John Byrne is a Reader in The Uses of Art at Liverpool John Moores University where he is also the Lab Leader of The City Lab (which forms part of Liverpool School of Art and Design’s Institute of Art and Technology). From 2008 Byrne worked closely with the Van Abbemuseum on the development of ‘The Autonomy Project’ and, in 2013, Byrne managed and coordinated Liverpool John Moores University’s participation in the L’Internationale project ‘The Uses of Art: The Legacy of 1848 and 1989’.
Adam Carr is a Curator, Writer and Educator. Since 2004 he has curated over 70 exhibitions worldwide and over 150 texts and essays he has authored have been published by major museums, galleries and publications.
Dr Christine Eyene is an art historian and curator. She is Senior Lecturer in Contemporary Art at Liverpool John Moores University and Research Curator at Tate Liverpool.
Matt Johnson is an image maker, researcher and senior lecturer working in the Graphic Design and Illustration department at LJMU. Matt’s interests include hybrid images, signification, relations between affects and textuality and material in art and design and in the dynamic interface between disciplinary boundaries.
Gerwyn Jones is Programme Leader for LJMUs MA Cities course and is Chair of the APSS Faculty Research Degrees Committee. He is passionate about developing young researchers, and has a strong track record in supporting graduates into funded PhDs, both at LJMU and other UK Universities.
Joasia Krysa is curator and Professor of Exhibition Research at Liverpool John Moores University’s School of Art and Design, with an adjunct position at Liverpool Biennial. At LJMU she leads the development of Exhibition Research Lab (ERL), a public venue and a research centre dedicated to the interdisciplinary study of exhibitions and curatorial knowledge.
Hana Leaper was appointed to the post of John Moores Painting Prize Senior Lecturer and Development Manager in late 2017. She began to undertake research on the John Moores Painting Prize in her previous role as Paul Mellon Centre Fellow and one of the founding Editors of the prestigious born-digital journal British Art Studies at the Paul Mellon Centre, a part of Yale University.
Simon Piasecki, Professor and Subject Leader for Creative Writing and Drama, Liverpool Screen School at LJMU
Roy Claire Potter is a Senior Lecturer in Fine Art in the Liverpool School of Art and Design and is Programme Leader for MA Fine Art. Roy is an artist who publishes, performs and exhibits, working across experimental writing, spoken performance, sound art, sculptural installation and drawing.
Professor Mark Roughly is a Lecturer in 3D Digital Art at Liverpool School of Art and Design and a member of the Face Lab research group that explores faces and art-science applications. Mark trained as a medical artist, gaining his MSc in Medical Art from the University of Dundee, and specialises in visualising anatomy through 3D data acquisition, modelling and fabrication. His research focuses on the affordances that 3D digital technologies allow for both digital and haptic interaction with anatomical and cultural artefacts. He is the host of the art-science Liverpool LASER Talks (Leonardo Art Science Evening Rendezvous) and a Section Editor for the Journal of Visual Communication in Medicine.
James Schofield is an artist-curator, editor of Corridor8 and current PhD researcher based at the Exhibition Research Lab at Liverpool John Moores University. His research is focused on artist-led practices and organisation in the UK post-financial crisis and the relationship it has with neoliberalism, globalisation and network culture.
Imogen Stidworthy What happens to language and sense-making in encounters with unfamiliar or even unknowable forms of voicing? What different forms of relationship and understanding emerge in the spaces between languages? My work grapples with the impossibility of glimpsing language from the outside. It takes the form of films, sound works and multi-part installations involving sound, video, sculptural and technological elements.
Bedwyr Williams is a Welsh artist. His work combines installation and stand-up comedy and often draws upon the quirky banalities of his own autobiographic existence to develop his sculptures and performances. His work merges art and life with a comedic twist that is instantaneously sympathetic and relational.
Dr Lee Wright is a specialist in Design History and Theory and currently teaches the history and theory of fashion design & fashion communication, including fashion photography. Her field of expertise spans material and visual culture, in particular popular culture studies. She has supervised PhD students jointly with History, American Studies and Art & Design. Her publications focus on a range of subjects from snapshot photography in the inter war period to gender and clothing.
Mark Wright holds a joint appointment between FACT (The Foundation for Art and Creative Technology) one of Europe's leading centres for new media, where he is Director of FACTLab and the Liverpool School of Art and Design at Liverpool John Moore's University, where he is co-director of the Contemporary Art Lab.