Adjunct Faculty
James Miller is a painter living in Brooklyn, NY. His painting practice draws heavily from the history of photographic and light-based media in both method and aesthetics—translating the rhetoric of an additive light process to a subtractive color medium. Miller captures traces of movement, light, and shadow with acrylic paint on canvas in a process parallel to cameraless photography.
Miller received his BFA from Laguna College of Art and Design in 2009, his MFA from Yale School of Art in 2014, and was a Dedalus Foundation Fellow in 2015. His paintings have been shown throughout the U.S. and Europe—including the solo exhibition “Sun Muzzle” at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery in NY, and in group exhibitions “The Dust” at The Centre Pompidou and “Painting As Is” at The Fosdick-Nelson Gallery.
David L. Johnson is an artist and educator based in New York City. Johnson makes work attuned to the streets of the city, pinpointing moments of slippage between public and private property. His practice utilizes photography, video, found and stolen objects, and installation to consider the politics, histories, aesthetics, and forms of use that define contemporary urban space. His work has been exhibited in solo exhibitions at The Shop at Sadie Coles HQ, London (2024); Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin; Galerie Noah Klink, Berlin; Art Lot, Brooklyn (2023); and Theta, New York (2021). Recent group exhibitions have been held at the Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH; Salzburger Kunstverein, Salzburg, AT (both 2024); Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Chicago Architecture Biennial, Chicago; MoMA PS1, New York (all 2023); and Artists Space, New York (2022).
Johnson received a BFA from the Cooper Union in 2015 and an MFA from the University of Pennsylvania in 2020. He is an alumnus of the Whitney Independent Study Program. Johnson is an adjunct instructor at The Cooper Union and a part-time faculty member in the MFA program at the Parsons School of Design. Johnson’s work is held in the public collection of The Studio Museum in Harlem and The Columbus Museum of Art.
Johnson's CV is available here.
