Johanna Fateman

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Johanna Fateman

Johanna Fateman, probably best known as a member of the band Le Tigre, attended Reed College of Portland, OR -- notorious for academic excellence contrasted with an unconventional grading system -- where, Fateman writes, she "started making a fanzine called Snarla with my best friend from high school, Miranda July."

Fateman went on to pen such titles as My Need to Speak on the Subject of Jackson Pollock, The Opposite and The Opposite Part II and ArtaudMania, the latter of which detailed Fateman's hilarious in-class feuds with an abrasive art professor.

She met Kathleen Hanna at a Bikini Kill show, and the two became fast friends when Fateman gave Hanna one of her zines. Fateman dropped out of Reed and, when Hanna moved to town, they embarked on their first musical collaboration, a band called The Troublemakers, after the film of the same name by G.B. Jones. The band played often in Portland at basement parties in the house the two women shared, until Fateman moved to New York City to go to school. After Fateman graduated, Kathleen Hanna moved up to the east coast and they formed Le Tigre with Sadie Benning. After the release of the groups's first album Benning left the band and JD Sampson filled her place. The band released a number of recordings before going on hiatus in 2006.

Fateman then began the musical project MEN with JD Sampson.

Johanna Fateman writes for Art Forum magazine. On 2013, she wrote an introduction for The Riot Grrrl Collection, an anthology compiled by Lisa Darms, gathered from the archives of The Fales Library of NYU Riot Grrrl Archives.

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