Wednesday – Friday 12 – 6 pm
Saturday 12 – 4 pm and by appointment
A.L. Steiner works in photography, video, installation, collage, and performance, often in collaboration; she also lectures, writes, and curates. A self-described “skeptical queer eco-feminist androgyne,” Steiner is co-curator of Ridykeulous, a member of the musical collective Chicks on Speed, and co-founder of Working Artists and the Greater Economy (WAGE), which advocates for the payment of fees for artists exhibiting in nonprofit art institutions. Steiner’s artworks are irreverent, humorous, personal, perverse, and political. Most evident in her large-scale installations of collaged digital photographs is Steiner’s expansive network of queer friends and lovers. Her installation in the 2014 Whitney Biennial, More Real than Reality Itself/Cost-benefit analysis, for example, investigates sociocultural, biopolitical, and familial constructions through the lived practices of activists and artists Rita “Bo” Brown, Carla Cloer, Ericka Huggins, Miya Masaoka, and Laurie Weeks.
A.L. Steiner (b. 1967) is based in Brooklyn, and serves as Faculty at Yale University’s School of Art in New Haven. Recent solo and group exhibitions include Museum Brandhorst, Munich, Germany (2023); Nottingham Contemporary, UK (2023) along with Ridykeulous (Nicole Eisenman & A.L. Steiner, with Sam Roeck); 80WSE, New York University, New York (2023); Deborah Schamoni, Munich, Germany (2023); Blum & Poe, Los Angeles, USA (2015). Steiner’s work is featured in the permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Marieluise Hessel Collection of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art, Hammer Museum, and Museum of Modern Art.
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A.L. Steiner works in photography, video, installation, collage, and performance, often in collaboration; she also lectures, writes, and curates. A self-described “skeptical queer eco-feminist androgyne,” Steiner is co-curator of Ridykeulous, a member of the musical collective Chicks on Speed, and co-founder of Working Artists and the Greater Economy (WAGE), which advocates for the payment of fees for artists exhibiting in nonprofit art institutions. Steiner’s artworks are irreverent, humorous, personal, perverse, and political. Most evident in her large-scale installations of collaged digital photographs is Steiner’s expansive network of queer friends and lovers. Her installation in the 2014 Whitney Biennial, More Real than Reality Itself/Cost-benefit analysis, for example, investigates sociocultural, biopolitical, and familial constructions through the lived practices of activists and artists Rita “Bo” Brown, Carla Cloer, Ericka Huggins, Miya Masaoka, and Laurie Weeks.
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CV A.L. Steiner
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Die Enzyklopädie der Amazonen. Im Strom der Bilder by Catrin Lorch, Monopol, 01/2025
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Poppers, phallic food and a soiled royal: inside Ridykeulous’s ridiculous art show by Hannah Jane Parkinson, The Guardian, 10/2023
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A.L. Steiner at 80WSE Gallery by Ksenia M. Soboleva, Artforum, 09/2023
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Über verlorene Bilder. A.L. Steiner bei Deborah Schamoni by Carlin Kralapp, gallerytalk.net, 01/2023
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Blum & Poe by Travis Diehl, Artforum, 07/2022
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Meet A.L. Steiner, Artist/Activist and Member of Chicks on Speed by Lydia Siriprakorn, Frontiers Blog, 07/2014
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Managin Impossibility by Chelsea Haines, Mousse, 04/2014
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Action Movie by Kayla Guthrie, Artnet, 02/2013
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