Monica Moses Haller’s work spans photography, video, writing, installation, and design in order to highlight complex, at times volatile, activities within environmental and human systems. Most often she collaborates long-term with individuals or small groups of people. These works include Riley and His Story: Me and My Outrage, You and Us (Onestar Press, 2011) and the Veterans Book Project, both offering multi-layered narratives of the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Haller’s recent work brings her to the eroding wetlands of the Louisiana coast, land that has been in her family for six generations. This work explores philosophies of ownership, the social construction of race, and the possibilities of this wetlands’ terrain. These works are exhibited and shared in the US and internationally at museums and public spaces including: Baumwhoolspinnerei, Leipzig; Pompidou Center, Paris; the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minnesota; and the Brooklyn Museum, New York, and many places along the Mississippi River. She has received fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, McKnight Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts among others. Monica works internationally and is based in Minneapolis.