Issue 4:
Chantal Jung (she/they) is a Nunatsiavummiuk and self-taught collage artist, writer, filmmaker, and zine creator originally from Happy-Valley Goose-Bay, NL, Canada (Nunatsiavut). She currently resides as a guest on unceded Muwekma Ohlone territory (San Jose, CA). Chantal has produced animated work for the musician Black Belt Eagle Scout, and her writing and artwork has been featured in Inuit Art Quarterly and on the Inuit Art Foundation's website. She is currently part of the Bartow Project and is a member of an Indigenous-led collective called Indigenous Honeys.
Chantal Jung (she/they) is a Nunatsiavummiuk and self-taught collage artist, writer, filmmaker, and zine creator originally from Happy-Valley Goose-Bay, NL, Canada (Nunatsiavut). She currently resides as a guest on unceded Muwekma Ohlone territory (San Jose, CA). Chantal has produced animated work for the musician Black Belt Eagle Scout, and her writing and artwork has been featured in Inuit Art Quarterly and on the Inuit Art Foundation's website. She is currently part of the Bartow Project and is a member of an Indigenous-led collective called Indigenous Honeys.
Iris Cliff (they/them) is an Assiniboine and Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa illustrator and small business owner based in Lawrence,Kansas. You can find their prints, stickers, and enamel pins in small shops like Wonder Fair, The Raven Bookstore, Made In KC, Frog & Toad and more. Their work is rooted in channeling emotions through cute characters and shape-based illustrations. More recently, Iris has been creating and collaborating on zines. Their new line of zines focuses on Assiniboine and Ojibwe characters and stories, wellbeing exercises, and uplifting Indigenous voices. @irisncliff www.iriscliff.com
Jonathan Nelson is a Diné illustrator, graphic artist, and fine artist. His eclectic subject matter includes a blend of Diné culture, Star Wars, and the southwest desert landscape with a unique style influenced by comic books, street art, and graphic design. Jonathan’s original art and designs featuring Indigenous peoples and culture create an authentic portrayal of Indigenous life in order to decimate stereotypes. Instagram: @badwinds Website: http://stg.jnelson.work/
Marina Perez (she/they) is a descendant of the Nahua and Huichol peoples of the Sierra Madre Occidental territories in West Mexico. She is currently a guest on Tongva and Tiwa territories. She is an arts educator and cultural worker dedicated to empowering young people in the arts. Marina is also a graduate student at the University of New Mexico studying contemporary Native art. She enjoys creating collages, reading poetry, beading and listening to oldies. @your_comadre
O.C. Gorman is a Diné Asdzą́ą́n (she/her), Auntie, Artmaker, and Full-Spectrum Indigenous Birthworker. Her art is inspired by her Rez upbringing and are made for anyone that enjoys a little bit of Diné whimsy. When she is not creating art stuffs or serving families in Phoenix as a Doula, you can find her getting coffee, learning about plant medicines, listening to True Crime podcasts, and singing silly songs with her baby niblings. IG: @laughingallsomehow Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/shop/LaughingAllSomehow
Sierra Edd is a Diné writer and artist who grew up in Durango, Colorado / Four corners. In her illustration work, she highlights the experiences of Native women, incorporating themes of spirituality and Indigenous futures. Recently she has been making and collaborating on zine projects. She is currently a doctoral student in Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. You can follow her work on IG: @sierrabeading.
Sierra Edd is a Diné writer and artist who grew up in Durango, Colorado / Four corners. In her illustration work, she highlights the experiences of Native women, incorporating themes of spirituality and Indigenous futures. Recently she has been making and collaborating on zine projects. She is currently a doctoral student in Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. You can follow her work on IG: @sierrabeading.
Tia is a Two-Spirit artist from the Seminole Tribe of Florida, and grew up on the Hollywood reservation in South Florida. With a BFA in Illustration from the Rhode Island School of Design, they create multimedia work that ranges from comics and illustrations, to traditional Seminole crafts. Their work focuses on character driven narratives with themes of identity, connection, and belonging, and often includes visual motifs of Seminole culture. They are also an advocate for Indigenous and environmental rights, and aim to work in community with their relatives and neighbors across Turtle Island and beyond.
