Sonia Sheridan

[3] Sheridan had received awards from numerous institutions, including the Guggenheim Foundation in 1973 for Photography[4] and the National Endowment for the Arts (1974–1975, 1976–1977, 1981–1982).

[6] Her artistic works were shown in many different institutions, the most relevant in 1970 at the Software exhibition at the Jewish Museum in New York, where they did a historic catalogue.

[9] In this exhibition she presented the first image manipulation software for artists, developed by John Dunn, Lumena artware of TimeArts.

[10] Three years later, her work was shown for the first time in Spain, together with other artists such as Nam June Paik, Marisa Gonzalez, Paloma Navares, Marina Abramovic, John Cage... at the inaugural collective exhibitions of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía of Madrid titled Procesos: Cultura y nuevas tecnologías, which offered a compilation of different artistic approximations by the use of the new means that arose in the contemporary art during the second half of the 20th century, and in which she presented, as part of her work, the graphic computer invented by her student of SAIC, John Dunn, the EASEL software and Time Arts PC computer.

[5] The Hood Museum of Art (Hanover, New Hampshire), and all the documentation on her long artistic career can be consulted in the Foundation Daniel Langlois of Montreal.

SS with Marisa Gonzalez at her exhibition in Procesos Cultura y Nuevas Tecnologias at the Reina Sofia Museum in Madrid 1986
In 2011, at her exhibition in the Hood Museum with some of her Generative System students from the 70´s. Cindy, Brian Oglesbee, Greg Gundlach, Martha Lovin Orgain, Sonia Sheridan and Marisa González