Contributors

Triple Canopy has worked with several hundred writers, artists, researchers, activists, architects, curators, educators, lawyers, scientists, and other outstanding people whose accomplishments cannot be circumscribed by profession and whose value cannot be expressed in list form. We are extraordinarily grateful to them.

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Guangtian Ha

Guangtian Ha is assistant professor of religion at Haverford College. He is the author of The Sound of Salvation: Voice, Gender, and the Sufi Mediascape in China (2022), and coeditor of Ethnographies of Islam in China (2020) and The Contest of the Fruits (2021). Website

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Jiminie Ha

Jiminie Ha is an independent designer and founder of W/—— project space in Chinatown. Website

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Ben Hall

Ben Hall  

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Ilana Halperin

Ilana Halperin is a New York– and Glasgow-based artist. Website

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Ed Halter

Ed Halter is a writer, curator, and director of Light Industry in Brooklyn. Website

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Lawrence Abu Hamdan

Lawrence Abu Hamdan is an artist and “private ear” who was born in Amman and lives in Dubai. His audio investigations, conducted with fellow researchers with Forensic Architecture, have been used as evidence at the UK Asylum and Immigration Tribunal and by organizations such as Amnesty International and Defense for Children International. Abu Hamdan received his PhD from Goldsmiths and is currently a fellow at the Gray Center for Arts and Inquiry at the University of Chicago. He has exhibited work at the Venice Biennale, the Gwangju Biennale, the Sharjah Biennial, Witte De With (Rotterdam), Tate Modern (London), Chisenhale Gallery (London), the Hammer Museum (Los Angeles), Portikus (Frankfurt), the Showroom (London), and Casco (Utrecht). His works are part of the collections of the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Guggenheim (New York), the Van Abbemuseum (Eindhoven), Centre Pompidou (Paris), and Tate Modern. Abu Hamdan has been awarded the 2019 Edvard Munch Art Award and the 2016 Nam June Paik Award. In 2019, Abu Hamdan shared the Turner Prize with three other artists, as part of a temporary collective. Website

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Barbara Hammer

Barbara Hammer is a visual artist working primarily in film and video. She has made over one hundred moving-image works in a career that spans fifty years. She is considered a pioneer of queer cinema. Retrospectives of her work have been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, NY; The Tate Modern, London; Jeu de Paume, Paris; the Toronto International Film Festival; among other institutions. She's received a Guggenheim Fellowship (2013), the Leo Award from the Flaherty Film Seminar (2008), the first Shirley Clarke Avant-Garde Filmmaker Award from New York Women in Film and Television (2006), among other honors. Her work was selected for the Whitney Biennial in 1985,1989, and 1993. In 2010, her book Hammer! Making Movies Out of Sex and Life was published by the Feminist Press at the City University of New York. In 2017, she launched the Barbara Hammer Lesbian Experimental Filmmaking Grant, an annual award for self-identified lesbians making visionary moving-image art. Website

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Laura Hanna

Laura Hanna is an organizer and filmmaker. She is co-founder and co-director of the Debt Collective, a membership-based economic justice organization. She serves as board president of Rolling Jubilee, a fund that has facilitated $33 million dollars of debt relief to people struggling with predatory debts, including medical debts and student loans. Hanna's background is in filmmaking. Prior to political organizing, she developed film and media strategies on behalf of those facing the death penalty. She has produced and directed films that have been screened and installed in museums in the U.S. and abroad. Website

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James Hannaham

James Hannaham  

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Arshia Fatima Haq

Arshia Fatima Haq was born in Hyderabad, India, and is based in Los Angeles. She works in film, visual art, performance, and sound. She is currently exploring themes of embodiment and mysticism, particularly within the context of Sufism. She is the founder of Discostan, a collaborative decolonial project working with cultural production from South and West Asia and North Africa. Haq’s work has been presented at Museum of Contemporary Art Tucson, the Station Museum of Contemporary Art (Houston), the Broad Museum (Los Angeles), the Toronto International Film Festival, the Museum of Modern Art (New York), the Hammer Museum (Los Angeles), LAXART (Los Angeles), Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris), and the Pacific Film Archive. She hosts and produces monthly radio shows on Dublab and NTS and recently released an album of field recordings from Pakistan on the label Sublime Frequencies. She is the recipient of the California Community Foundation Visual Artist Fellowship and the Rema Hort Mann Emerging Artist Grant.  