Issue 3:
Issue 3:
Amber McCrary is Diné poet, zinester and feminist. She is Red House Clan born for Mexican people. Originally from Shonto, Arizona and raised in Flagstaff, Arizona. She received her MFA in creative writing with an emphasis in poetry at Mills College. She currently resides on Akimel O'odham land. McCrary is also the owner and founder of Abalone Mountain Press, a press dedicated to publishing Indigenous voices.
Audra Wolowiec (she/her) is an interdisciplinary artist whose work oscillates between sculpture, installation, text, and performance with an emphasis on sound and the material qualities of language. Recent exhibitions include Sound Mirror at Visitor Center (Newburgh, NY), Viscera/Epiphora at Compound (Yucca Valley, CA), and an iea (Institute for Electronic Arts) residency at Alfred University. She teaches at Parsons School of Design, SUNY Purchase, and directs the publishing platform Gravel Projects. Gravel Projects is an artist-run publishing platform that works collaboratively to produce prints and editions, at the intersection of sound and language. @gravelprojects Photo credit: Anna Bauer
Chantal Jung (she/they) is a Nunatsiavummiuk and self-taught collage artist, writer, filmmaker, and zine creator originally from Happy-Valley Goose-Bay, NL, Canada (Nunatsiavut). She currently resides as a guest on unceded Muwekma Ohlone territory (San Jose, CA). Chantal has produced animated work for the musician Black Belt Eagle Scout, and her writing and artwork has been featured in Inuit Art Quarterly and on the Inuit Art Foundation's website. She is currently part of the Bartow Project and is a member of an Indigenous-led collective called Indigenous Honeys.
Chantelle Mitchell is from Las Vegas, NV and loves interactive digital spaces. Her work explores the overlap between bodies and machines (and always includes moms). She is an editor at Nabillera: Contemporary Korean Literature and is currently studying at University of Denver.
cy x (they/we) is a black queer agender love influencer, earth tender, pleasure-centered energy worker, and cyber witch based in Brooklyn, NY. They are a Pisces Sun + Scorpio Moon doing the magical work of integrating indigenous, ancestral, and emerging technologies, showing the necessity of an embodied way of being that moves beyond binaries and reliance on techno-capitalist fixes. @cyberwitch666
Amber McCrary is Diné poet, zinester and feminist. She is Red House Clan born for Mexican people. Originally from Shonto, Arizona and raised in Flagstaff, Arizona. She received her MFA in creative writing with an emphasis in poetry at Mills College. She currently resides on Akimel O'odham land. McCrary is also the owner and founder of Abalone Mountain Press, a press dedicated to publishing Indigenous voices.
Audra Wolowiec (she/her) is an interdisciplinary artist whose work oscillates between sculpture, installation, text, and performance with an emphasis on sound and the material qualities of language. Recent exhibitions include Sound Mirror at Visitor Center (Newburgh, NY), Viscera/Epiphora at Compound (Yucca Valley, CA), and an iea (Institute for Electronic Arts) residency at Alfred University. She teaches at Parsons School of Design, SUNY Purchase, and directs the publishing platform Gravel Projects. Gravel Projects is an artist-run publishing platform that works collaboratively to produce prints and editions, at the intersection of sound and language. @gravelprojects Photo credit: Anna Bauer
Chantal Jung (she/they) is a Nunatsiavummiuk and self-taught collage artist, writer, filmmaker, and zine creator originally from Happy-Valley Goose-Bay, NL, Canada (Nunatsiavut). She currently resides as a guest on unceded Muwekma Ohlone territory (San Jose, CA). Chantal has produced animated work for the musician Black Belt Eagle Scout, and her writing and artwork has been featured in Inuit Art Quarterly and on the Inuit Art Foundation's website. She is currently part of the Bartow Project and is a member of an Indigenous-led collective called Indigenous Honeys.
