[5][6] "Perry is committed to net neutrality and ideas of collective production and action, using open source software to edit her work and leasing it digitally for use in galleries and classrooms, while also making all her videos available for free online.
[8] Perry has been an adjunct faculty member at Columbia University School of the Arts as of 2019, where she has taught Advanced Video to both graduate and undergraduate students.
[16] From January to May 2017, Sondra Perry had a solo exhibition, flesh out, at Squeaky Wheel Film and Media Art Center in Buffalo, New York.
[17] Perry was awarded a 2017 Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Grant,[18] and the 2017 Gwendolyn Knight and Jacob Lawrence Prize, which includes a solo show at the Seattle Art Museum and a $10,000 stipend.
Perry states this intended to reflect her interest in "the possibility of abstraction as a way of creating dimensionality that connections individual bodies to larger visual and environmental ecologies.
It is now available for public viewing at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, as a part of their exhibition titled Going Dark: The Contemporary Figure at the Edge of Visibility from October 2023 until April 2024.
The video begins with an avatar of Perry set against a chroma blue backdrop, describing the details and components of the machine;[33] the exercise bike is designed in a way that forces the sitter to contort their body unnaturally, making it difficult and exhausting to actually cycle.
She frames technology as it allows us to dehumanize one another yet again, flattening race history and political context out in favor of a spectrum of slottable markers like age, class, and education.
[36] In 2017 Perry won the Gwendolyn Knight and Jacob Lawrence Prize, for which she presented her solo exhibition Eclogue For Inhabitability at the Seattle Art Museum.
In a widely publicized scandal, Sandy was among a number of student-athletes whose similarities and stats were licensed, without their consent, by the National Collegiate Athletic Association to a video game developer.
The idea originated from her research into blacksmithing's history and how it is formed as a highly skilled labor and it's the base that creates the building blocks of infrastructure and architecture.