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Abdul Qadim Haqq

Abdul Qadim Haqq is an American visual artist who was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan. Haqq’s artwork has been featured on countless seminal Detroit techno records, including those of Juan Atkins, Derrick May, Underground Resistance, Carl Craig, and Drexciya.  

Maya Harakawa

Maya Harakawa is an art historian interested in feminist methodology and the study of artists’ books and publications. She is a PhD student at the CUNY Graduate Center.  

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Barry Harbaugh

Barry Harbaugh lives in Brooklyn. He was a research editor at the defunct Condé Nast Portfolio and has written for Wired. Website

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Sylvia Hardy

Sylvia Hardy is an artist based in New York City. She studied anthropology and photography at Washington University in St. Louis and received her MFA from Parsons. She has exhibited at Gallery Tayuta, Tokyo; Sydhavn Station, Copenhagen; and Spazio Morris, Milan. Website

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Ilana Harris-Babou

Ilana Harris-Babou is an artist whose work is grounded in the practice of video but includes sculpture and installation. Her work employs the aspirational tropes of popular culture, especially the language of cooking shows, music videos, and home-improvement television. She has exhibited work throughout the United States and Europe.  

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Rachel Harrison

Rachel Harrison lives and works in New York. Recent solo exhibitions include CCS Bard/Hessel Museum of Art, Annandale-on-Hudson (2009); Portikus, Frankfurt (2009); Whitechapel Gallery, London (2010); Kestnergesellschaft, Hannover (2013); and S.M.A.K., Ghent (2013). Her work is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam among many others. Website

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Christian Hawkey

Christian Hawkey  

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Cori Hayden

Cori Hayden is associate professor and chair of the department of Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley, and former director of UC Berkeley’s Center for Science, Technology, Medicine and Society. She is the author of When Nature Goes Public: The Making and Unmaking of Bioprospecting in Mexico (Princeton University Press, 2003), and has written extensively on knowledge production, intellectual property, and postcolonial science studies, particularly in Latin America.  

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Sharon Hayes

Sharon Hayes investigates the relationship between history, politics, and speech. Her multidisciplinary approach borrows from theater, anthropology, and journalism, among other artistic and academic practices. Her work has been exhibited internationally at institutions such as the New Museum for Contemporary Art, New York; the Guggenheim Museum, New York; Artists Space, New York; the Tate Modern, London; Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna; and the Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin. Hayes’s work was the subject of a 2012 solo exhibition, “There’s So Much I Want to Say to You,” at the Whitney Museum of American Art. “In My Little Corner of the World, Anyone Would Love You,” a major new commission, was on view at Studio Voltaire, London, in 2016. Hayes is an associate professor of fine arts at the University of Pennsylvania.  

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N. Katherine Hayles

N. Katherine Hayles is professor of literature at Duke University and the author of How We Became Posthuman.  

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Frank Heath

Frank Heath is an artist living and working in New York. He has had solo exhibitions at Simone Subal Gallery, New York; Swiss Institute, New York; and Art Basel Statements, Basel. His work has been included in group exhibitions and screenings at the Kitchen, New York; International Film Festival Rotterdam, the Power Plant, Toronto; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and the High Line, New York, among other venues.  

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Heatsick

Heatsick is the solo moniker of Berlin-based musician Steven Warwick, also known as one half of Birds of Delay. Website

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Hecuba

Hecuba Website

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Mostafa Heddaya

Mostafa Heddaya is a writer in New York and the coeditor of American Circus.  

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Johanna Hedva

Johanna Hedva is the author of the novel On Hell (Sator Press, 2018). Their fiction, essays, and poems have appeared in Asian American Literary Review, Black Warrior Review, Entropy, Mask Magazine, 3:AM, and elsewhere. Their work has been shown at Machine Project, Human Resources LA, the LA Architecture and Design Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art on the Moon.  

