Greg Bloom
Greg Bloom has a decade of experience in community organizing. He seeks out spaces that foster collaboration, and likes to cultivate common resources from which anyone can benefit. He is currently researching alternative economic models such as mutual credit systems and cooperative enterprise.
Elsewhere Project | The Great Reconomy
John Q
John Q is an idea collective whose name references “John Q. Public.” The “public” is left understood, though the work is considered a kind of public scholarship, and the “Q” is left hanging to reference the group’s interest in queer history and politics. The collective consists of Wesley Chenault, Andy Ditzler, and Joey Orr. John Q has been funded by Artadia: The Fund for Art and Dialogue (New York) and has participated in the 2012 National Queer Arts Festival at the GLBT History Museum in San Francisco.
Joey Orr holds an MA in Visual and Critical Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and is an ABD Arts and Sciences Fellow at Emory University’s Graduate Institute of the Liberal Arts. His dissertation, Practicing the Past: Socially Engaged Remembering in Contemporary Art, looks at cooperative memorial practices at the intersection of memory studies and art history. The study includes a practice component in the context of the collective, John Q, of which he is a founding member. Joey also currently serves as an associate editor for the Journal for Artistic Research (Bern, Switzerland). Past projects have been reviewed by Art Papers, Art in America, ARTnews, Contemporary (UK), Public Art Review and Sculpture magazine, among others.
Wesley Chenault is a certified archivist and head of special collections and archives at Virginia Commonwealth University’s James Branch Cabell Library. His interests in memory, place, and identity take forms as diverse as collection development, exhibitions, public art, teaching, and traditional scholarship. Chenault’s work on Atlanta LGBTQ archives, history, and memory includes the book Gay and Lesbian Atlanta; public artworks, exhibits, and publications with idea collective John Q; and exhibitions at the Atlanta History Center and online through OutHistory.org. He holds a PhD in American studies from the University of New Mexico and a MA in women’s studies from Georgia State University.
Elsewhere Project | Untitled (Books)
Lindsey Clark-Ryan
Lindsey Clark-Ryan grew up in Florida and currently lives in Northampton, MA, where she teaches at Smith College. She makes prints, installations, and contraptions, and has recently been focused on ideas related to expeditions, tools, measurement, and data. She can provide you with many facts about astronauts.
Elsewhere Project | Title, Mulligan + Kyle the Unicorn
Rebecca Noone
Rebecca Noone is an artist from Canada. She makes installations that interrupt everyday experiences and tech-filled landscapes with playful meditations on the nature of information, preservation, participation, and memory. Recently, she has been planning science fairs, mailing people the Analogue Internet, making household archives, and playing with rainbow parachutes in city parks. Rebecca has a Master’s Degree in Museum Studies from the University of Toronto and works as a curator for Toronto’s pop-up Children’s Own Media Museum. Yeah!
Elsewhere Project | [Insert Title]
Ashley Yeo Yakka
Ashley Yeo Yakka creates work that reflects on the nature of being and existence. The personal effort of making her works has become her methodology in an attempt to repossess what she feels is becoming less visible in the human condition. Recent works explore the idea of slowness and work with ideas of creating depth and curiosity. Ashley recently completed her MA Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art & Design in London.
Elsewhere Project | Blue Yonder
Melissa Vandenberg
Born and raised in Detroit, Melissa Vandenberg is an artist, educator and curator living in eastern Kentucky. Her recent creative inquires investigate fear, impermance and power with everyday materials like fabric, stickers, temporary tattoos and found objects. Current events, nationalism and ancestry play a fundamental role in her studio practice through imagery of flags, gravestones, life-vests and atomic explosions. Additionally, she is exceptionally fond of mustard and cilantro, not together though.
Elsewhere Project | Sew To Speak
Lauren Bullock
Lauren Bullock was born in Boston, Massachusetts but spent most of her life in Georgia where her interest in the arts developed from an early age. Her formal studies in textiles began at the Rhode Island School of Art and Design’s Pre College Program where she first studied pattern screen printing. She also traveled to Japan to study cultural techniques such as dye resist with rice paste, paper spinning and weaving. Currently, she is pursuing a Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of Georgia. Her creative work concerns ecofriendly art and design by constructing fabric from discarded materials, employing multiple strategies such as weaving, sewing, soft sculpture along with other contemporary and traditional techniques in order to give used objects a new purpose or identity.
Elsewhere Project | Reflect Inward
Peter Pendergrass
2013 Resident
Peter Pendergrass is a multidisciplinary artist from Greensboro, NC. Working primarily in visual media and performance, Peter's work focuses on gender, sexuality, and personal identity; contemporary political issues, especially feminist movement; the evolving role of technology in culture; spirituality beyond the context of major organized religion; and the intersections thereof. He currently lives and works in Oakland, CA, but has yet to establish a permanent home besides Greensboro, which he loves very much.
Elsewhere Project | SanctuWHEREium
2013 Production Intern
James Huckenpahler
James Huckenpahler tosses away the software manuals before making images on his laptop. He is represented in Washington DC by Hemphill Fine Arts, teaches new media at George Washington University, is a fellow at Provisions Library, and serves on the advisory board of Transformer, non-profit, artist-centered organization that connects and promotes emerging artists locally, nationally and internationally. His current work-in-progress, "Allegories," is an illustrated history of the capital city.
Elsewhere Project | The Inscrutable Women of Pompeii, NC in the Year 10,000AD