Mark Tribe is an artist who works across media and
forms, including drawing, photography, installation, video and
performance. His recent work explores the relationship between
landscape and technology. He has had solo exhibitions at the
Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.; Momenta Art in New York;
Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions; the Queen Victoria
Museum in Launceston, Australia; and DiverseWorks in Houston. His
work has also been shown at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris; the Menil
Collection in Houston; Centre Pompidou in Paris;
the National Center for Contemporary Arts in Moscow; MUAC in Mexico
City; SITE Santa Fe; the San Diego Museum of Art; Museo de Antioquia in
Medellín; Blanton Museum of Art in
Austin; Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah; Montclair Museum of Art
in New Jersey; the DeCordova Museum in Lincoln, Mass; the Contemporary
Museum in Baltimore; Ronald Feldman
Gallery in New York; and Yossi Milo Gallery in New York. He has
received grants from Creative Capital and the New York Foundation for
the Arts. He is the author of two books, The Port Huron
Project: Reenactments of New Left Protest Speeches (Charta, 2010) and New Media Art (Taschen, 2006), and numerous articles. Tribe is Chair of the MFA Fine
Arts Department at School
of Visual Arts in New York City. In 1996, he founded Rhizome, an
organization that supports the creation, presentation, preservation, and
critique of emerging artistic practices that engage
technology.