Myriam Bornand is a French-Swiss artist, who works in multiple mediums: paint, collage, photography, video, texts and installations.

Suzanne Opton is a photographer. Her soldier portraits, icons of the aftermath of the current wars, have been presented as billboards in eight American cities.

Madelon Hooykaas is a Dutch visual artist, photographer and filmmaker with a long and international career. Her video and photographic work often establishes pure relationships with nature and explores scientific principles and forces of nature. She has developed a comprehensive artistic practice related to her art and research through photography, film, installation and video, and interactive and performance art and text. Recurring themes are physical and human landscapes, water and light, memory and presence, loss and abstraction, and minimalism and formalism. Hooykaas has been working with photography since the 1960s and was one of the first visual artists to use video as an artistic medium. From the 1970s, Hooykaas worked closely with the Scottish visual artist Elsa Stansfield (1945-2004). Stansfield/Hooykaas gained fame as European video pioneers. Hooykaas’ work is part of important museum collections, including Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Museum of Modern Art New York, Tate Gallery London and National Gallery of Canada Ottawa.

Rodrigo Valenzuela (b.Santiago, Chile 1982) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA, where he is the Associate Professor and Head of the Photography Department at UCLA. Valenzuela has been awarded the 2021 Guggenheim Fellowship in Photography and Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship; Joan Mitchell award for painters and sculptors; Art Matters Foundation grant; and Artist trust Innovators Award. Recent solo exhibitions include: New Museum, NY; Lisa Kandlhofer Galerie, Vienna, AU; Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene; Orange County Museum; Portland Art Museum; Frye Art Museum, Seattle. Recent residencies include: Core Fellowship at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture; MacDowell Colony; Bemis Center for contemporary arts; Lightwork; and the Center for Photography at Woodstock.

Katherine Bussard is the Peter C. Bunnell Curator of Photography at the Princeton University Art Museum. Most recently, Bussard coauthored The City Lost and Found: Capturing New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, 1960–1980, an award-winning publication exploring the intersection of photography, architecture, and urban studies. She is also the coauthor of Color Rush: American Color Photography from Stieglitz to Sherman and author of So the Story Goes: Photographs by Tina Barney, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Nan Goldin, Sally Mann, and Larry Sultan. Her doctoral research on street photography at the City University of New York is the subject of Unfamiliar Streets: The Photographs of Richard Avedon, Charles Moore, Martha Rosler, and Philip-Lorca diCorcia.