Leslie Dick (born 1954) is an American artist, writer, editor, and educator, based in Los Angeles. Her work explores feminist themes, especially in relation to queer theory and Lacanian discourse. Dick has published two novels, a collection of short stories, and several critical essays. She is a member of the editorial board of X-TRA Contemporary Art Quarterly , a Los Angeles–based, internationally distributed journal of art. [1] She has been faculty at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) since 1992, and is currently co-director of the CalArts Program in Art. [2] Since 2012 she has also held a position as a critic in the sculpture program at the Yale School of Art. [3]
Leslie Dick was born in Boston in 1954. At the age of 10, she moved from New York to London, living there from 1965 to 1988. [4] She attended the University of Sussex and earned a BA in English Literature in 1977. [5]
Dick is the author of two novels: Without Falling (1987) and Kicking (1992). Without Falling has been described by Kathy Acker as "a real woman's romantic novel... written for the sake of truth" [6] and by Angela McRobbie as "an important book" that occupies a space "along the line between romance and sexuality". [7] Kicking, her second novel, follows a self-referential love triangle set in the 1980s art world in London and New York. [8] [9] She has also published a collection of short stories, titled The Skull of Charlotte Corday and Other Stories (1997), which features stories with female protagonists. [10] [11] [12] Her story "Envy", part of Alison Fell's 1989 seven-author project The Seven Deadly Sins, was described by Carolyn Cooke in The Nation as one of the strongest stories in the collection, using "thoroughness to transcend the trite". [13]
Dick contributes regularly to X-Tra Arts Quarterly, among other journals. She contributed a chapter to a 2006 collection of criticism on Kathy Acker, titled Lust for Life. [14] [15]
In 1999 Dick and Los Angeles–based artist Martin Kersels were jointly selected "to run the arts program at" CalArts. [16] Dick and Kersels have also collaborated on several projects. In 2008, Dick and Kersels exhibited the video Ripcord at ACME Gallery in Los Angeles. [17] For the 2010 Whitney Biennial, Dick presented a talk titled The Mirror Stage—a Multimedia Performance, as part of the performance series Live on 5 Songs, curated by Kersels. [18]
Leslie Dick appears in Sarah Thornton's collection of art world reportage, titled Seven Days in the Art World. [19] Dick discusses her teaching philosophy in the context of a chapter on Michael Asher's "Post-Studio" critique class. [19]
Kathy Acker was an American experimental novelist, playwright, essayist, and postmodernist writer, known for her idiosyncratic and transgressive writing that dealt with themes such as childhood trauma, sexuality and rebellion. She was influenced by the Black Mountain School poets, William S. Burroughs, David Antin, Carolee Schneeman, Eleanor Antin, French critical theory, mysticism, and pornography, as well as classic literature.
The Pushcart Prize is an American literary prize published by Pushcart Press that honors the best "poetry, short fiction, essays or literary whatnot" published in the small presses over the previous year. Magazine and small book press editors are invited to submit up to six works they have featured. Anthologies of the selected works have been published annually since 1976. It is supported and staffed by volunteers.
Josip Novakovich is a Croatian Canadian writer.
Panio Gianopoulos is an American writer and editor.
Dodie Bellamy is an American novelist, nonfiction author, journalist, educator and editor. Her book, Cunt-Ups (2001) won the 2002 Firecracker Alternative Book Award. Her work is frequently associated with that of the New Narrative movement in San Francisco and fellow writers Robert Glück, Dennis Cooper, Kathy Acker, Kevin Killian, and Eileen Myles.
Laila Lalami is a Moroccan-American novelist, essayist, and professor. After earning her licence ès lettres degree in Morocco, she received a fellowship to study in the United Kingdom (UK), where she earned an MA in linguistics.
Tod Goldberg is an American author and journalist best known for his novels Gangsters Don't Die (Counterpoint),Gangster Nation (Counterpoint), Gangsterland (Counterpoint) and Living Dead Girl, the popular Burn Notice series (Penguin/NAL) and the short story collection The Low Desert: Gangster Stories (Counterpoint).
Chris Kraus is a writer and critic. Her work includes the novels I Love Dick, Aliens and Anorexia, and Torpor, which form a loose trilogy that navigates between autobiography, fiction, philosophy, and art criticism, and a sequence of novels dealing with American underclass experience that began with Summer of Hate. Her approach to writing has been described as ‘performance art within the medium of writing’ and ‘a bright map of presence’. Her work has drawn controversy through its equalisation of high and low culture, mixing critical theory with colloquial language and graphic representations of sex. Her books often blend intellectual, political, and sexual concerns with wit, oscillating between esoteric referencing and parody. She has written extensively in the fields of art and cultural criticism.
Douglas A. Martin is an American poet, a novelist and a short story writer.
Martin Kersels is an American contemporary artist. Kersels' work is largely installation based, incorporating sculpture, photography and video. Kersels is a professor of sculpture and director of graduate studies at the Yale School of Art.
Alexandra Grant is an American visual artist who examines language and written texts through painting, drawing, sculpture, video, and other media. She uses language and exchanges with writers as a source for much of that work. Grant examines the process of writing and ideas based in linguistic theory as it connects to art and creates visual images inspired by text and collaborative group installations based on that process. She is based in Los Angeles.
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Tara Ison is an American novelist, short story writer, and essayist.
X-TRA Contemporary Art Journal (X-TRA) is an independent visual arts journal that focuses on criticism and conversation about contemporary art. X-TRA was founded in Los Angeles in 1997 by artists Stephen Berens and Ellen Birrell and is published twice a year by the non-profit Project X Foundation for Art and Criticism. The magazine is the longest running art publication in Los Angeles.
Carole Ann Klonarides is an American curator, video artist, writer and art consultant that has been based in New York and Los Angeles. She has worked in curatorial positions at the Santa Monica Museum of Art (1997–2000) and Long Beach Museum of Art (1991–95), curated exhibitions and projects for PS1 and Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), Laforet Museum (Tokyo), and Video Data Bank, among others, and been a consultant at the Getty Research Institute. Klonarides emerged as an artist among the loosely defined Pictures Generation group circa 1980; her video work has been presented in numerous museum exhibitions, including "Video and Language: Video As Language", "documenta 8," "New Works for New Spaces: Into the Nineties,", and "The Pictures Generation, 1974-1984", and at institutions such as MoMA, the Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum, Contemporary Arts Center, the New Museum, The Kitchen, and School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2016). Her work belongs to the permanent collections of MoMA, the Whitney Museum of American Art, Getty Museum, Centre Pompidou, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Museu-Fundacão Calouste Gulbenkian (Lisbon), Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía (Madrid), and National Gallery of Canada, and is distributed by the Video Data Bank and Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI).
Audrey Wollen is an American writer and artist. Wollen's prose and essays gained traction on social media platforms like Tumblr as she developed the idea of "Sad Girl Theory. Wollen has written for publications including The Nation, The New York Review of Books, and Artforum. Her work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art Warsaw, the Barischer Kunstverein, and Steve Turner Gallery. She lives and works in New York.
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Robert Glück is an American poet, fiction writer, artist, and co-founder of the New Narrative movement. In the 1980s in San Francisco, he co-founded the New Narrative movement with Bruce Boone and several others. His published poetry includes the book Reader (1989) and his published fiction work includes Margery Kempe (1994), Jack the Modernist (1995) and Denny Smith (2003), and essay collections such as Communal Nude (2016).