Career
Bryan-Wilson joined Columbia University in 2022, when she became the first art history Professor of LGBTQ+ studies in the history of the university. Bryan-Wilson studies
feminist and
queer theory, modern and contemporary art, craft histories, and questions of artistic labor, as well as
photography,
video, collaborative practices, and
visual culture of the
Atomic Age. Her first major academic book,
Art Workers: Radical Practice in the Vietnam War Era, published by the
University of California Press in 2009, examined the politics of artistic labor in the 1960s and 1970s, particularly in feminist and Marxist contexts. It was named an outstanding book of the year by Artforum, Choice, and the New York Times. Bryan-Wilson's article, "Invisible Products," published in the Summer 2012 issue of
Art Journal, received the 2013 Art Journal Award for Outstanding Article of the Year from the
College Art Association. Her second book,
Fray: Art and Textile Politics, published by the
University of Chicago Press in 2017, explores the role of handmade textiles in art history, drawing attention to the racialized and gendered labor involved in textile production. It also includes a critical analysis of the AIDS Quilt, incorporating queer perspectives into the narrative of art history. The book was awarded three major prizes: the 2018
Robert Motherwell Book Award by the Dedalus Foundation, the Book Prize from The Association for the Study of the Arts of the Present (or ASAP), and the 2019 Frank Jewett Mather Award from the College Art Association.
Holland Cotter named it one of the best art books of the year in the New York Times. Her third sole-authored book, ''Louise Nevelson's Sculpture: Drag, Color, Join, Face'', focused on the Jewish Ukrainian-American sculptor
Louise Nevelson, challenged traditional monographic approaches in art history by expanding the conversation around influence to include what she calls "queer aesthetic kinship". She studied Nevelsons fan art, treating it with the same respect as professional critiques, and emphasized the importance of examining the wide range of spaces in which an artists work circulates. It was awarded the Terra Foundation for American Art International Publication Award, 2022. She is the editor of
Robert Morris (October Files), published by the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2013. With
Glenn Adamson, Byran-Wilson is also the co-author of
Art in the Making: Artists and their Materials from the Studio to Crowdsourcing (1st Edition), published by
Thames & Hudson in June 2016.
Curatorial activity With Andrea Andersson, Bryan-Wilson co-curated the first traveling exhibition of
Cecilia Vicuña: About to Happen at the
Contemporary Arts Center in New Orleans in 2017. The show traveled to the
Institute for Contemporary Art at the
University of Pennsylvania in February 2019, the
Henry Art Gallery in Seattle, the
Berkeley Art Museum, and MOCA North Miami. In 2024, Bryan-Wilson chaired the international jury of the
60th Venice Biennale. == Publications ==
Publications
Books • • • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2023). Louise Nevelson's Sculpture: Drag, Color, Join, Face. Yale University Press. Edited books and journal editions • Bodies of Resistance exhibition catalogue; editor, with Barbara Hunt. Hartford, CT: Real Art Ways/Visual AIDS, 2000 • Bryan-Wilson, J. (Ed.). (2013). Robert Morris (Vol. 15). MIT Press. • Bryan-Wilson, J., & Piekut, B. (2020). Amateurism. Third Text, 34(1), 1-21. • Bryan-Wilson, J., González, J., & Willsdon, D. (2016). Editors' introduction: Themed issue on visual activism. Journal of Visual Culture, 15(1), 5-23. • Jackson, S., & Bryan-Wilson, J. (2016). Time Zones: Durational Art and Its Contexts. Representations, (136), 1-20. Selected book chapters • Bryan-Wilson, Julia. "Against the Body: Interpreting Ana Mendieta." In Transnational Perspectives on Feminism and Art, 1960-1985, pp. 139–153. Routledge, 2021. • Baum, K., Griffey, R., Brown, M. A., Bryan-Wilson, J., & Temkin, S. V. (2021). Alice Neel: people come first. Metropolitan Museum of Art. • Lewallen, C., Moss, K., Bryan-Wilson, J., & Rorimer, A. (2011). State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970. Univ of California Press. Selected articles • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2003). Remembering Yoko Ono's" Cut Piece". Oxford Art Journal, 99–123. • Bryan-Wilson, J., & July, M. (2004). Some kind of grace: An interview with Miranda July. Camera Obscura, 19(1), 180–197. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2007). Hard hats and art strikes: Robert Morris in 1970. The Art Bulletin, 89(2), 333–359. • Foster, H., Bryan-Wilson, J., Kester, G., Elkins, J., Kwon, M., Shannon, J., ... & Mcdonough, T. (2009). Questionnaire on" The Contemporary". October, 130, 3–124. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2012). Occupational realism. TDR/The Drama Review, 56(4), 32–48. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2012). Dirty commerce: Art work and sex work since the 1970s. differences, 23(2), 71–112. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2013). Eleven propositions in response to the question:"What is contemporary about craft?". The Journal of Modern Craft, 6(1), 7–10. • Bryan-Wilson, J., & Dunye, C. (2013). Imaginary archives: A dialogue. Art Journal, 72(2), 82–89. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2015). Simone Forti goes to the zoo. October, (152), 26–52. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2012). Practicing" Trio A.". October, (140). • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2014). "Out to See Video": EZTV's Queer Microcinema in West Hollywood. Grey Room, (56), 58–89. • Bryan-Wilson, J. (2019). queer-homophobia Bruce Nauman: queer homophobia. Burlington Contemporary. • Brizuela, N., & Bryan-Wilson, J. (2021). Speaking of Lotty Rosenfeld:"Gestures Dangerous, Simple, and Popular". October, (176), 111–137. ==References==