Daniel Nickerson
Daniel is a musician and composer from central California. He has spent the last few years picking the banjo and eating burritos in Portland, OR, where his best friend is an Edgar Degas painting of a hazy looking lady in blue that lives at the Portland Art Museum.
Michelle Lee
From Richmond Virginia, Michelle is a video vixen gettin' it dun across the USA. A recent post-grad from the University of Virginia, she is interested in experimental filmmaking, performance art, and social practice. A mind reader, hand massager, and committed bad-dancer, her international notoriety is inevitably coming soon.
Stacy Lynn Waddell
Stacy Lynn Waddell creates works that appropriate the power invested in linguistics, historical record and cultural leitmotifs. After earning her MFA from The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2007, Waddell’s works and multimedia installations have been on view at the Franklin Humanities Institute at Duke University (NC), the Weatherspoon Art Museum (NC), The North Carolina Museum of Art (NC), The Gibbes Museum of Art (SC), The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PA), Project Row Houses (TX), The Studio Museum in Harlem (NY) and Koplin Del Rio (CA) among other venues.
Waddell’s works are represented in public and private collections across the country. She has been awarded a Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Grant, an Art Matters Grant and has been in residence at Project Row Houses. Currently, she is participating in When The Stars Begin To Fall: Imagination and the American South that originated at The Studio Museum in Harlem and will travel to the NSU Museum of Art, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. (Fall ’14) and the Institute of Contemporary Art-Boston, MA (Spr ‘15). She resides in Chapel Hill, NC.
Robert Reed
Living in Waikiki, being raised in the heartland of America, and commuting to work as a flight attendant out of New York City to Europe has given Robert a wealth of artistic material. He received his MFA in 2011 from the University of Hawai'i at Manoa. Robert has exhibited locally, nationally and internationally regarding current and controversial issues such as tourism, consumption, civil rights and pop culture. Observations about the realm of good and bad human behavior to reveal the ironic choices humans make are layered into his work as well as personal issues and topics. He uses mixed media to create sculpture, installation, performance and wearable art and often combines these mediums and makes them interactive.Robert prefers to use found or common universal objects in a new fashion rather than typical art supplies. He employs humor, sound, irony, bright colors and odd materials to lure in the viewer with a veiled hidden and layered meaning.
Ali Aschman
Ali Aschman creates hand-made worlds exploring emotional states. Hybridity, transformation, alienation and guilt are recurring themes. Her practice includes animation, installation, drawing and printmaking. She experiments with narrative forms through moving and still images, kinetic and static objects and sculptural tableaux. Aschman earned a BA from the University of Cape Town and an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Ali Aschman’s residency is supported by a grant from the Illinois Arts Council Agency.
Judith Parker
Judith Parker is a curator, writer and art historian who lives in Canada’s capital, Ottawa. The city is named after indigenous traders, the Odawa, who met explorers traveling the Kitchesippi River. Judith curates interdisciplinary contemporary exhibitions in non-traditional places where artists can respond to specific cultural sites or historic artifacts. Every August, she creates collaborative performance in the Canadian wilderness with R. Murray Schafer’s Wolf Project. In 2014, Beyond the Edge: Artists’ Gardens presented five outdoor plant-based installations addressing its location at Agriculture Canada’s Central Experimental Farm. As former curator at the historic Bytown Museum, Judith initiated Artist-in-Residence solo exhibitions presenting contemporary art in dialogue with Victorian-era artifacts.
