Hannah Mathews is Senior Curator at Monash University Museum of Art, where her recent projects include Vivienne Binns: On and through the Surface (2022), Dale Harding: Through a Lens of Visitation (2021), Agatha Gothe-Snape: The Outcome Is Certain (2020) and Shapes of Knowledge (2019). Mathews has held curatorial positions at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne; Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts; Next Wave Festival, Melbourne; and the Biennale of Sydney. She has edited numerous publications and is currently a chief investigator on the ARC Linkage Grant Precarious Movements: Choreography in the Museum. Erin Brannigan is Associate Professor in Theatre and Performance at the University of New South Wales. She is of Irish and Danish political exile, convict and settler descent. Her current research project is Precarious Movements: Dance and the Museum, and monographs associated with this project: Choreography, Visual Art and Experimental Composition 1950s–1970s (Routledge, 2022) and The Persistence of Dance: Choreography as Concept and Material in Contemporary Art (Michigan University Press, forthcoming). Justin Clemens writes extensively about Australian art and culture. His books include Limericks, Philosophical and Literary (Surpllus, 2019) and Psychoanalysis is an Antiphilosophy (Edinburgh, 2013). His monograph on the early colonial Australian judge Barron Field, written with T.H. Ford, will be out soon with Melbourne University Press. He is an Associate Professor at the University of Melbourne. Claudia La Rocco’s books include the pamphlet Quartet (Ugly Duckling Presse); the selected writings The Best Most Useless Dress (Badlands Unlimited); and petit cadeau, a novel published in live, digital and print editions by the Chocolate Factory Theater in New York. With musician/composer Phillip Greenlief, she is animals & giraffes, an ongoing experiment in multidisciplinary improvisation. She has been a columnist for Artforum and a cultural critic for WNYC New York Public Radio. From 2005 to 2015 she was a critic and reporter for The New York Times. Robyn McKenzie originally trained in Art History. She has an established reputation as a writer on contemporary Australian art. After undertaking further study in Anthropology (in the Interdisciplinary Cross-Cultural Research Program at the Australian National University), her interests have focussed on ways of engaging with and re-activating historical museum collections, specifically of First Nations material culture in Australian and Pacific collections. She continues to engage with and write on contemporary art. Zoe Theodore is a Sydney-based curator, producer and writer, with a particular interest in the relationship between performance, choreography and the gallery. She is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of New South Wales and the Project Coordinator of Precarious Movements: Choreography and the Museum. She was the co-editor of Dissect Journal’s third issue and has held professional roles at Anna Schwartz Gallery and Australian Centre for Contemporary Art, Melbourne; and MoMA PS1, New York.