Chantelle Mitchell is from Las Vegas, NV and loves interactive digital spaces. Her work explores the overlap between bodies and machines (and always includes moms). She is an editor at Nabillera: Contemporary Korean Literature and is currently studying at University of Denver.
cy x (they/we) is a black queer agender love influencer, earth tender, pleasure-centered energy worker, and cyber witch based in Brooklyn, NY. They are a Pisces Sun + Scorpio Moon doing the magical work of integrating indigenous, ancestral, and emerging technologies, showing the necessity of an embodied way of being that moves beyond binaries and reliance on techno-capitalist fixes. @cyberwitch666
Note from Gabrielle Civil, who compiled Experiments in Joy: A Workbook: “Above is the photo that appears on the cover of the workbook and it features all of the contributors to the workbook from our Experiments in Joy Festival in 2014. In order, you see Wura-Natasha Ogunji, Awilda Rodríguez Lora, Kenyatta A.C. Hinkle, Miré Regulus, Duriel E. Harris, Gabrielle Civil, Rosamond S. King along with Vernetta Willett who also performed at the festival. Because it’s a collective project, I would love for this image to represent us. Co-Conspirator Press [the publisher of the workbook] is a grassroots project of the Feminist Center for Creative Work.”
Jam Lincoln is a writer and filmmaker born and raised in Los Angeles California. While completing their MFA in Creative Writing at California Institute of the Arts, they’re currently working through hybrid modes of creating such as genre-bending and the use of industrial documentation. @jamthings
Lukaza Branfman-Verissimo (they/them/she/her) is an artist, activist, educator, storyteller & curator who lives/works between Ohlone Land [Oakland, CA] and Powhatan Land [Richmond,VA]. Their work has been included in exhibitions and performances at Konsthall C [Stockholm, Sweden], SEPTEMBER Gallery [Hudson, NY], EFA Project Space [New York City, NY], Leslie Lohman Museum [New York City, NY], Yerba Buena Center for the Arts [San Francisco, CA], UNO Gallery [New Orleans, LA] and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive [Berkeley, CA], amongst others. Their artist books have been published by Endless Editions, Childish Books, Play Press, Press Press, Night Diver Press. In the Spring of 2021 their newest artist book, Slow Looking: These Views Are Our Tools, was released with Childish Books [Portland, ME]. Lukaza got their BFA at California College of the Arts and MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University.
Meg Shevenock is a Pittsburgh-based writer whose poetry-hybrid collection, The Miraculous, Sometimes, was selected by Bob Hicok as winner of the 2019 Marystina Santiestevan first book prize for Conduit Books & Ephemera. Meg's poems and essays have appeared in such places as Times Literary Supplement, Lana Turner, Denver Quarterly, Best New Poets, and the Kenyon Review blog. She received an Individual Excellence Award in poetry from the Ohio Arts Council in 2020 and a writer's grant from The Academy of Arts and Letters in 2021. Meg is a reader and researcher for artist Ann Hamilton.
Neta Bomani is an abolitionist, learner and educator who is interested in parsing information and histories while making things by hand with human and non-human computers. Neta’s work combines archives, oral histories, computation, social practices, printmaking, paper engineering, zine making and workshops to create do it yourself artifacts. Neta received a graduate degree in Interactive Telecommunications from the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. Neta is currently an Instructor in the Collaborative Arts Department at New York University. Neta is also a co-director of the School for Poetic Computation. Neta has studied under Mariame Kaba, American Artist, Simone Browne, Ruha Benjamin, Fred Moten and many others who inform Neta’s work. Image description: Neta, a deep brown skinned person, wears a colorful halter top and large lavender heart-shaped crochet earrings as she stands in front of a reflective backdrop that doubles and distorts the image of her profile. Photo credit: Izzy Commers.
