et al.

Author

Jan Bryant

et al.

et al. live in Auckland Tāmaki Makaurau and have been practicing under various pseudonyms for over four decades. The collective was the subject of a survey exhibition at Govett-Brewster Art Gallery in 2004, awarded the Walters Prize in the same year, and in 2005 represented New Zealand at the Venice Biennale. et al. have held solo and group exhibitions in New Zealand and internationally and their work is held in public collections in New Zealand including Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, Christchurch Art Gallery Te Puna o Waiwhetu and The University of Auckland Art Collection.

Dr Jan Bryant

Jan Bryant is a writer and academic interested in the material basis of contemporary art practices and their political and philosophical resonances. She is Director of Art Programme, an anti-institutional art initiative based in Melbourne that generates online courses, studio pracs. and artist-led projects.

Natasha Conland

Natasha Conland is a Senior Curator of Global Contemporary Art at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki. She has over twenty years experience developing exhibitions of contemporary art, and has written for a number of contemporary art journals andcatalogues in the Asia-Pacific region. She co-edited Reading Room, a peer-reviewed journal of contemporary art published annually by the E H McCormick Research Library, Auckland Art Gallery, 2006 18. She has a long interest in performance, art in public space and the dissemination of the historic avant-garde.

Gwynneth Porter

Gwynneth Porter is a writer and editor from Otautahi Christchurch in Aotearoa New Zealand. Writing essays on art since the mid-1990s, her practice has involved persistent experimentation with forms, methodologies and subject positions. With a long history of collaborations with artists in publication development and artist-led projects, she has a working background in art school teaching, visual arts publishing, and art museum curatorial and public programmes mahi. In 2020 she completed a PhD through Monash University in Melbourne s Department of Art History and Theory with a thesis titled

Delinquent Palaces: Adolescent Museum Visitation in Literature . She is currently Librarian at Christchurch Women s Prison.

Pip Wallis

Pip Wallis is Senior Curator at Monash University Museum of Art (MUMA). She has held curatorial roles in Australia, the United Kingdom and Europe. She has written for numerous publications and journals with a particular interest in performance art and dance. Pip is a Chief Investigator on the Australian Research Council (ARC) funded study Precarious Movements: Choreography and the Museum (2020 24).

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