Past Resident
2016: Pollock-Krasner Foundation

Anne Neukamp

Anne Neukamp diverts the vocabulary of the contemporary visual language that surrounds us: logos, emblems, icons, pictograms and signs by rendering them fundamentally ambiguous. Her paintings produce a floating state between intelligible motifs and an abstract, incomplete and loose cosmology. They destabilize the viewer’s perception by creating unusual situations that are stretched between reality and illusion, challenging different painting clichés or contradictory “styles” and collapse multiple senses of space into one visual surface.

Anne Neukamp (born 1976, Düsseldorf, Germany) lives and works in Berlin. Solo exhibitions of her work have been held at Gregor Podnar Gallery, Berlin, Germany, 2015; Greta Meert Gallery, Brussels, Belgium, 2014; Valentin, Paris, France, 2014; Agustina Ferreyra, San Juan, Puerto Rico, 2014; Oldenburger Kunstverein, Oldenburg, Germany, 2013, and Wilhelm-Hack-Museum, Ludwigshafen, Germany, 2012. Her works have been included in group exhibitions at Columbia University, New York; KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin, Germany; Kai10 Arthena Foundation, Düsseldorf, Germany; Kunstverein Heidelberg, and the 5th Prague Biennale.

Iliana Antonova

Iliana Antonova is a critic and independent curator whose practice examines the possibilities for alternative models of art presentation. By engaging with the exhibition as an open-ended structural armature, she foregrounds artistic practices invested in experimentation within these frameworks.

Iliana Antonova (born 1984, Bulgaria) is based in Montréal, Quebec, Canada. Her writing has been published in numerous publications including Canadian Art, ETC revue de l’art actuel, and C Magazine. she co-founded the directed Silver Flag, an independent exhibition space, from 2009-2012, which featured solo exhibitions by artist such as Scott Lyall, Euan Mcdonald, and Sarah Greig, amongst others. In 2013, she was the recipient of the Astérides curatorial residency in Marseille, France, granted by Fonderie Darling, Montréal. Antonova holds a degree in art history from Concordia University.

Past Resident
2015: National Endowment for the Arts

Dylan Gauthier

Dylan Gauthier works at the intersection of new media, architecture, ecology, and critical urbanism. His work takes the form of soundtracks, publications, images, websites, videos, environmental research, and social sculptures. His research-based artistic practice explores the residues of temporary occupations, interventions in public space, invisible infrastructure, and utopian systems. Gauthier is a founder of the Sunview Luncheonette, a social center and cooperative space located in a former diner in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and of the artist-activist-boatbuilding collective Mare Liberum.

Dylan Gauthier (born 1979, Santa Monica, California) is an artist, writer, and curator based in Brooklyn, NY, where he has lived since 2002. Gauthier is co-founder of Mare Liberum, a longtime collaborator with Red76, and founder of Luncheonette, an art and social space located in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. His work has been presented in museums and galleries including the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University, MASS MoCA, The Walker Art Center, The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts Project Space, Parsons School of Design, Printed Matter Art Book Fair at MoMA PS1, C.C.A.D., ISSUE Project Room, the Boston Center for the Arts, PsyGeoConflux Festival, Flux Factory, the Wassaic Project, and the Neuberger Museum of Art. He holds an MFA in Integrated Media Arts from Hunter College, where he currently teaches in the Film and Media Department.