All on Me")
ADDED: September 1, 2008
John Powers was born in Chicago and now lives in Brooklyn. His artwork has been shown at PS1, Exit Art, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, the Swiss Institute, CUE Art Foundation, and the Brooklyn Museum, among others.
(
"Star Wars: A New Heap")
ADDED: November 4, 2008
Julia Powers is a translator based in New York and New Haven and a PhD student in comparative literature at Yale University. She is the recipient of the 2012 Susan Sontag Translation Prize.
ADDED: October 16, 2012
R. H. Quaytman R. H. Quaytman is a painter living in New York City. Over the last decade Quaytman’s practice has encompassed various roles, including artist, writer, and curator. Recent projects include the artist book Spine published in 2011, directorship (from 2005 to 2008) of the New York gallery known as Orchard, a collective of artists, filmmakers, and art historians. In 2009 Quaytman’s first solo museum exhibition was mounted at the ICA Boston, and in November 2010 the artist’s first survey opened at the Neuberger Museum of Art in Purchase, New York and traveled in June 2011 to the Basel Kunsthalle. Quaytman has had solo exhibitions at Miguel Abreu Gallery, New York; Silberküppe, Berlin; Gladstone Gallery, Brussels; Daniel Buchholz, Cologne.
ADDED: November 19, 2012
Sara Greenberger Rafferty is a New York–based interdisciplinary artist. In 2011, she had solo exhibitions at the Suburban, in Chicago, and at Rachel Uffner Gallery, in New York. Rafferty has also had solo exhibitions at the Kitchen and MoMA PS1, both in New York. She is an assistant professor of art at Hampshire College.
(
"Sons")
ADDED: November 29, 2012
Lisi Raskin ’s on-site research of Cold War relics has informed the making of drawings, objects, videos, and large, constructed environments that simultaneously quell and stimulate her fear of technological progress and pathology. She is currently working on a performance and a series of constructions designed to send healing energy into the past, present, and future. Raskin has exhibited her artwork at the Frankfurter Kunstverein, the Contemporary Art Center Vilnius, MoMA PS1, and the Blanton Museum of Art in Austin, Texas. In 2009, Raskin participated in the Istanbul Biennial.
(
"Endgame Tourism")
ADDED: November 8, 2011
Lucy Raven is an artist based in New York. Her new movie,
China Town, an experimental photo animation about global copper production, is currently screening at art, film, and industrial spaces around the country. Her work has been screened and exhibited at Mass MoCA, the Storefront for Art and Architecture, and SculptureCenter, among other venues. She is founding editor, along with Rebecca Gates, of the
Relay Project audio magazine.
(
"Daybreak")
ADDED: October 21, 2009
Ariana Reines is the author of
The Cow,
Coeur de Lion,
Mercury, and the play
Telephone and the translator of books by TIQQUN, Jean-Luc Hennig, and Charles Baudelaire.
(
"Un Coeur Simple")
ADDED: February 22, 2012
Sarah Resnick is an archivist, researcher, and Triple Canopy senior and managing editor. She lives in Brooklyn.
ADDED: May 21, 2010
Emily Richardson lives and works in London. Her films are distributed by LUX and have been shown in galleries and at festivals internationally, including Tate Britain; Cafe Gallery Projects, London; Artists Space, New York; and the Edinburgh, London, Hong Kong, Rotterdam, and New York film festivals.
(
"Transit")
ADDED: September 19, 2011
Tom Roberge is a book editor and freelance writer.
ADDED: February 25, 2011
Lisa Robertson is a Canadian poet now based in the Vienne region of France. Her most recent books are
Lisa Robertson's Magenta Soul Whip (Coach House, 2009) and
R's Boat (University of California Press, 2010) A book of essays,
Nilling, is forthcoming from Bookthug in Toronto.
(
"The Venus Problem")
ADDED: September 1, 2011
Michael Robinson is a film and video artist based in Chicago. His work has been shown in festivals, cinematheques, and galleries internationally, including the New York, San Francisco, Hong Kong, Rotterdam, and London film festivals.
