Daniel Terna (b. Brooklyn, 1987) (he/him) is a Brooklyn-based artist working in photography and video. Terna’s work focuses on family and inherited trauma, blending autobiographical narratives with a tourist’s approach to exploring sites, be they memorials, cities, personal archives, or the body itself. He has exhibited his work in select solo and group shows at Jack Barrett, NY (2022, 2019); Guertin’s Graphics, Red Hook, NY (2020); Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts, NY (2018); Baxter St. Camera Club of NY (2015); and the BRIC Arts Media Biennial, Brooklyn (2014). His work has been screened at the Echo Park Film Center, Los Angeles (2020); MoMA PS1's film program in Greater New York, Queens (2016); the New York Film Festival’s Convergence Program (2014), the Austrian Cultural Forum, NY (2012) and the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Cambridge, MA (2011). Terna is a recipient of fellowships and residencies at The Workshop (2021); the Asylum Arts Small Grant (2019); Asylum Arts’ International Jewish Artist Retreat (2018); the New Jewish Cultural Fellowship (2018); the Cuts and Burns Residency at Outpost Artist Resources (2013); and the Collaborative Fellowship Program at UnionDocs (2011). His work has been featured in The New York Times, Apartamento, Pin-Up, and Buffalo Zine, among others. Terna founded and co-directed the artist-space 321 Gallery, Brooklyn (2012-20). Terna graduated from Bard College and received his MFA from the International Center of Photography-Bard.