Sierra Edd is a Diné writer and artist who grew up in Durango, Colorado / Four corners. In her illustration work, she highlights the experiences of Native women, incorporating themes of spirituality and Indigenous futures. Recently she has been making and collaborating on zine projects. She is currently a doctoral student in Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. You can follow her work on IG: @sierrabeading.
sydnee monday is a sentimental former child who edits books for young people. They studied media, journalism and film at Howard University. Connect with her @sydneemonday. Image description: A Kodak negative of a young Black child with a bun in a yellow scrunchy poses with arms above her head. She wears a denim dress with embroidered flowers over a yellow sweater.
Note from Gabrielle Civil, who compiled Experiments in Joy: A Workbook: “Above is the photo that appears on the cover of the workbook and it features all of the contributors to the workbook from our Experiments in Joy Festival in 2014. In order, you see Wura-Natasha Ogunji, Awilda Rodríguez Lora, Kenyatta A.C. Hinkle, Miré Regulus, Duriel E. Harris, Gabrielle Civil, Rosamond S. King along with Vernetta Willett who also performed at the festival. Because it’s a collective project, I would love for this image to represent us. Co-Conspirator Press [the publisher of the workbook] is a grassroots project of the Feminist Center for Creative Work.”
Jam Lincoln is a writer and filmmaker born and raised in Los Angeles California. While completing their MFA in Creative Writing at California Institute of the Arts, they’re currently working through hybrid modes of creating such as genre-bending and the use of industrial documentation. @jamthings
Lukaza Branfman-Verissimo (they/them/she/her) is an artist, activist, educator, storyteller & curator who lives/works between Ohlone Land [Oakland, CA] and Powhatan Land [Richmond,VA]. Their work has been included in exhibitions and performances at Konsthall C [Stockholm, Sweden], SEPTEMBER Gallery [Hudson, NY], EFA Project Space [New York City, NY], Leslie Lohman Museum [New York City, NY], Yerba Buena Center for the Arts [San Francisco, CA], UNO Gallery [New Orleans, LA] and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive [Berkeley, CA], amongst others. Their artist books have been published by Endless Editions, Childish Books, Play Press, Press Press, Night Diver Press. In the Spring of 2021 their newest artist book, Slow Looking: These Views Are Our Tools, was released with Childish Books [Portland, ME]. Lukaza got their BFA at California College of the Arts and MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University.
Meg Shevenock is a Pittsburgh-based writer whose poetry-hybrid collection, The Miraculous, Sometimes, was selected by Bob Hicok as winner of the 2019 Marystina Santiestevan first book prize for Conduit Books & Ephemera. Meg's poems and essays have appeared in such places as Times Literary Supplement, Lana Turner, Denver Quarterly, Best New Poets, and the Kenyon Review blog. She received an Individual Excellence Award in poetry from the Ohio Arts Council in 2020 and a writer's grant from The Academy of Arts and Letters in 2021. Meg is a reader and researcher for artist Ann Hamilton.
Neta Bomani is an abolitionist, learner and educator who is interested in parsing information and histories while making things by hand with human and non-human computers. Neta’s work combines archives, oral histories, computation, social practices, printmaking, paper engineering, zine making and workshops to create do it yourself artifacts. Neta received a graduate degree in Interactive Telecommunications from the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University. Neta is currently an Instructor in the Collaborative Arts Department at New York University. Neta is also a co-director of the School for Poetic Computation. Neta has studied under Mariame Kaba, American Artist, Simone Browne, Ruha Benjamin, Fred Moten and many others who inform Neta’s work. Image description: Neta, a deep brown skinned person, wears a colorful halter top and large lavender heart-shaped crochet earrings as she stands in front of a reflective backdrop that doubles and distorts the image of her profile. Photo credit: Izzy Commers.
Sierra Edd is a Diné writer and artist who grew up in Durango, Colorado / Four corners. In her illustration work, she highlights the experiences of Native women, incorporating themes of spirituality and Indigenous futures. Recently she has been making and collaborating on zine projects. She is currently a doctoral student in Ethnic Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. You can follow her work on IG: @sierrabeading.
sydnee monday is a sentimental former child who edits books for young people. They studied media, journalism and film at Howard University. Connect with her @sydneemonday. Image description: A Kodak negative of a young Black child with a bun in a yellow scrunchy poses with arms above her head. She wears a denim dress with embroidered flowers over a yellow sweater.
