Nicholas Kahn and Richard Selesnick, both born in 1964, are a collaborative team of artists working primarily in the areas of photography and installation. They specialize in fictional histories of the past and future.
David Lawrence Levinthal is a photographer who lives and works in New York City. He uses small toys and props with dramatic lighting to create miniature environments and reproduce legendary moments in baseball history.
Tim Noble and Sue Webster are two artists from England who make sculptures out of various salvaged objects such as wood, soda cans, scrap metal, cigarette packs and stuffed animals.
Donald K. Sultan is an American painter, sculptor and printmaker, particularly well known for his large-scale still life paintings and use of industrial materials such as tar, enamel, spackle and vinyl tile.
Julian Schnabel is an American painter and filmmaker. In the 1980s, Schnabel received international media attention for his "plate paintings", with broken ceramic plates set onto large-scale paintings.
If he does not belong to the generation saw the birth of this medium, he belongs on the other hand to the one that renewed its use by freeing itself from the limits of the frontality of television screens.
Fred Tomaselli is an American artist. He is best known for his highly detailed paintings on wood panels, combining an array of unorthodox materials suspended in a thick layer of clear, epoxy resin.
Andres Serrano is an American photographer and artist who has become famous through his photos of corpses and his use of feces and bodily fluids in his work.
Lorna Simpson is an American photographer and multimedia artist. She came to prominence in the 1980s and 1990s with artworks such as Guarded Conditions and Square Deal.
Robert Wilson is an American experimental theater stage director and playwright who has been described by The New York Times as "[America]'s - or even the world's - foremost vanguard 'theater artist.