(
"Victory over the Sun")
ADDED: May 29, 2008
Torbjørn Rødland is a Los Angeles–based photographer whose books include
White Plant Black Heart (2006, steidlMACK),
I Want to Live Innocent (2008, steidlMACK), and
Andy Capp Variations (2011, Hassla).
(
"Sentences on Photography")
ADDED: April 18, 2011
Steve Rowell is an artist and researcher working between Los Angeles, Washington, DC, and Berlin. He examines technology, culture, and infrastructure on, beneath, and above the landscape, contextualizing the built and the natural environments, appropriating the methods and tools of the geographer and cartographer. Photography, video, and sound recordings from the field provide a medium for his projects. In addition to his own practice he collaborates with the Center for Land Use Interpretation (CLUI), SIMPARCH, and the Office of Experiments.
(
"The Ultimate High Ground")
ADDED: November 15, 2010
Rufus Corporation is a Brooklyn-based ad hoc "think tank" of performers, artists, musicians, writers, and programmers who collaborate on films and artworks. Their previous work includes
Yuri's Office (2009),
The Rape of the Sabine Women (2006), and
89 Seconds at Alcázar (2003). Rufus Corporation's most recent foray is the coproduction of performances at the Wallabout Oyster Theatre in south Williamsburg.
(
"whiteonwhite")
ADDED: November 16, 2010
Peter J. Russo is director of Triple Canopy. From 2009–2012, he organized Printed Matter's NY Art Book Fair at MoMA PS1.
(
"Way of the Righteous")
ADDED: April 30, 2013
Erin Schell is a designer, illustrator, and graduate philosophy student living in Brooklyn, NY.
ADDED: May 14, 2012
Barry Schwabsky is the art critic of the
Nation and a regular contributor to the
London Review of Books and
Artforum.
(
"Tableaux Mourants")
ADDED: May 4, 2011
Adam Shecter has exhibited widely in New York (venues include D’Amelio Terras, BAMcinematek, Brooklyn Arts Council, Eyebeam, John Connelly Presents, and Deitch Projects), as well as in Miami, Boston and Paris. A graduate of the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, he lives and works in Long Island City.
(
"Forecasts")
ADDED: November 28, 2011
Kate Shepherd is a born and bred New Yorker. In addition to the fine-lined enamel paintings for which she is best known, she makes prints, wood puzzles, sculptures, drawings, and site-specific land art. She is represented by Galerie Lelong (New York, Paris), Anthony Meier Fine Art (San Francisco), and Barbara Krakow Gallery (Boston) and has also exhibited with
Galería Elvira González (Madrid) and Bartha Contemporary (London). Her work has been acquired by museums such as the Phillips Collection, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Indianapolis Museum of Art.
(
"Were I to Write a Longer Letter")
ADDED: October 3, 2012
Julia Sherman is an artist, professional photographer, and amateur wigmaker, weaver, cobbler, and baker. She is the founder of Workspace in Los Angeles and an alumnus of the Mountain School of Arts and the Anhoek School. She is currently pursuing her MFA at Columbia University.
(
"She Goes Covered")
ADDED: November 5, 2008
Dan Shiman lives in Marfa, Texas, serving as the archivist and programmer at the Chinati Foundation. A longtime record collector and DJ, Dan is also creator of
Office Naps and the
Exotica Project, two sites devoted to lost sounds and obscure vinyl.
ADDED: April 11, 2011
Erin Shirreff is an artist based in New York City. Her work has been shown at Sculpture Center, MoMA PS1, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Lisa Cooley, the Contemporary Art Museum in Saint Louis, Ballroom Marfa, and elsewhere. She will have a solo exhibition at the ICA Philadelphia in fall 2010.
