Thinking out Loud with Bruce E. Phillips: On the development of Who can think, what can think at Te Tuhi
Contemporary Art, Essay, Te Tuhi, ArtNowBruce E. Phillipsneurodiversity, Contemporary Art, ArtNow, artnow.nz, Simon Yuill, Judy Singer, Peter Godfrey-Smith, N. Katherine Hayles, curatorial, turing test, who can think, what can think, Who can think, Who can think what can think, Bruce E. Phillips, curator, posthuman, intelligence
Some struggles are invisible: Art, Neurodiversity, and Aotearoa
Whirling and Looping
Global flows in Ruth Watson's Geophagy
Curating EAST 2018
Essay, Hastings City Art GalleryBruce E. PhillipsHastings City Art Gallery, Terri Ripeka Crawford, George Nuku, Jacob Scott, Lara Lindsay-Parker, Ayesha Green, Martin Poppelwell, Peter Madden, Michael Hawksworth, Kauri Hawkins, Rangituhia Hollis, Sonya Lacey, Clare Plug, David Trubridge, Kamaka Pottery, Bruce and Estelle Martin, Donna J. Haraway, Jorge Luis Borges, Tim Thatcher, Vanessa Arthur, Ben Pearce, Annette Bull, Ann Shelton, Hawke's Bay, Chapman-Taylor, Rita Angus, Āpirana Ngata, Peter Henry Buck, Trevor Paglen, EAST Writing
Sculptures in Space
Art News New Zealand, Art Criticism, Contemporary Art, EssayBruce E. PhillipsRocket Lab, Humanity Star, Art News New Zealand, Peter Beck, Tesla Roadster, Elon Musk, SpaceX, Duchampian, readymade, Moon Museum, Andy Warhol, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg, Apollo 12, MoonArk, Trevor Paglen, Creative Time, Carl Sagan, Orbital Reflector
Share/Cheat/Unite
Transformative Practice and Open Gestures