Artists Now! Guest Lecture Series: Kill Joy
OnlineKill Joy's family is originally from and partly based in the archipelago known as the Philippines and partly in Texas.
Kill Joy's family is originally from and partly based in the archipelago known as the Philippines and partly in Texas.
Julia Galloway is a utilitarian potter and professor. She teaches ceramics at the University of Montana, Missoula.
Dana Fritz uses photography to investigate the ways we shape and represent the natural world in cultivated and constructed landscapes.
Sasha Stiles is a first-generation Kalmyk-American poet, artist and AI researcher whose work probes what it means to be human in a nearly post-human era.
Barbara Miner is a writer, photographer and multimedia artist, currently in her third year of the Master of Fine Arts program at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Tanekeya Word (b. 1983, Clarksdale, Mississippi) creates multimedia visual art: paintings, drawings, fine art prints and book art. She is an art educator, cultural arts organizer and scholar based in Milwaukee, WI.
Edie Fake’s multi-media work — drawings, paintings, installations, comics, books and zines — has been written about and featured in Artforum, New York Times, The Paris Review, Art News, Art 21, Juxtapoz, Hyperallergic, The Comics Journal, and The Los Angeles Review of Books.
Raoul Deal is an interdisciplinary artist and educator who often works collaboratively in community settings.
Sarah FitzSimons is a visual artist who makes sculpture which interacts with and derives meaning from its surroundings.
Lyndsay Rice received an MFA from the University of Oregon in 2012 and BFA from the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee in 2006.
Anna Natter is a Hungarian designer currently living in Germany. After studying fine art and animation, she worked for the largest commercial television company in Hungary before transitioning to freelance work.
Deepanjan Mukhopadhyay works in photography, video, installation, sculpture, and new media, investigating shifting meanings within post and neocolonialism while still reflecting on the very mediums of representation that he uses.
Adam Hawk is a studio artist and Visiting Assistant Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.