Issue 2:
Adjua Gargi Nzinga Greaves (New Yorker, b. 1980) is a Pushcart-nominated poet concerned with postcolonial ethnobotanical literary criticism, the limits of language, and archive as medium. Greaves has most recently been published in The Brooklyn Rail, the collections Letters to the Future: Black Women / Radical Writing (Kore Press), and Creature/Verdure (Pinsapo Journal), as well as in her chapbook Close Reading As Forestry (Belladonna*). Formerly a Monday Night Reading Series curator at The Poetry Project, she will be an artist-in-residence with The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation on Captiva Island, Florida in early 2020 and serves as Site Director of Wendy’s Subway in Bushwick, Brooklyn.
Caroline Hu is a biologist and cartoonist based in Massachusetts. She makes comics and zines inspired by the natural world and our struggle to understand it. Her ongoing project, The Little Scientist, follows an aspiring scientist’s training in a wondrous forest. @hudrewthis
Ellen Bae (she/her) resides in the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles, CA. She attended Cal State University Long Beach where she received a BFA Illustration degree. In addition to freelance illustration & design work, she has worked in art education programs in both public, private, and non-profit art spaces. During that time, she created inclusive and adaptive arts programming for youth and adult artists. With a special interest in accessibility to information in public libraries and archives, Ellen is currently working on her Masters of Library and Information Science degree at San José State University.
Eric Jackson is an artist living in Delaware. Featured in “100Lit” Podcast and poetry appearing in Castle of Our Skins, “Black Poet Miniature Challenge”; Eric’s work explores cosmology, race, politics, introspection and relationships through poetry, essays, speculative fiction, and photography.
Jacquelyn Zong-Li Ross is a writer based in Vancouver, the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples. Her fiction, poetry, essays, and art criticism have appeared in BOMB, Mousse, Fence, C Magazine, Kijiji, and elsewhere, and her chapbooks include Mayonnaise and Drawings on Yellow Paper (with Katie Lyle). She publishes books by emerging artists and writers under the small press Blank Cheque, and is currently at work on a novel and a collection of short stories. www.jacquelynzross.com
Jonathan Lyndon Chase is an interdisciplinary artist who works in painting, video, sound and sculpture to depict queer black love and community amidst the backdrop of urban and domestic spaces. Chase’s figures hang in various forms of articulation - intertwined with domestic markers of a kitchen or a bedroom, they are then tethered by pop and street signage to blend emotional and physical, internal and external states of being. Rendered through layers of bright, visceral paint, make- up, foam and glitter these compositions challenge and subvert canonical misrepresentation and exclusion of the black body.
Solo exhibitions in 2020 include Wind Rider at Company Gallery in New York and Big Wash at the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia. Chase’s work has been previously featured at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pond Society (solo), Shanghai; LSU Museum of Art (solo), Baton Rouge; the Rubell Foundation, Miami; Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke; California African American Museum, Los Angeles; Woodmere Art Museum, Philadelphia; The Bunker, Collection of Beth Rudin De-Woody, Palm Beach and Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Art, Philadelphia. Their work is included in numerous private and public collections such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, Walker Art Center, ICA Miami, High Art Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Bronx Museum, Rubell Family Collection, Buxton Contemporary Art Museum, The Wedge Collection, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art and Woodmere Museum of Art. Chase was born in 1989 in Philadelphia, PA where they currently live and work.
Mira Dayal is an artist, editor, and writer based in New York. She is a co-organizer of the residency program rehearsal, co-curator of the collaborative artist publication prompt:, founding editor of the Journal of Art Criticism, and a regular contributor at Artforum. Her studio work often involves laborious play with language, material, and site, and has been shown at OCHI, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, STNDRD, Gymnasium, Lubov, NURTUREart, NARS Foundation, Abrons Art Center, and other spaces. She has participated in residencies and intensives at the Ox-Bow School of Art, Art in General, and A.I.R. Gallery. She also teaches courses on conceptual projects and writing about art.