(
"Shadow, Glare",
"For the Rotation of the Work Never to Stop")
ADDED: June 26, 2010
Amy Sillman
ADDED: April 18, 2012
Iain Sinclair has lived in Hackney since 1968. He is working on a book,
That Red Rose Empire, woven from interviews with Hackney artists, writers, and local characters, due to be published by Hamish Hamilton this year.
(
"Transit")
ADDED: January 27, 2009
Christine Smallwood is a former Triple Canopy contributing editor. She has written for the
Nation, the
London Review of Books, the
Baffler, and
Harper's Magazine. She lives in Brooklyn.
(
"I Know What You Did Last Summer")
ADDED: January 17, 2011
Genevieve Smith is a writer living in Brooklyn and a former Triple Canopy contributing editor. She is currently an assistant editor at
Harper's Magazine.
(
"Sexy Librarian")
ADDED: December 2, 2010
William Smith is a Triple Canopy senior editor and a PhD candidate at the Institute of Fine Arts in New York.
(
"Chinese Customs")
ADDED: March 11, 2010
Maria Sonevytsky is a PhD student in ethnomusicology at Columbia University and one half of the Brooklyn musical duo the Debutante Hour. She currently lives in Bakhchisaray, Crimea, but will soon relocate to the Ukrainian Carpathian Mountains to continue her dissertation fieldwork.
(
"No Other Home")
ADDED: November 11, 2008
Kathryn Sonnabend studied German and Architecture at Brown University and has lived in Boston, Providence, and Berlin.
ADDED: September 12, 2011
Nancy Spero was a pioneer of feminist art. She was born in Cleveland in 1926 and died in New York City in 2009. Her work was shown in major exhibitions at Centro Galego de Arte Contemporanea, Santiago de Compostela, Spain (2003); MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1994); Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston (1994); Museum of Modern Art, New York (1992); and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1988).
(
"Notes in Time")
ADDED: October 29, 2010
Molly Springfield is an artist living in Washington, DC. Her work has been shown in solo exhibitions in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Washington.
(
"Inside the Mundaneum")
ADDED: March 15, 2010
Holly Stanton is a New York–based curator and photographer.
ADDED: February 2, 2011
Will Steacy was raised in Philadelphia and now resides in New York. His work has been shown in numerous gallery and museum exhibitions and has appeared in
Harper's,
New York Magazine, the
Paris Review, and
Newsweek.
(
"Landfall: A Portfolio")
ADDED: August 31, 2008
Bob Stein is creator of the Criterion Collection of films, founder of the Voyager Company, an original advocate of cross-platform electronic publishing and most recently initiator and director of the Institute for the Future of the Book. He is currently developing a new digital-publishing company.
(
"Mao, King Kong, and the Future of the Book")
ADDED: June 26, 2010
Florine Stettheimer
(
"Études")
ADDED: September 7, 2011
C. S. Stevens is a freelance photographer based in London.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Publication Studio is an experiment in sustainable publication. They print and bind books on demand, creating original work with artists and writers, books that both respond to the conversation of the moment and can endure. Publication Studio is a laboratory for publication in its fullest sense—not just the production of books, but the production of a public. This public, which is more than a market, is created through deliberate acts: the circulation of texts; discussions and gatherings in physical space; and the maintenance of a digital commons. Together these construct a space of conversation, a public space, which beckons a public into being.
ADDED: April 28, 2010
Sumi Ink Club is a Los Angeles–based collective founded in 2005 by Sarah Anderson and Luke Fischbeck. The group meets regularly to execute topsy-turvy, detailed, collaborative drawings using ink on paper. In each of its permutations, Sumi Ink Club uses group drawings as a means to open and fortify social interactions that bleed into everyday life. Sumi Ink Club is nonhierarchical: all ages, all humans, all styles.
(
"Woven Waves + Sumi Cinema 1")
ADDED: June 23, 2008
Eve Sussman is a Brooklyn-based artist and filmmaker who works collectively with Rufus Corporation. Sussman and the company have created
Yuri's Office (2009),
The Rape of the Sabine Women (2006),
89 Seconds at Alcázar (2003), and the currect work-in-progress
whiteonwhite:algorithmicthriller, a Creative Capital project. Rufus Corporation's work has been exhibited at museums and festivals worldwide.