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Christoph Heemann

Christoph Heemann is a German musician who is widely known for his involvement with music projects H.N.A.S., Mirror, and Mimir. Since the mid-'90s, Heemann has collaborated with an array of musicians and visual artists, including the Melvins, Nurse with Wound, Tony Conrad, Faust, Keiji Haino, Merzbow, and Current 93’s David Tibet. Website

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Marwa Helal

Marwa Helal is a poet and journalist. Her work has appeared in Apogee, Hyperallergic, Poets & Writers, and elsewhere. She is the author of I AM MADE TO LEAVE I AM MADE TO RETURN (No, Dear/Small Anchor Press, 2017) and Invasive species (Nightboat Books, 2019). Helal is the winner of BOMB’s 2016 poetry contest and has been awarded fellowships from Poets House, Brooklyn Poets, and Cave Canem. She has presented her work at the Museum of Modern Art, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Brooklyn Museum. Born in Al Mansurah, Egypt, Helal currently lives in Brooklyn.  

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Adam Helms

Adam Helms is a New York–based artist and a former Triple Canopy contributing editor. He is obsessive, a collector of ephemera, and a friend to all animals. Website

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S*an D. Henry-Smith

S*an D. Henry-Smith is an artist and writer working primarily in poetry, photography, and performance, engaging Black experimentalisms and collaborative practices. They have received awards and fellowships from the Fulbright Program, The Poetry Project, Poets House, Antenna/Paper Machine, and have read, performed, and exhibited at Basilica Soundscape, Issue Project Room, Brooklyn Museum, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and elsewhere. S*an’s words and photographs have appeared in Aperture PhotoBook Review, Apogee Journal, FACT, FLASH ART, Canadian Art, the New York Times, them, Triple Canopy, and across several book projects. They are the author of two chapbooks, Body Text and Flotsam Suite: A Strange & Precarious Life, or How We Chronicled the Little Disasters & I Won’t Leave the Dance Floor Til It’s Out of My System; as mouthfeel, they coauthored Consider the Tongue alongside Imani Elizabeth Jackson, which explores histories of aquatic labor and Black food through cooking, poetry, and ephemeral practices. Wild Peach is S*an’s first full-length collection.  

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Amy Herzog

Amy Herzog is a scholar and critic who writes about sound, film, philosophy, pornography, and dioramas. Her most recent research project excavates the history of motion picture peepshow arcades in the late 1960 and early 1970s. She is Coordinator of the Film Studies Program at the CUNY Graduate Center and associate professor of media studies at Queens College.  

Sheila Heti

Sheila Heti is the author of five books: the story collection The Middle Stories; the novels Ticknor and How Should a Person Be?; a book for children titled We Need a Horse; and with Misha Glouberman, a book of spoken philosophy called The Chairs Are Where the People Go. She is the creator of the Trampoline Hall Lecture Series. She lives in Toronto. Website

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Toby Heys

Toby Heys produces music, sound, video, and Web projects as a member of Battery Operated and the KIT Collaboration. He runs the sound and video label Cocosolidciti and works in AUDiNT with Steve Goodman and Jon Cohrs. He is currently a resident at Eyebeam and an Arts and Humanities Research Council scholar finishing a PhD at John Moores University in England.  

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Sean Higgins

Sean Higgins is a writer and critic living in Portland, Maine, and an editorial and production assistant for Triple Canopy. He writes an irregular column for the BOMBlog on sound, media, and sound art. His work has appeared in Deep Leap, Sounding the Virtual: Gilles Deleuze and the Theory and Philosophy of Music and The Official Catalog of the Library of Potential Literature. Website

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Matthew Higgs

Matthew Higgs  

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Hilda Hilst

Hilda Hilst (1930–2004) is widely recognized as one of the most important lusophone authors of the twentieth century. Born in the state of São Paulo, Hilst obtained a law degree from the University of São Paulo in 1952 and, a few years later, moved to a small family estate; for the rest of her days, she lived in near seclusion and devoted herself to literature. Hilst published more than fifty works of poetry, fiction, and theater. Website

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Antonia Hirsch

Antonia Hirsch is an artist living and working in Berlin. Her work has been exhibited at the Contemporary Art Gallery (Vancouver), The Power Plant (Toronto), Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Tramway (Glasgow), and ZKM Museum of Contemporary Art (Karlsruhe). She is a contributing editor of Fillip. Website

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Orra White Hitchcock

Orra White Hitchcock (1796–1863) was a diarist and self-taught scientific illustrator of flora, fauna, fossils, and geological formations in Amherst, Massachusetts. Included in Issue 14 are charts she painted for classroom use. Website

Johan Hjerpe

Johan Hjerpe is a graphic designer and illustrator living in Stockholm. Website

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James Hoff

James Hoff is an artist living and working in Brooklyn. He is also a founder and editor (along with Miriam Katzeff) of Primary Information, a nonprofit arts organization devoted to publishing artists’ books and publications by artists. Website

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Dennis Hogan

Dennis Hogan Dennis Hogan is a PhD student in Comparative Literature at Brown University. His work focuses on decadent and aesthetic literature of the British and French fins de siècle and 1890s print cultures.  

