[1][2] Her work has been produced and presented by the Park Avenue Armory, Museum of Modern Art, Portikus (Frankfurt), Donaueschinger Musiktage, and such international surveys as documenta 14 and the Montreal, Liverpool, PERFORMA, and Whitney biennials, among many others.
Sheer Frost Orchestra has been mounted in Los Angeles (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions), San Francisco (Mills College), London (Tate Modern), New York City (Greene Naftali; Whitney Museum of American Art), Cleveland (Cleveland Museum of Art), Chicago (Sexing Sound Symposium); and Innsbruck (Kunstraum Innsbruck).
Teenage Lontano has been re-staged in Slovenia, Holland, Australia and Norway, and an installation version has also been exhibited at Tou-Scene (Stavanger, Sweden), the James Gallery (CUNY Graduate Center, New York), and the Cleveland Museum of Contemporary Art.
[9] In his review of the 2008 premiere, New York magazine's art critic, Jerry Saltz, wrote, "Watching this piece, I felt the opening of a portal between a failed utopian past and the possibility that the more real present is already something to love.
A punning gloss on spectral composition, the work uses the figure of the rainbow to project sound vertically in an architecture; it requires a custom loudspeaker installation and battery of live performers, which have included teenagers, amateur choirs, double basses, and brass.
[14][15] Free Exercise employs large-format score materials and choreographed formations to stage moments of unison and disunison among the military regimental band and a looser collective of improvising musicians.
The array recorded continuously during the four weeks of the show, routing its signal through live-processing computer software and then back out into the space, with variable delays, through four loudspeakers.
She has performed with Ikue Mori, George Lewis, Philip Jeck, Otomo Yoshihide, Okkyung Lee, Sonic Youth, DJ Olive, the Rova Saxophone quartet, Christian Marclay, Andrew Cyrille, Nels Cline, Tony Conrad, Mattin, and Ken Vandermark, among many others.
Warrior Queen Sour Mash, collaboration with George Lewis (2010, Innova/Minneapolis) Plastic Materials (2009, Room40/Sydney) joy of fear (2006, Softl/Cologne), with Okkyung Lee, cello DJTrio appearance with Christian Marclay, Erik M and Toshio Kajiawara (Asphodel, San Francisco, 2003) the sheer frost orchestra: hop, drop, drone, slide, scratch and A for anything (2001, Charhizma/Vienna) a water’s wake, collaboration with Tim Barnes and Toshio Kajiwara (Quakebasket, NY, 2001) theforestthegardenthesea: music from Fragment opera (1999, Charhizma/Vienna), producer Mayo Thompson