Amelia Abreu is a writer and design researcher based in Portland, Oregon, and the founder of UX Night School. Her writing on technology and culture has appeared in various publications. She holds a BA from Evergreen State College, an MSIS from the University of Texas-Austin, and an MS from the University of Washington.
Lise Haller Baggesen studied painting at the AKI in Enschede, the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, and completed her MA in Visual and Critical Studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She has exhibited her work internationally, is the author of Mothernism (2014), and the co-organizer of The Mothernists in Rotterdam (2015) and The Mothernists 2: Who Cares for the 21st Century at Astrid Noack’s Atelier and at the Royal Academy for Fine Art, Copenhagen (2017).
Amber Berson is a writer, curator, and PhD student conducting doctoral research at Queen’s University on artist-run culture and feminist, utopian thinking. She most recently curated World Cup!; The Let Down Reflex (with Juliana Driever); TrailMix (with Eliane Ellbogen); *~._.:*JENNIFER X JENNIFER*:.~ (with Eliane Ellbogen); The Annual Art Administrator’s Relay Race (2013, with Nicole Burisch); and was the 2016 curator-in-residence as part of the France-Quebec Cross-Residencies at Astérides in Marseille, France. She is the Canadian ambassador for the Art+Feminism Wikipedia project. Her writing has been published in Breach Magazine, Canadian Art, C Magazine, Revue .dpi, Esse, FUSE Magazine, and the St Andrews Journal of Art History and Museum Studies.
Artist-engineer Marc Böhlen (a.k.a. RealTechSupport) imagines and designs information systems that reflect on automation as cultural currency. Böhlen is Professor of Media Study at the University at Buffalo and is co-creator of the online resource “Robots for Last Days.” His projects query the relationship between people and automation at large, generating unexpected qualities from quantitative processes.
Cevan Castle, founder of The Center for Parenting Artists, is an architectural designer, artist, and principal of a firm working in urban landscape and exterior architecture. Castle teaches professional practices in art and design, as well as pre-kindergarten and early childhood education. She holds a Master’s of Architecture from Columbia University (New York) and a BFA from the College for Creative Studies (Detroit).
Cynthia Cranford is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Toronto Mississauga, where she leads the research project “Understanding and Improving Immigrant Labour Markets for Personal Care Work: A Comparative Analysis of Public Sector Personal Care Work in North America.” She is currently writing a book comparing personal care in California and Ontario from the vantage points of workers, service users, labour and disability activists, employers, and state officials.
Deirdre M. Donoghue lives and works in Rotterdam. She is a performance and visual artist, mother, doula, founding director of the international m/other voices foundation for Art, Research and Theory / Dialogue / Community Involvement, PhD candidate at the Institute for Cultural Inquiry, University of Utrecht, and a founding member of ADA: Area for Debate and Art, Rotterdam.
Juliana Driever is a curator and writer focused on collaborative practices, public space, and site-specificity. Recent curatorial work includes The Let Down Reflex (2016, with Amber Berson, EFA Project Space, New York), Socially Acceptable (2015, Residency Unlimited/InCube Arts), Art in Odd Places 2014: FREE (with Dylan Gauthier, New York), and About, With & For (2013, Boston Center for the Arts).
Dillon de Give is an artist and educator working with performance, film, publication, and documentary forms. He is a co-founder of the Walk Exchange, a cooperative walking group, and organizes the annual Coyote Itinerancy, a retreat that traces a foot-path between New York City and the wild.
k.g. Guttman (she/they) is an interdisciplinary artist, performer and teacher, a solo mother, and currently a 2023-24 Artist-in-Residence in the Intermedia area of Studio Arts (video, performance and electronic arts) at Concordia University, Montreal.
k.g. is a graduate of Leiden University's PhDArts program, the Netherlands, receiving funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council for their work on situated performance in the settler colonial context of Canada.
From the social location of a white settler of Jewish and Irish descent, she works on the complexities of the local, encompassing collaboration, visiting, and radical hospitality. Current research into bodily memory and somatic practices in pedagogy and practice have been informed by circumstances in childhood/ young adulthood of generalized anxiety/ depression and an environment that disavowed emotions.
k.g.’s recent exhibitions, performances and publications were held at TPW Gallery and Blackwood Gallery in Toronto, Verticale, VIVA! Art action, Dazibao Centre Art, and LaCentrale in Tiohtiá:ke/ Mooniyang/ Montréal, Musée d’Art de Joliette, Klupko, Amsterdam, Galerie Khiasma and Palais de Tokyo, Paris. Choreographic residencies and commissions include l’Agora de la Danse and Tangente, Montreal, the Canada Dance Festival, Dancemakers, Toronto, LeGroupe Dance Lab, Ottawa, the University of Sonora, Mexico, BudaKustencentrum, Kortijk and Pointe Ephémère, Paris.
Founded by Arzu Ozkal, Claudia Pederson, and Nanette Yannuzzi, HOME AFFAIRS is an interdisciplinary art collective focusing on creative projects about a range of issues impacting women’s lives. The group has exhibited and performed at diverse venues including Spaces Gallery (Cleveland), EFA Project Space (New York), Project Goleb (Amsterdam), and Art Produce Gallery (San Diego).
An artist and transmedia producer of Ecuadorian and Chinese descent, Marisa Morán Jahn founded Studio REV-, a non-profit organization whose key projects include El Bibliobandido, Video Slink Uganda, Contratados, the Nannyvan, an app for domestic workers that CNN named as “one of five apps to change the world,” and the CareForce. She is a graduate of MIT and teaches at MIT, Columbia University, and The New School.
