Adam Gildar (he/him) is currently a nomadic curator and art dealer. He founded and ran Illiterate, an art publication and project gallery, from 2005 through 2011. In 2012 he opened Gildar Gallery in Denver. Through his commercial gallery, Gildar has curated more than fifty exhibitions in Denver, Los Angeles, Mexico City, and New York, and has participated in many national and international art fairs. He has consulted with local museums such as the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, the Denver Art Museum, and Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art. He has also consulted on and contributed his writing to Hippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia, a book and traveling exhibition organized by the Walker Art Center, in partnership with the Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive and the Cranbrook Art Museum. From 2012 to 2019, Gildar also directed ArtPlant, a nonprofit arts organization dedicated to creating cross-cultural dialogue within the Rocky Mountain region. With ArtPlant, Gildar developed the Biennial Ambassadors program—an artist residency exchange between Denver and Mexico City—for the Biennial of the Americas, and he launched an annual artist-centric symposium cohosted by Black Cube Nomadic Museum. In May 2019, Gildar closed his physical gallery and put his nonprofit work on hiatus, in order to travel and research decentralized yet regionally relevant models for engaging with the “art world.”