Schneider is a Clinical Assistant Professor in the School of Art. She holds a BA from the University of Michigan, a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and an MFA from Mills College in Oakland, California. From 2002 to 2016, she was a professor in the School of Art at Arizona State University. In 2016, she relocated to the Boston Area for family reasons. Since then, working remotely, she designed, directed, and developed one of the first online BFA programs in photography in the country for ASU.
Czajkowski is an image-based artist and educator working in a number of interdisciplinary methods. Driven by personal experience, her research explores social constructions related to femininity, mortality and the psychological manifestation of and the human-animal. Though situated in photography, Czajkowski's practice also incorporates video, installation, and alternative print processes, pushing the expected boundaries of the photographic art medium.
Granville Carroll is a visual artist and Afrofuturist using photography and poetry to explore representation and identity. Carroll’s work also explores the multidimensionality of blackness through spatial blackness, temporal blackness and spiritual blackness. At the core of his practice is the investigation into metaphysics, specifically the ontology of self and the universe. Carroll’s work highlights the imaginative qualities of the mind through storytelling and world-building to create new speculative futures and states of being.