Kwentong Bayan Collective is a collective of two Toronto-based artists, Althea Balmes and Jo SiMalaya Alcampo. Their work explores critical and intersectional approaches to community-based art, labour, and education. They are currently developing a comic book, Kwentong Bayan: Labour of Love, in close collaboration with caregivers, advocates, and community allies about the real life stories of Filipinx migrant care-givers working in Canada under the Care-giver Program (formerly known as the Live-in Caregiver Program).
Leisure is the Montreal-based conceptual collaborative art practice of Meredith Carruthers and Susannah Wesley. Working together under the name “Leisure” since 2004, they engage with cultural-historical narratives through research, conversation, published texts, curatorial projects, and art production. Leisure exhibits regularly at Erin Stump Projects (Toronto) and has work in the permanent collection of the Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery (Montreal).
LoVid is a New York-based artist duo comprised of Tali Hinkis and Kyle Lapidus. LoVid’s work includes immersive installations, sculptural synthesizers, single channel videos, textiles, participatory projects, mobile media cinema, works on paper, and A/V performance. Collaborating since 2001, LoVid has performed and presented works at venues throughout the United States, Europe, and the Middle East.
Award-winning choreographer Terrill Maguire has had an extensive and wide-ranging career in dance and related arts. Her creation and performance life has been located in her native California, in New York, Toronto, and Ottawa; she has also danced in London, England, Ireland, and Paris, France. Her work has been presented in theatres large and small; on television and in film; in trees and forests; in fountains, galleries, city streets, and historical sites, among other places.
Jacqueline Hoàng Nguyễn is a research-based artist based in Stockholm. Using a broad range of mediums, her artistic practice investigates issues of historicity, collectivity, utopian politics, and multiculturalism within the framework of feminist theories. Nguyễn is the 2017 Audain Visual Artist in Residence at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver and will participate in the fourth cycle of NTU Center for Contemporary Art Singapore’s Residencies program.
Onaman Collective is a community-based social arts and justice organization founded in 2014 by Christi Belcourt, Isaac Murdoch, and Erin Konsmo. Onaman Collective is interested in helping Indigenous communities, particularly youth, with reclaiming the richness and vibrancy of their heritage. The collective combines land-based contemporary art with traditional arts, anishnaabemowin immersion, and Elders’ and traditional knowledge.
Pinky Paglingayen is from the Philippines and entered Canada through the Live-in Caregiver Program in 2004. She worked as a caregiver for three years taking care of children and the elderly. She has been involved in the organizing of caregivers and other migrant workers with Migrante since 2007. She studied in the Social Service Worker Program at George Brown College and graduated with honors. She now works as a Settlement Worker at Thorncliffe Neighbourhood Office, supporting caregivers and other migrant workers.
Shani K Parsons is an independent curator, designer, and founding director of Critical Distance Centre for Curators (CDCC) in Toronto. With degrees in architecture (Temple University) and design (Rhode Island School of Design) she has pursued a transdisciplinary practice within independent and institutional contexts such as the American Museum of Natural History, Museum of Chinese in America, Museum of Modern Art, and Mixed Greens (New York).
Kerri-Lynn Reeves is a Canadian arts labourer working as an artist, writer, educator, curator, and administrator. She holds a BFA from the University of Manitoba and a MFA from Concordia University in Fibres and Material Practices. Her work explores the relationship of the social and the material, especially as it relates to the construction of social space, the marking of physical place, and the activation of embodied site.
Ian Roderick is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Wilfrid Laurier University. He is the Special Issues Editor for Critical Discourse Studies and recently published Critical Discourse Studies and Technology: A Multimodal Approach to Analysing Technoculture (2016). His research interests include technology and culture, militarism, and critical discourse studies.
Shane Aslan Selzer is an artist, writer, and organizer whose practice develops micro- communities where artists can expand on larger social issues such as exchange, critique, and failure. Selzer is a founding member and Co-Director of Global Crit Clinic, an international peer learning network for artists working to diversify the field by sharing tools for participation.
Sarah Sharma is Associate Professor of Media Theory at the Institute of Communication, Culture, Information, and Technology and Director of the McLuhan Centre for Culture and Technology at the University of Toronto. She is the author of In the Meantime: Temporality and Cultural Politics (Duke University Press, 2014) and is currently working on a new book that explores the gendered politics of exit and refusal, or what she terms the ‘(s)Exit’ within contemporary techno-culture.
Born in Toronto, Boo Watson began playing and composing music at the age of five, and played in bands for over three decades. In the 1970s she joined the Wages for Housework Campaign and co-founded Wages Due Lesbians. She wrote songs for the movement, many of which were published in Wages for Housework International's Conference Song Book (1975). Watson is a life-long activist working on environmental, feminist, and social justice issues. From 2000–01, Watson organized the only Green Gay Pride in Toronto, powered exclusively by renewable energy. She is now the owner of a hundred-acre art farm, producing organic food, music, theatre, and other arts in Manitoulin Island, Ontario.
Alize Zorlutuna is an interdisciplinary artist, curator, and writer who works with installation, video, performance, and material culture, to investigate themes concerning identity, queer sexuality, settler-colonial relationships to land, culture, and history, as well as intimacy with the more-than-human and technology. Her work aims to activate interstices where seemingly incommensurate elements intersect. Alize draws on archival as well as practice-based research, and the body and its sensorial capacities are central to her work. She lives and works in Tkaronto.
Coman Poon is a Toronto-based interdisciplinary artist, activist, curator and producer working within contexts of decolonization and intercultural exchange. He actively collaborates with artists, social and environmental justice activists, academics, filmmakers, photographers, video and sound technicians, poets and writers, architects and builders, to realize his diverse local and transnational initiatives.