(
"whiteonwhite")
ADDED: November 15, 2010
Alex Tatusian works with people, primarily in graphic design, music, film, and writing. He is a co-founder of BF Bifocals, a free graphic-design collective, and has received a degree from an accredited institution.
ADDED: June 27, 2011
Allie Tepper is a writer, researcher, and Triple Canopy's Program Manager. She lives in Brooklyn.
ADDED: April 4, 2013
James Merle Thomas is a San Francisco–based writer, editor, and curator. He is currently completing a dissertation in the Department of Art History at Stanford, where he researches intersections between art, science, and politics of the cold war. He is the 2011-12 Guggenheim Predoctoral Fellow at the National Air and Space Museum at the Smithsonian Institution.
(
"Tektite Revisited")
ADDED: July 17, 2011
John Thompson is a writer living in Brooklyn.
ADDED: October 26, 2009
Leslie Thornton is an internationally acclaimed media artist whose work explores the outer parameters of ethnographic and narrative form. Her films, videos, photographs, and installations have been exhibited worldwide, in venues such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the CAPC Musée d’Art Contemporain de Bordeaux, and the Rotterdam, New York, Berlin, Toronto, Buenos Aires, and Seoul film festivals. Thornton is currently a professor in media at Brown University.
(
"Horror Film 1: Shanghai Blue")
ADDED: February 7, 2009
Tiqqun is a French collective of authors and activists formed in 1999. The group published two journal volumes in 1999 and 2001 (in which the collective author “The Invisible Committee” first appeared), as well as the books
Théorie du Bloom and
Théorie de la jeune fille.
(
"Preliminary Materials for a Theory of the Young-Girl")
ADDED: February 22, 2012
Mónica de La Torre Mónica de la Torre’s poetry collections include two in English, Talk Shows (Switchback Books, 2006) and Public Domain (Roof Books, 2008), and two in Spanish, Acúfenos (Taller Ditoria, 2006) and Sociedad Anónima (UNAM/ Bonobos, 2010). She is the editor, with Michael Weigers, of the bilingual anthology Reverisible Monuments: Contemporary Mexican Poetry (Copper Canyon, 2002). Her translations from Spanish include Lila Zemborain’s Mauve Sea-Orchids (co-translated with Rosa Alcalá) and Poems by Gerardo Deniz, which she also edited. A recent collaborative book project, Taller de Mecanografía, was published in 2011 in Mexico City by Tumbona Ediciones. Four, a group of four new chapbooks, is just out from Switchback Books. She lives in Brooklyn and is senior editor at BOMB Magazine.
ADDED: November 19, 2012
Meline Toumani is a writer based in Brooklyn. From 2007 to 2009 she lived and worked in Turkey and traveled frequently to Armenia. Her stories and essays have appeared in the
New York Times, the
Nation,
n+1,
Salon, and other publications. Her first book, a reflection on how history is written and remembered, will be published by Random House next year.
ADDED: October 17, 2009
Anthony Tran is an artist and technologist. He was born in New York City and raised at the Hotel Carter.
ADDED: April 4, 2013
Jules Treneer is the Western European correspondent for the
Faster Times. His work has appeared in the
New York Sun, the
Rumpus,
Snorkel, and
n+1
(
"Monoactivité")
ADDED: May 4, 2009
Romy Treneer is a photographer based in Paris.
ADDED: June 9, 2009
Urban China is the first magazine about urbanism in China. Currently
Urban China has its studios in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou, with advisers and project cooperators including world-class architects, curators, and offices.
(
"Better Underground")
ADDED: October 18, 2009
Anja Utler was born in Schwandorf, Germany, in 1973, studied Slavic and English literature as well as elocution and speech therapy, and now lives in Vienna and Regensburg.