Margaret Blaney, Kate Duffy, Sebastian Vander Ploeg Fallon, Max Felland, Carsten Finholt, Anna Klein, Chris Martin, [Redacted] Maxwell, Rachel Miller, Chisom Oguh, Rehana Naik Olson, Emma Paltrow, Grace Ronan, and Henry Sottrel made up a class at Carleton College. The loving responders convened here learned alongside one another during the spring of 2021. The framework of their time together was an exploration of natural and unnatural relations: ecologies and intersections. This response to the writing and thinking of Adjua Gargi Nzinga Greaves was informed by engagement with other writers as well, including: Philip Metres, Ross Gay, June Jordan, Hanif Abdurraqib, Hannah Emerson, DJ Savarese, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Nora Murphy, Diane Wilson, Heid Erdrich, Kao Kalia Yang, and Michael Kleber-Diggs. Carleton College sits on the unceded lands of the Wahpekute and Mdewakanton bands of the Dakota nation, an hour south of George Floyd Square. The participants in this class met over Zoom and were far-flung, though several wrote from Carleton campus.
Moncho Alvarado is a trans queer Xicanx poet, translator, visual artist, and educator. She is the author of Greyhound Americans (Saturnalia Books 2022), which was the winner of the 2020 Saturnalia Book prize, selected by Diane Seuss. She has been published in Hayden’s Ferry Review, Poets.org, and other publications. They are a recipient of fellowships and residencies from The Helene Wurlitzer Foundation, Lambda Literary, Poets House, Troika House, the Summer Seminar at Sarah Lawrence College. Visit her at www.monchoalvarado.com
Wanda Diep is a curious, human-loving, tender-hearted therapist from Los Angeles, CA. She finds joy in the morning light, laughing + crying with others and connecting in all ways possible. Wanda is exploring her relationship with words, writing and storytelling. She is dedicated to helping others find acceptance, love and safety through reflection, quiet moments and silly jokes. IG: @dieppwanda
Issue 1:
Adjua Gargi Nzinga Greaves (New Yorker, b. 1980) is a Pushcart-nominated poet concerned with postcolonial ethnobotanical literary criticism, the limits of language, and archive as medium. Greaves has most recently been published in The Brooklyn Rail, the collections Letters to the Future: Black Women / Radical Writing (Kore Press), and Creature/Verdure (Pinsapo Journal), as well as in her chapbook Close Reading As Forestry (Belladonna*). Formerly a Monday Night Reading Series curator at The Poetry Project, she will be an artist-in-residence with The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation on Captiva Island, Florida in early 2020 and serves as Site Director of Wendy’s Subway in Bushwick, Brooklyn.
Caroline Hu is a biologist and cartoonist based in Massachusetts. She makes comics and zines inspired by the natural world and our struggle to understand it. Her ongoing project, The Little Scientist, follows an aspiring scientist’s training in a wondrous forest. @hudrewthis
Ellen Bae (she/her) resides in the San Fernando Valley region of Los Angeles, CA. She attended Cal State University Long Beach where she received a BFA Illustration degree. In addition to freelance illustration & design work, she has worked in art education programs in both public, private, and non-profit art spaces. During that time, she created inclusive and adaptive arts programming for youth and adult artists. With a special interest in accessibility to information in public libraries and archives, Ellen is currently working on her Masters of Library and Information Science degree at San José State University.
Eric Jackson is an artist living in Delaware. Featured in “100Lit” Podcast and poetry appearing in Castle of Our Skins, “Black Poet Miniature Challenge”; Eric’s work explores cosmology, race, politics, introspection and relationships through poetry, essays, speculative fiction, and photography.
