Anne E Stoner | Collection of Work


Anne E. Stoner (b. 1999) is a post-studio sound artist, researcher and social practitioner whose work criticizes infrastructural and political systems of disability, injury, and death. 


Her work has been shown nationally and internationally, with solo exhibitions at the Tang Museum, New York State, the Chazen Museum, Madison. Anne’s sound and writing can be read and listened to in Resonance: The Journal of Sound and Culture, Global Performance Studies Journal, and the Struer Tracks Sound Biennial Almanac. 


Anne holds an undergraduate MA(h) from the University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh College of Art and an MA from Northwestern University. In 2026 she earned an MFA in Studio Art, focusing in time-based media, from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. She currently teaches Art and Art History at Carthage College.


Email: anneestoner@gmail.com
CV









News:

October 15-17, 2026 - Speaking at the American Association for Arts of the Present (ASAP) Conference, 2026

June 2-29, 2026 - Artist in Residence at the I-Park Foundation

Apr 10–May 22, 2026 - Infrastructure Bodies/Injury Systems: An Exhibition by Anne E. Stoner at the Chazen Museum of Art





Anne E. StonerHomeNewsCurator’s Essay


Walk Upon our Sweet and Blessed Land!: Exploring Walking, Complex Embodiment and Shared Space through a Soundwalk on Edinburgh's Water of Leith Walkway

Building upon the disciplines of Truman, Shannon, and Springgay, this work discusses the complexities of inhabiting a crip, queer, black, or otherwise “othered” body while interacting with natural spaces and shared public spaces. The work would be categorized as a sound essay presented as a binaural, somewhat immersive soundwalk in an attempt to underscore points made throughout the piece. Passers-by present audible asides where encouraging walkers to pass first serves to highlight the critical aspects of what it means to navigate bodily complexities in public. The sustained increase of oncoming water rushing serves as a metaphor for the overwhelming and dangerous act of inhabiting an “othered” body.





Shown at

Edinburgh College of Art Graduate Show, 2022