Münden – entzüngeln (2004), published in English as
engulf – enkindle (Burning Deck, 2010), received the coveted Leonce-und-Lena Prize for poetry. Newer books are
brinnen (2006) and
jana, vermacht (2009), all published by Edition Korrespondenzen in Vienna.
(
"Sibyl and Marsyas")
ADDED: January 11, 2011
Kazys Varnelis is the director of the Network Architecture Lab at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation and the author of the book
The Infrastructural City: Networked Ecologies in Los Angeles. With Robert Sumrell, he runs the nonprofit architectural collective AUDC (Architecture Urbanism Design Collaborative).
(
"The Wrong Way Forward")
ADDED: October 15, 2009
Wang Bing is a Chinese documentary filmmaker.
ADDED: November 25, 2009
Warm Engine is Greta Hansen and Cheryl Wing-Zi Wong, a creative duo that works between art and architecture.
(
"Frontier Facades")
ADDED: March 2, 2011
Bill Weeden is an actor and songwriter from Manhattan. He has appeared in many plays and films and has hosted television shows.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
Julia Weist is an artist and author living in Brooklyn. She was educated at the Cooper Union School of Art and is completing a master’s of library science at Pratt Institute.
Sexy Librarian is her first novel.
(
"Sexy Librarian")
ADDED: June 2, 2008
Tingting Wei is an undergraduate studying Studio Art at New York University.
ADDED: September 12, 2011
Diane Williams 's most recent book of stories is
Vicky Swanky Is a Beauty, due out from McSweeney's in January 2012. She is the editor of the literary annual
NOON.
(
"Religious Behavior + Angus Was So Near...")
ADDED: September 19, 2011
Jonah Wolf studies classics at Brown University. He has written for the College Hill Independent and Paper. He is an editorial and production assistant for Triple Canopy.
ADDED: May 24, 2011
Lynn Wright is a Brooklyn-based composer and musician. He embraces the language of Morton Feldman, the chance of improvisation, and the obscurity afforded by a brief bio. He plays in the band And the Wiremen.
ADDED: March 16, 2010
B. Wurtz moved to New York in the mid-1980s after studying at the California Institute of the Arts and UC Berkeley. His work has been the subject of numerous one-person exhibitions and has been included in group shows throughout the US and Europe.
(
"History Works")
ADDED: March 18, 2013
Nine Eglantine Yamamoto-Masson is a French-Japanese artist, scholar, and curator based in Berlin and at home in many places. She likes cats and strange music.
(
"The Sea of Trees")
ADDED: March 15, 2010
Matvei Yankelevich Matvei Yankelevich’s books and chapbooks include Boris by the Sea (Octopus Books, 2009), The Present Work (Palm Press, 2006), and Writing in the Margin (Loudmouth Collective, 2001). His writing has appeared in Boston Review, Damn the Caesars, Fence, Open City, and other magazines. His translations from Russian have appeared in Circumference, Harpers, New American Writing, Poetry, and the New Yorker. He teaches at Hunter College, Columbia University School of the Arts (Writing Division), and the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College. He is an editor at Ugly Duckling Presse and of the Eastern European Poets Series, and a co-editor of 6×6. He lives in Brooklyn.
ADDED: November 1, 2012
Ben Yaster was born in Baltimore. He now spends his time between Brooklyn and New Haven.
(
"Horse People")
ADDED: March 15, 2010
C. Spencer Yeh is a musician and artist living in Brooklyn. He performs and records music under his own name and that of Burning Star Core.
ADDED: April 25, 2010
Bryan Zanisnik is an artist based in Brooklyn. He holds an MFA from Hunter College and has attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
(
"Beyond Passaic")
ADDED: October 30, 2011
Zs is a Brooklyn-based quartet. The band makes music that challenges the physical and mental limitations of performers and listeners alike. Zs' most recent record,
Music of the Modern White, is available now on Social Registry.
(
"Construction")
ADDED: October 18, 2009