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Harmony Holiday

Harmony Holiday is a writer, dancer, and archivist. She’s the author of Maafa (Fence Books, 2021) A Jazz Funeral for Uncle Tom (Birds, LLC, 2019); Hollywood Forever (Fence Books, 2016); Go Find Your Father/A Famous Blues (Ricochet Editions, 2014); Negro League Baseball (Fence Books, 2011); and The Black Saint and the Sinnerman, an LP composed of sound and speech that assimilates Charles Mingus’s classic 1963 album. She runs Afrosonics, an archive of jazz and everyday diaspora poetics, and Mythscience, an imprint that reissues work from the archive. She is currently working on a collection of essays, Love Is War for Miles, and a biography of the jazz singer Abbey Lincoln. She has received the Motherwell Prize from Fence Books and the Ruth Lilly Fellowship, a fellowship from New York Foundation for the Arts, and a fellowship from the Schomburg Center Scholars-in-Residence Program.  

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Karen Holmberg

Karen Holmberg is an archaeologist specializing in volcanic regions who has taught at Brown and Stanford Universities. Website

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Karl Holmqvist

Karl Holmqvist is an artist, poet, performer, and atypical activist. He works with various media and supports, creating installations, sound pieces, videos, performances, collages, and artist’s books. He has shown at Galerie Giti Nourbakhsch, Berlin; Gaga Arte Contemporaneo, Mexico City; Marabouparken, Sundbyberg, Sweden; and the Fifty-Fourth Venice Biennale; and a collection of his writings was published in 2009 by BookWorks in London under the title What’s My Name? “You Beat Me” was recorded and mixed by Stefan Tcherepnin in New York, 2010. Website

Julia Holter

Julia Holter  

Stewart Home

Stewart Home is an English artist, filmmaker, writer, pamphleteer, art historian, activist, and internationally acclaimed author. Home’s writings include Pure Mania (Polygon, 1989), Defiant Pose (Peter Owen Publishers, 1991; Penny-Ante Editions, 2016), Slow Death (Serpent’s Tail, 1996), 69 Things To Do With A Dead Princess (Canongate, 2002), Tainted Love (Virgin Books, 2005), Memphis Underground (Snowbooks, 2007), and Mandy, Charlie & Mary-Jane (Penny-Ante Editions, 2013). Between 2007 and 2010, Home was the commissioning editor of Semina, a series of acclaimed experimental novels from London art publisher Book Works, to which he contributed Blood Rites of the Bourgeoisie (2010). He was born and continues to reside in London.  

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Ja Zou Hon

Ja Zou Hon  

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Cathy Park Hong

Cathy Park Hong is a poet whose latest collection, Engine Empire, was published in 2012 by W.W. Norton. Her other collections include Dance Dance Revolution, chosen by Adrienne Rich for the Barnard Women Poets Prize, and Translating Mo'um. Hong is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship and the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship. Her poems have been published in Poetry, A Public Space, the Paris Review, McSweeney’s, Baffler, Boston Review, and the Nation, among other journals. Her writing on politics and her reviews have appeared in the Village Voice, the Guardian, Salon, Christian Science Monitor, and New York Times Magazine. She is the poetry editor of the New Republic and is an associate professor at Sarah Lawrence College. “Forecasts,” by Hong and artist Adam Shecter, was included in “Negative Infinity,” the fifteenth issue of Triple Canopy, published in 2011. Website

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Sukjong Hong

Sukjong Hong is a New York–based researcher and activist. Website

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Ana Finel Honigman

Ana Finel Honigman  

David Horvitz

David Horvitz is a half-Japanese Californian artist who was born in Los Angeles. He has recently had solo exhibitions at Chert, Berlin; Yvon Lambert Librarie, Paris; Fotomuseum Winterthur, Switzerland; Blum & Poe, Los Angeles; the New Museum, New York; Jan Mot, Brussels; Dawid Radziszewski Gallery, Warsaw; Statements, Art Basel; and Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen. Website

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Christine Hou

Christine Hou  

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John Houck

John Houck is an artist based in Los Angeles. He studied at UCLA and participated in the Whitney Independent Study and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. His work has been included in exhibitions at Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris; On Stellar Rays, New York; Art in General, New York; The Kitchen, New York; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. Website

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Sheree Hovsepian

Sheree Hovsepian is an Iranian-born artist who works in New York. Her work has appeared in exhibitions at the Drawing Center, New York; Higher Pictures, New York; Monique Meloche, Chicago; Halsey McKay, East Hampton. She received an MFA in photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2002). In the spring of 2019 she will present her second solo exhibition at Higher Pictures, New York. Website

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Jaya Howey

Jaya Howey lives and works in Brooklyn. He received his MFA from Columbia University. His recent solo exhibitions include “Splendor in the Commons” at Armada (Milan, 2017), “Edifying Lines for Sensitive Readers” at Bureau (New York, 2016), “Stay in Bed” at Standard (OSLO) (2015), “Note to Self” at Bureau (New York, 2014). Howey has exhibited at numerous other venues including the Kitchen (New York), Team Gallery (New York), Night Gallery (Los Angeles), and Taxter & Spengemann (New York). Howey was a Chinati Foundation Artist in Residence in Marfa, Texas, in 2017, and will have a solo exhibition at Standard (OSLO) in the fall of 2018.  

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Dan Hoy

Dan Hoy lives in Brooklyn, NY and is the author of the poetry collections Omegachurch (Solar Luxuriance, 2010), Polaroid (Wrath of Dynasty, 2010), and Glory Hole (Mal-O-Mar, 2009). He previously co-edited SOFT TARGETS (2006-2007), a magazine of art, philosophy, and literature, and currently contributes to the collective blog www.montevidayo.com. His personal site is www.thepinupstakes.com. Website

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Sarah Hromack

Sarah Hromack writes and works at the intersection of art, publications, technology, and institutions. She is the Director of Digital Media at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Website

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Hua Hsu

Hua Hsu is a writer living in New York City. He is a staff writer at the New Yorker and an associate professor of English and director of the American Studies program at Vassar College. Hsu has contributed to Artforum, the Atlantic, Slate, the Wire, and Triple Canopy, among other publications, and has been a fellow at the New York Public Library’s Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center and the New America Foundation. In 2019, he co-curated “The Moon Represents My Heart,” an exhibition about music and Chinese-American life at the Museum of Chinese in America (New York City). He is the author of A Floating Chinaman: Fantasy and Failure Across the Pacific (Harvard University Press, 2016), and is working on a book about identity, grief, and listening to music with friends. Website

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Eric Hu

Eric Hu is a designer based in New York City and a partner at Nothing in Common, a design and technology studio in Brooklyn. He received his BFA from Art Center College of Design in 2011 and his MFA from the Yale School of Art in 2013. Previously Eric was the design director at digital agency OKFocus, leading branding and user interface projects for clients such as Nike, the Wolfsonian Museum, Soylent, Phillips, Tumblr, and Atlantic Records. Eric was honored as an Art Director’s Club Young Gun in 2010 and became the recipient of the Bradbury Thompson Memorial Prize in 2013.  

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Zhou Hai Hua

Zhou Hai Hua  

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Wennie Huang

Wennie Huang  

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A. B. Huber

A. B. Huber is a professor at NYU’s Gallatin School for Individualized Study whose current work is focused on the force and form of critique in times of war. Website

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Jibade-Khalil Huffman

Jibade-Khalil Huffman is an artist and writer whose video and photo works use found, archival material and contemporary ephemera to address slippage in memory and language, particular to race and visibility. Lyrical strophes of text and densely-composed imagery produce objects of perpetual flux, indexed by accumulating layers which challenge normative symbolic and semiotic hierarchies. Through projection and repetition, Huffman’s work evokes the untranslatable, ruminating on the liminal qualities of singular experiences through narrative and graphic rhythms.  

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Paul Hughes

Paul Hughes is a Web developer who sometimes develops Web things. Website

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Hush Hush

Hush Hush  

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