Jan Wade
I was born an artist. My beginning years were spent in a small community of black people who had come to Southern Ontario from the Southern U.S.A. My parents were married in 1951 and brought in and questioned by the Morality Squad of the Hamilton Police Dept. since mesegenation(the mixing of the races) was still against the law. I graduated from a comprehensive Arts High School and moved from Hamilton to Toronto were I graduated with honors from The Ontario College of Art and Design. I moved to Vancouver and became part of a small but intence live Arts and Music scene. From there I started researching Black Spiritual Practices through Slave Cultures and have lived and worked in Cuba, Haiti and the U.K. I was one of two Canadian artists invited to participate in the 1st International Arts Biennale in Johannesburg, South Africa after the official end of aparthied and met Nelson Mandela seven months after his electon. My work is an on going learning process and I have become interested in the enviroment and the use of recoverable materials and objects as building materials. This has become an important part of my process. For more info. www.janwade.com
Brenda Oelbaum
Brenda Oelbaum is the current President of the Women's Caucus for Art, a national organization that supports women in the arts by creating community through art, education and social activism. As a multidisciplinary conceptual artist, Oelbaum works in whatever medium best suits her mission. For the past 10 years she has been focusing on taking down the 66 billion diet industry, turning diet books into art that will educate viewers about disordered eating, and an industry that thrives on personal failure, promoting low self-image and body loathing. She feels strongly that it is the Diet Industry that has created the so called "Obesity Epidemic," and believes in the principles of Health at Every Size (HAES)
Margaret Bowes
Margaret Bowes (b. 1986) is a Canadian visual artist, writer and traveler, whose many activities involve exploring the friction between land and identity. Often traveling throughout border zones, resource-based economies and shifting channels, her practice opens up a space between landscape and the contemporaneity of colonization. An ongoing part of her practice involves immersing herself in these first-hand experiences, like fieldwork. For the past nine years Margaret has worked in seasonal forestry in Northern British Columbia to offset the costs of producing artwork. In the process she has become highly attached to, and inspired by, the diverse pockets of nomadic subcultures that travel according to season and economic flux. She earned her Bachelor of Fine Art from Emily Carr University of Art + Design, has exhibited nationally and has had works published in Canada and Australia. She has attended artist residencies at Nes Residency (Skagaströnd, Iceland) and Full Tilt (Newfoundland, Canada).
Taylor Tower
Taylor Tower is a storyteller and teacher based in Minneapolis by way of Montreal. Her writing has been featured on CBC’s WireTap with Jonathan Goldstein and Roman Mars’ Public Radio Remix, as well as on nerve.com and elsewhere. She was thrilled and honored to participate in The Moth GrandSLAM in St. Paul in June 2014, where the audience went wild, just like her mom said they would. She has taught storytelling workshops to students of all ages through Quebec Writers’ Federation and The Loft Literary Center. You can read more and listen to her radio voice at taylorgtower.com.
Evanthia Afstralou
Evanthia Afstralou has received her BA degree from Wimbledon College of the Arts in London. Her videos are short clips of ‘the choreography of everyday life’. Through directing people to perform everyday activities such as tying their shoes, making coffee, flossing their teeth these activities are then turned into art, offering a different perspective, adding importance to the unimportant – from object making to working as an ‘observer’ that ‘makes nothing happen’ based on the ideas of non interference, exploring non objectified materials. ‘I think that these moments have something to do with art, if someone looks for it. But, I don’t know, I am just looking for the mouse at the back of the room that is not there...’
Elizabeth Hamilton
Elizabeth Hamilton has a multi-disciplinary practice, primarily focusing on installation, sculpture and photography. She lives and works in Philadelphia.
Laura Bigger
Laura Bigger is a multimedia artist whose work addresses the various relationships that exist among humans, animals, and ecosystems, particularly in terms of the food chain, raw materials, and the human tendency to exert control over natural systems. She received her MFA from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, where she currently resides. Prior to graduate school, Bigger lived off the grid in subtropical New Zealand, serving as a family’s cook, gardener, and nanny, which proved to be a formative experience. She aspires to integrate urban permaculture into her life as an artist.
Ma Li
Ma Li is an installation artist and sculptor who explores dichotomies of time, culture, and nature through the use of nontraditional art media and discarded materials such as fabric, plastic, and paper. Originally from Fuzhou, China, Li formulates dreamlike worlds that are influenced in part by her background in choreography and experience with communist calisthenics. Li graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering from Shanghai Dong Hua University and received a Master of Fine Arts in Painting from San Francisco Art Institute. She has exhibited in galleries including A.I.R. Gallery in Brooklyn, Gallery 825 in Los Angeles, and SOMArts Cultural Center in San Francisco, CA. She was awarded Murphy and Cadogan Contemporary Art Awards and Vermont Studio Center fellowship. Li currently lives and works in San Francisco, California.
