I & R16 Myths & Facts13 (story) Loading...12 Fayen d'Evie12 Video12 Crisis10 Text10 Reproductions9 Improvements8 Listening8 Sound8 Poetry7 Memory7 Photography7 Favourable Conditions7 Performing the Archive6 Sculpture6 Points of Connection6 Environment6 a border can have no boundaries6 Fandom5 Sincerely Yours5 Casual-Paradise5 Painting5 to listen, not to preserve5 Installation5 writing4 Language4 Archives4 The Anti-Shock Doctrine4 interview4 Labour3 House of Mother Tongue, House of Other Tongue3 Artist Walks3 Record3 Performance3 Augury – The diary of birds3 Pandemic3 Precarity2 Textile2 read2 music2 Paradise2 Gentrification2 Community2 Essay2 fiction2 WS × Social Studio2 listen2 Productivity1 Description1 Angna Mein1 watch1 Anna Dunnill | Processing Plant1 vampires1 Translation1 augury1 The Region1 choreography1 TERRA: Memory & Soil1 Improvisation1 talking1 Surprised face; Heart eyes1 movement1 documentation1 dust1 Sex1 interpretation1 scores1 exhibition1 Politics1 spoken word1
A growing assembly of biographies. Collaborators and contributors to 'We get in touch with things at the point they break down // Even in the absence of spectators and audiences, dust circulates...'

Janaleen Wolfe is an actress based in Sydney who creates character and sound performances drawing on voice and imagination.

Katie West is an artist and Yindjibarndi woman of the Pilbara tablelands with a strong sense of home in Noongar boodja. Using found and naturally dyed textiles, Katie creates installations and happenings to invite attention to the ways we weave our stories, places, histories and futures. www.katiewularniwest.com/

Carmen Papalia is a nonvisual social practice artist with severe chronic and episodic pain. Since 2009 he has used organizing strategies and improvisation to address his access to public space, the art institution and visual culture. His work, which takes forms ranging from collaborative performance to public intervention, is a response to the harms of the Medical Model of Disability, a framework that erases disability experience by reinforcing ableist concepts of normalcy.

Benjamin Hancock is a solo and collaborative performance artist, who situates their work within and across the dance, drag, and contemporary art communities. He is interested in how a subjective body receives, interprets, processes, and translates information. His work explores and redefines how we understand the ability, strength, care, sexuality, masculinity and femininity of a body. www.benjaminhancock.net

Jennifer Justice is an artist and writer living in Northern California. Her recent work includes computer-generated and tactile sculptural installations, as well as ekphrastic poetry to promote accessible design in exhibition and public spaces. She is also interested in disability culture and the ecological landscape.

Sophie Takách is an artist and teacher working from the lower Yarra Ranges area. Sophie generates sculptural objects primarily though casting processes, recording temporary voids and gestures that are captured and made tangible. These passing moments and movements are turned into tactile encounters that become nodal points for collective conversations and experiences; offering a perspective into the physical interactions and intangible forces that shape our understand of self and other. www.sophietakach.com

Hillary Goidell is an artist based in the San Francisco Bay Area. She collaborates with choreographers to photograph their creative process, both emotional and physical, and expands on this work through multisensorial research and audiodescription. She also documents larger processes like end of life; these images act as imprints for accessing embodiment and lived experience. www.hillarygoidell.com

Holly Craig is a dance artist and performance maker based in Sydney. From their lived history of Blindness, Holly creates movement works which activate critical discourse on social issues through personal narratives.

Lizzie Boon is an archivist, arts registrar, writer, and occasional designer, currently living and working on Wurundjeri country. She is interested in the expanded potentials of publishing, particularly its embodied possibilities. Lizzie is also studying psychology, which is increasingly guiding her perspective on making.

Georgina Kleege is a blind writer interested in representations of blindness across all facets of visual culture, and the ways these representations impact access to the arts.

Vincent Chan is a type designer based in Naarm. He is interested in commoning, pedagogy, language and letters and where they overlap, co-mingle and meld. www.matterofsorts.com

Irina Povolotskaya (Purple Fairy Phoenix) is a deafblind performer from Moscow. She is active in theater, music, and painting, writes articles on these topics, and composes prose, poetry, and scripts. She worked as a psychologist for many years, and is the founder of Cosmoopera Performing Arts. www.ipovolotskaya.ru

Andy Slater is a blind media artist from Chicago, working in the mediums of sound, extended reality, web art, science fiction,installation and performance. Much of his art is focused on accessibility, blind wayfinding, and sonic drifting. www.thisisandyslater.net

Harriet Jones follows a curiosity in ways of understanding and the interference from language-frames we habitually use to locate and identify, in search of untidy & empathetic alternatives. She is a curator and collaborator who lives and works on Wurundjeri country.

J (ju ca, picnic, etc) is a writer, musician and founder of the record label and publishing platform Daisart. www.daisart.press

Janice Florence tangles with a range of approaches to improvisation and devising performance works in pedestrian movement, dance and text. She has recently been delving into Japanese Butoh. She has been dancing in a wheelchair for 30 years, mostly with other diverse bodies and minds.

Kate Disher-Quill is a Melbourne based artist working across photography, moving image, publication, multimedia and author of Earshot – a publication exploring the myriad of experiences of deafness. As a visual communicator she is drawn to stories that matter and translating these experiences into art. www.katedisherquill.com

Trent Walter is an artist, printer and publisher interested in the overlap of printed matter, contemporary art and community-based practice based in Naarm, Melbourne. www.negativepress.com.au/

Riana Head-Toussaint is an interdisciplinary disabled artist, who uses a manual wheelchair for mobility. Her work crosses traditional artform boundaries, and exists in online and offline spaces. Enduring concerns are agency, representation, the limits of empathy, and how these impact people across different marginalised intersections. Her work is deeply informed by her experiences as a disabled woman of Afro-Caribbean descent, and her training as a legal practitioner.

Adam Leslie is a snake catcher and cabinetmaker, whose work usually derives from a Shaker ethos and function over form. When not relocating snakes or joining pieces of wood together, his mind swirls with science fiction, mythology, occult philosophy, geopolitics, and myriad flora and fauna of the Stringybark country where he lives and works.

Tommy Carroll is a drummer, composer, and beatmaker from Chicago who happens to be totally blind. He leads Tommy Carroll’s Calculated Discomfort, an 8 piece Jazz dance collective that has played in a wide variety of venues throughout Chicago. He recently released a celebratory album called, Dances for Different Bodies, Vol. I, providing a sonic display of his own take on disability culture. www.tcdrums.com

Khang Chiem is an Australian Sign Language (Auslan) interpreter based in Melbourne, living on the Country of Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung and Bunurong peoples of the Kulin Nation. He is passionate about facilitating access to the intersection of ideas, expression and stories for the Deaf community.

Benjamin Baker is an artist and arts worker, practising within the measures of their capacity. They are interested in creating a sustainable practice with expansive output. With interests swaying around through themes of care, queerness, ecologies, and autonomous and self determined value systems. Perpetually trying to combine all interests into one image plane.