CBC Arts by Chris Hampton. April, 2025. Link Here
“The long list for the 2025 Sobey Art Award, one of Canada's most prestigious art prizes, was announced this morning…. It aims to promote exceptional Canadian talent to audiences both at home and abroad.”
ARTICLES | REVIEWS | INTERVIEWS
Arts journalist Alison Gillmor writing for the Winnipeg Free Press. April 26, 2025 . Link Here
“Lincoln’s work has always resisted generalized or oversimplified ways of looking at both human and machine intelligence. This approach is rooted in her habit of tinkering with emerging technologies, as well as her own experience of neurodivergence.”
Interview with Arts and Culture reporter Nolan Kehler of Classic 107. April 24, 2025 .
“Winnipeg artists Erika Jean Lincoln and Chukwudubem Ukaigwe have both been longlisted for one of the most prestigious contemporary art awards in the country. Lincoln joined Nolan Kehler to talk about what her Sobey Art Award recognition means to her at this point in her career, and the role that machine intelligence and artificial intelligence plays in her work.”
Erika Jean Lincoln- author. Leonardo volume 57, Issue 2 April 2024
Crip-techno-tinkerism: A Neurodivergent Learning Style Meets Machine Learning. Link Here
Abstract: The artist discusses the development of their crip-techno-tinkerism methodology and its application to machine learning. They outline how their tinkering with the creation of datasets and the manipulation of transfer learning within machine learning models can reflect the diversity of neurodivergent learning.
Donna Haraway’s Children: Meet the Dynamic Young Artists Who Are Embracing the Cyborg. Cassie Packard. Cultured Magazine Nov. 2023 Link Here
“From biotechnologies that rewrite experiences of embodiment to cellular devices that act as cognitive prosthetics, we are all, to one extent or another, cyborgs.”
Sensing the Future: Moholy-Nagy, Media and the Arts. Oliver Botar Link Here
“Was Moholy-Nagy at once a pioneer and a proto-critic of the digital? This book introduces this seminal figure to younger generations and includes responses to his work by contemporary artists.”
“What Flies Above” Alison Gillmore - BorderCrossings Aug. 2018 Link Here
“Lincoln creates carefully calibrated, rigorously beautiful works that embody systems of knowledge, especially as they extend into technology and social control.”
“ Machine Edge: An Interview with Erika Lincoln” - Espace art actuel #116 – Digital June 2017. Bilingual edition (English / French) Link Here
"Cliff Eyland: You are known to your peers as a high-tech artist, artists are never at the cutting edge of technology—it’s the military-industrial simplex (my term) that always gets there first. Thoughts?" (…)
Erika Lincoln: The Singing Condition - By Mary Carpenter Reid and Erika Lincoln. 2011 Link Here Amazon link
“Winnipeg electronic media artist Erika Lincoln considers how urban technological culture intersects with the natural existence of birds.”