Jacquelyn Zong-Li Ross is a writer based in Vancouver, the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples. Her fiction, poetry, essays, and art criticism have appeared in BOMB, Mousse, Fence, C Magazine, Kijiji, and elsewhere, and her chapbooks include Mayonnaise and Drawings on Yellow Paper (with Katie Lyle). She publishes books by emerging artists and writers under the small press Blank Cheque, and is currently at work on a novel and a collection of short stories. www.jacquelynzross.com
Jonathan Lyndon Chase is an interdisciplinary artist who works in painting, video, sound and sculpture to depict queer black love and community amidst the backdrop of urban and domestic spaces. Chase’s figures hang in various forms of articulation - intertwined with domestic markers of a kitchen or a bedroom, they are then tethered by pop and street signage to blend emotional and physical, internal and external states of being. Rendered through layers of bright, visceral paint, make- up, foam and glitter these compositions challenge and subvert canonical misrepresentation and exclusion of the black body.
Solo exhibitions in 2020 include Wind Rider at Company Gallery in New York and Big Wash at the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia. Chase’s work has been previously featured at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pond Society (solo), Shanghai; LSU Museum of Art (solo), Baton Rouge; the Rubell Foundation, Miami; Taubman Museum of Art, Roanoke; California African American Museum, Los Angeles; Woodmere Art Museum, Philadelphia; The Bunker, Collection of Beth Rudin De-Woody, Palm Beach and Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Art, Philadelphia. Their work is included in numerous private and public collections such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, Walker Art Center, ICA Miami, High Art Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Bronx Museum, Rubell Family Collection, Buxton Contemporary Art Museum, The Wedge Collection, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art and Woodmere Museum of Art. Chase was born in 1989 in Philadelphia, PA where they currently live and work.
Mira Dayal is an artist, editor, and writer based in New York. She is a co-organizer of the residency program rehearsal, co-curator of the collaborative artist publication prompt:, founding editor of the Journal of Art Criticism, and a regular contributor at Artforum. Her studio work often involves laborious play with language, material, and site, and has been shown at OCHI, Spencer Brownstone Gallery, STNDRD, Gymnasium, Lubov, NURTUREart, NARS Foundation, Abrons Art Center, and other spaces. She has participated in residencies and intensives at the Ox-Bow School of Art, Art in General, and A.I.R. Gallery. She also teaches courses on conceptual projects and writing about art.
Margaret Blaney, Kate Duffy, Sebastian Vander Ploeg Fallon, Max Felland, Carsten Finholt, Anna Klein, Chris Martin, [Redacted] Maxwell, Rachel Miller, Chisom Oguh, Rehana Naik Olson, Emma Paltrow, Grace Ronan, and Henry Sottrel made up a class at Carleton College. The loving responders convened here learned alongside one another during the spring of 2021. The framework of their time together was an exploration of natural and unnatural relations: ecologies and intersections. This response to the writing and thinking of Adjua Gargi Nzinga Greaves was informed by engagement with other writers as well, including: Philip Metres, Ross Gay, June Jordan, Hanif Abdurraqib, Hannah Emerson, DJ Savarese, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Nora Murphy, Diane Wilson, Heid Erdrich, Kao Kalia Yang, and Michael Kleber-Diggs. Carleton College sits on the unceded lands of the Wahpekute and Mdewakanton bands of the Dakota nation, an hour south of George Floyd Square. The participants in this class met over Zoom and were far-flung, though several wrote from Carleton campus.
Moncho Alvarado is a trans queer Xicanx poet, translator, visual artist, and educator. She is the author of Greyhound Americans (Saturnalia Books 2022), which was the winner of the 2020 Saturnalia Book prize, selected by Diane Seuss. She has been published in Hayden’s Ferry Review, Poets.org, and other publications. They are a recipient of fellowships and residencies from The Helene Wurlitzer Foundation, Lambda Literary, Poets House, Troika House, the Summer Seminar at Sarah Lawrence College. Visit her at www.monchoalvarado.com
Wanda Diep is a curious, human-loving, tender-hearted therapist from Los Angeles, CA. She finds joy in the morning light, laughing + crying with others and connecting in all ways possible. Wanda is exploring her relationship with words, writing and storytelling. She is dedicated to helping others find acceptance, love and safety through reflection, quiet moments and silly jokes. IG: @dieppwanda
Issue 1: