Past Residents
Past Resident
2017: National Endowment for the Arts
Paolo Cirio
Paolo Cirio engages with legal, economic, and semiotic systems of the information society. His works investigates social fields impacted by the Internet, such as privacy, copyright, democracy, and finance.
Paolo Cirio has exhibited widely throughout the world, including at C/O, Berlin; MIT Museum, Boston; and V&A Museum, London, among others. He was awarded the Golden Nica in the Interactive Art by Ars Electronica in 2014 and was an Eyebeam Fellow in 2012.

Paolo Cirio, Obscurity, 2016, archival inkjet on 350gsm paper, 33 × 41 in. (83.82 × 104.14 cm).

Paolo Cirio, Overexposed, 2015, acrylic and spray paint.

Paolo Cirio, Daily Paywall, 2014, news prints.

Paolo Cirio, Loophole for All, 2013.

Paolo Cirio, Street Ghosts, 2012, inkjet prints.
Residents from Italy
Raffaela Naldi Rossano

The Italian Academy for Advanced Studies, Columbia University, Italian Cultural Institute of New York, Directorate-General for Public and Cultural Diplomacy of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Directorate-General for Contemporary Creativity of the Italian Ministry of Culture
2024
Past Resident
2017: Canada Council for the Arts
Deborah Edmeades
Deborah Edmeades’s work exists at the intersection of performance, the lens, object-making and drawing. Her performative practice has at times extended outside of an artistic or academic context and into therapeutic and esoteric experiments. Recent interests include the history of western esotericism and its manifestation in contemporary New Age religion.
Deborah Edmeades has shown work at BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art, United Kingdom; Ars Electronica, Austria; Dixon Place, New York; Artspeak, Vancouver; and The Knitting Factory, New York, among others.

Deborah Edmeades, Monologues: a score, detail, 2017, paint, ink and silver leaf on drafting vellum, 83 × 181/2 in. (210.82 × 46.99 cm).

Deborah Edmeades, Monologues, 2017, performance, 20 min.

Deborah Edmeades, Blinking and Other Involuntary Portals, detail, 2016, rocks, felt, wood, paint, false eyelashes, silver leaf, paper, galvanized wire, polyester resin, magnets, circuitry, solar panels, mount board, 5" video monitors, cameras and teleprompter glass, dimensions variable.

Deborah Edmeades, Artists, Mystics & Suffragettes (A-Z), detail, 2016, paper, paint, and glue, 7.5 x 4.5 x 3 in each.

Deborah Edmeades, This, 2014, video still, 13 min.
Past Resident
2017: OCA - Office for Contemporary Art Norway
Marte Danielsen Jølbo
Marte Danielsen Jølbo is a curator, writer and editor. Her curatorial practice is concerned with site-specificity and transdisciplinary collaborations. She is interested in self-organisation, the relationship between curator and artist and in developing new tools and methods for curatorial writing.
Marte Danielsen Jølbo is a co-founder of Another Space, a project space for art and architecture, and is also co-founder and editor of the web journal Contemporary Art Stavanger. She is the author and editor of several essays and art publications. She has curated exhibitions at Open Source Gallery, New York City; Charlotte Street Foundation, Kansas City; insitu, Berlin, among others. Jølbo participated in Curatorial Program for Research, Mexico, 2017, and is the recipient of a Stavanger Curatorial Fellowship.
Events & Exhibitions
Fall Open Studios 2017
November 10–November 11, 2017

Marte Danielsen Jølbo, permanent construction at Open Source Gallery, New York. Artists Melodie Mousset, Owen Armour, Anna Daniell, 2016. photo by Guillaume Ziccarelli.

Marte Danielsen Jølbo, Vertical Displacement, 2016, at insitu, Berlin, 'Silk Grid' by Akane Moriyama, work in the back room by Luca Vanello.

Marte Danielsen Jølbo, Unflatten, 2016, at Prosjektrom Normanns, Stavanger. Artists Linn Pedersen, Ingo Mittelstaedt, Anne Holtrop & Bas Princen, Stein Rønning.

Marte Danielsen Jølbo, Shared Territory, 2015, published by Another Space, publication, 83/16 × 57/16 in. (20.78 × 13.84 cm).

Marte Danielsen Jølbo, Textile Spaces, 2013, published by Another Space, publication, 337/16 × 221/4 in. (84.99 × 56.59 cm).