New Natives (2013); Things R Queer (2018); Born Free and Equal (2018)
Joseph Maida is an artist, writer and educator. Best known for his photography, Maida's work is a visual representation of the intersections between identity and culture. Maida's most significant projects include New Natives;[1]Things R Queer;[2] and Born Free and Equal: The Story of Loyal ________-Americans.[3] Maida earned an MFA from Yale University in 2001 and currently serves as chair of the BFA Photography and Video Department at School of Visual Arts (SVA).[4]
Maida graduated summa cum laude from Columbia College in 1999 with a Bachelor of Arts in architecture and a specialization in art history. In 2001, Maida earned a Master of Fine Arts from Yale University, where they/he studied under Philip-Lorca diCorcia and Catherine Opie.[5]
While at Yale, Maida began exploring video for their/his graduate thesis. Soon after graduation from Yale University, Maida began displaying both photo and video work in group and solo exhibits nationally and abroad.
In 2013, New Natives was shown at Daniel Cooney Fine Art in New York City. The gallery exhibition marked a midpoint in a series of portraits made in Hawaii between 2010 and 2015 of male-identifying, Hawaiian-born aspiring models. Maida sourced models through social media, thus acknowledging contemporary changes in the relationship between the local and the global.[6]New Natives explored identity, gender, sexuality, and ethnicity within the complexity of Hawaii's unique culture and history. A monograph of New Natives was published by L'Artiere (Bologna, Italy) in 2015.[7] In 2018, Maida's series Things R Queer punctuated the publication of Feast for the Eyes: The Story of Food in Photography, by Susan Bright.[8] Their/his brightly colored still-life photographs of strange dioramas made entirely of food garnered the attention of both modern platforms such as Instagram as well as traditional modes of gallery and print exhibition.[9] That same year, soon after the enactment of Donald Trump's Executive Order 13769, known as the Muslim Ban, Maida's book Born Free and Equal: The Story of Loyal ________-Americans was published. It revisited a book of words and images of the Manzanar Japanese internment camp in California by Ansel Adams.[10]Born Free and Equal was a contemporary perspective of Adam's work that paralleled historical events with that of the current day.[3] Maida continues to work on personal art and writing projects while teaching at a collegiate level.
For their/his MFA thesis at Yale, Maida made the short film Hot Shots.[36] By deconstructing footage taken by their/his brother of two fraternity brothers at a college party, Maida explored how the intimacy of their relationship developed through increased intoxication.
Since 2002, Maida has been a faculty member in undergraduate photography at SVA in Manhattan. Between 2006 and 2011, they/he taught as an instructor in photography with a focus on Gender Studies at Parsons School of Design in New York City. In 2011, they/he returned to Yale as a lecturer until 2013 and then spent a year as a lecturer at State University of New York at Purchase, New York. In 2015, Maida served as a visiting critic at the University of Hawaiʻi in Honolulu.[40] In 2018, they/he was appointed chair of the BFA Photography and Video Department at SVA.[41]
^"Kinomuseum". The Artistic Estate of Ian White. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
^"[EXHIBITION] ON O'AHU : TWO VIEWS". Department of Art and Art History: University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. University of Hawaiʻi. 12 February 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2021.