- Phone:
- (812) 855-2652
- Email:
- frgleiss@iu.edu
- Department:
- Department of Art History
- Campus:
- IU Bloomington
Radio/TV, Room 318

modern and contemporary art; specialization in American art; critical race theory; urbanism and art; national imaginaries of social conflict and myth-making; art and theory of the African Diaspora; contemporary art historiography; archive theory and archival silences
Faye Gleisser (she/her) is an interdisciplinary art historian and curator of 20thand 21st century art, specializing in the history and theory of political violence, and expressions of gendered and sexualized raciality in the visual and material culture of the United States, with a special focus on photography, performance, and the art and theory of the African diaspora. Her research and teaching are situated at the intersection of three main subject areas: art and tactical intervention; the racial logics of archives; and curatorial ethics and canon formation. By bridging curation, art history, and performance studies, she investigates histories of art that challenge intertwined anti-Black societal structures and patriarchal, white-centering notions of value that have long limited the canon of “American art.” Whether studying police patrol maps to better understand the surveillance of a city block where artists once staged a performance piece, teaching a course that interrogates linear, imperialist theories of time in contemporary art, or organizing an exhibition, Dr. Gleisser approaches art as a material manifestation of sociopolitical conditions and artists as theorists of power and social encounter. In her first book, Risk Work: Making Art and Guerrilla Tactics in Punitive America, 1967-1987 (University of Chicago Press, 2023), Gleisser reveals and recasts the complex relationship between artists’ deployments of guerrilla tactics, state power, and policing in North America through close analyses of conceptual and performance art vis-a-vis photographic archives, criminal code reform, and emergent surveillance technologies. Her articles, reviews, and interviews have appeared in Art Journal, the Journal of Visual Culture, and Aperture, and a number of exhibition catalogues for shows such as The Propeller Group, Prospect.5 Triennial, and Out of Easy Reach. In her current research projects, Gleisser is exploring the intersection of representations of hormonal surges and dips, lens-based contemporary art, and the criminalizing of gestational bodies; as well as the form of artist residencies and the politics of care work that has unfolded alongside it.