Jasper Lee
Jasper Lee makes installations that evoke a metaphysical, self-reflective and ceremonial purpose. These deeply immersive constructions explore the relationships between humankind and nature, between the spirit world and physical world, between past and present.
A musical soundtrack, sometimes produced with instruments of his own making, often accompanies these visual projects as a vehicle for further transportation to an inner, mythical dimension. This mythical realm is where his work operates and where rational logic is left behind.
Leah Hamby
Leah Hamby is an interdisciplinary alchemist and creative instigator who hails from an enchanted farmland north of Birmingham, Alabama. Through her studies of the Social Sciences, music and foreign language, and through an experience with folk traditions both from her rural Southern upbringing and from living abroad in Mexico and Brazil, she feels inspired to design and re-interpret old and new community rituals through ceremony, installation, performance, and music. She invites everyone to "come on in and fix you a plate!”
Hillerbrand+Magsamen
Hillerbrand+Magsamen are a collaborative husband and wife visual artist team comprised of Stephan Hillerbrand and Mary Magsamen. Based in Houston, Texas their interdisciplinary projects explore family identity, everyday interactions and consumer culture. They often work with their two children, pets and home. Hillerbrand+Magsamen have presented their videos in international film and media festivals and their photographs and installations have been exhibited internationally in galleries and museums. They have been awarded grants from the Austin Film Society, Ohio Arts Council, Houston Arts Alliance and Houston Center for Photography. Hillerbrand+Magsamen received a 2013/14 Houston Airport Systems video commission and their videos and photographs are in numerous collections including the Portland Museum of Art and The Museum of Fine Arts Houston. Stephan Hillerbrand is an Associate Professor at the University of Houston and Mary Magsamen is the Curator at Aurora Picture Show.
Lee Deigaard
Lee's work explores animal protagonists and the emotional spaces and physical landscapes where humans and animals co-habitate. Circulatory systems, ecological processes and ideas of flow, immersion, and convergence inform much of her work.
Lee Deigaard graduated from Yale University with a major in fine arts and earned graduate degrees from the University of Michigan School of Art and Design and from the University of Texas at Austin where she held a Michener Fellowship in Creative Writing. In 2012 she won the Clarence John Laughlin Award for her series of nocturnal photographs of animals "Unbidden". In 2013, she had solo shows of site-specific installations at the Alexandria Museum of Art, the Acadiana Center for the Arts, the University of New Orleans, and the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans. Her solo show of photography "Trespass" and her video installation “PULSE” were on view at the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in 2014. Her work has been featured on National Geographic's blog PROOF. She is a member of the New Orleans-based artist collective The Front. Some of her curations there include the group shows "PhotoBOMB", "You Beautiful Bitch", and "Latin for Crab".
Nsenga Knight
Nsenga Knight is a interdisciplinary artist and filmmaker. Much of her work utilizes archive, memoir, and documentary materials, and expands upon the common aesthetic and theoretical concerns of the conceptual arts movement of the late 1960s and 70s, minimalism, Islamic geometrical art and other systems-based works. Through a restless hybridization of artistic practices she mobilizes a play with language and form and act as disruptive intervener and ardent preservationist. Knight has held residencies at Artspace in Raleigh, North Carolina, the Galveston Artist Residency (Galveston, TX), Brandywine Workshop (Philadelphia, PA), and Film/ Video Arts (New York, NY), and has been awarded with fellowships and grants from the Philadelphia Independent Film and Video Association, the Leeway Foundation, Brooklyn Arts Council, Brooklyn Historical Society, and the Puffin Foundation LTD. She has participated in recent solo and group exhibitions at Project Rowhouses in Houston, TX, Artspace in Raleigh, NC, Galveston Arts Center in Texas, MoCADA, New Museum and MoMA PS1 in New York. Knight earned a Bachelor of Arts in Film at Howard University and a Masters of Fine Arts degree at the University of Pennsylvania. During her residency at Elsewhere, Knight created Make Safe, Make Space.
Danny Wirtheim
Danny Wirtheim explores the world through creative writing and filmmaking. He’s currently in his final year of a BA in Media Studies from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro where he’s still trying to figure out what his English professor meant when she said, “Danny, you write like Ziggy Stardust looks.”