Difference between revisions of "Diann Bauer"
m (Text replacement - "[[Category:" to "[[Series:") |
|||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20160130035133/https://aap.cornell.edu/people/diann-bauer?department=7 Profile on Cornell U] (archived) | * [http://web.archive.org/web/20160130035133/https://aap.cornell.edu/people/diann-bauer?department=7 Profile on Cornell U] (archived) | ||
− | [[Series:Accelerationism | + | [[Series:Accelerationism]] [[Series:Cyberfeminism|Diann Bauer]] |
− | [[Series:Cyberfeminism|Bauer, Diann | + | {{DEFAULTSORT:Bauer, Diann}} |
Latest revision as of 19:45, 7 September 2024
Diann Bauer (1972 - 2022) was an artist and writer. She studied both art and architecture at the Cooper Union in New York and Goldsmiths College, London. She was a researcher at Westminster University, UK where she was part of Deep Field Projects. Much of her work was collaborative and interdisciplinary with projects including Laboria Cuboniks, with whom she wrote and published Xenofeminism, A Politics for Alienation in 2015, and A.S.T. (the Alliance of the Southern Triangle), a working group of artists, architects and curators that use the art field as a platform to broaden interdisciplinary collaboration with a focus on urbanism and climate change.
Bauer screened and exhibited independently at Tate Britain, The ICA, The Showroom and FACT Liverpool, Deste Foundation, Athens, The New Museum, and Socrates sculpture park, New York and completed a project with Arts at CERN. She taught and lectured widely at universities and cultural institutions including: Cornell University, Yale University, the New School and Cooper Union (US), HKW (Germany), ETH (Switzerland), DAI (Netherlands), Ashkal Alwan (Lebanon), The Tate and the ICA London. (2022)
- Links
- http://diannbauer.net
- Profile on Cornell U (archived)