Lasch has been regularly involved with the New York art and politics collective 16 Beaver Group[4] since 2000. He has been at Duke University since 2002, where he teaches art and art theory in the Department of Art, Art History, and Visual Studies,[5] is graduate faculty for the MFA in Experimental and Documentary Arts,[6] and was a fellow at the Franklin Humanities Institute.[7]
Lasch's work, like that of many other artists who make participatory art, actively engages with pedagogy. His art has intersected with the international immigrants’ movement, and the philosophies of critical pedagogy,[13]radical democracy,[14] and the coloniality of power.[15] Between 1999 and 2004, Lasch created a series of simultaneously local and transnational social projects with immigrant and indigenous groups in Chiapas and Quintana Roo (Mexico), and Jackson Heights (Queens, New York). In collaboration with grassroots organizations like Asociación Tepeyac de New York[16] and Mexicanos Unidos de Queens, Lasch founded and directed the experimental afterschool program Art, Story-Telling, and the Five Senses (El arte, el cuento y los cinco sentidos, in Spanish). This pedagogical work received consecutive years of support from artist Robert Motherwell’s Dedalus Foundation,[17] and it included noted guest participants such as Ricardo Dominguez[18] from Electronic Disturbance Theater. During the peak of the 2006 United States immigration reform protests, three of the projects begun in Queens (Naturalizations,[19]LATINO/A AMERICA,[20] and Tianguis Transnacional[21]) were presented in Lasch’s first major solo exhibition at the Queens Museum of Art in New York.[22] This show was named as the best of the year by Michael Rakowitz in the journal Artforum.[23] The museum and its immediate neighborhoods have since become increasingly recognized for their rich and globally significant immigrant culture, featured in popular films like Maria Full of Grace, Salma Hayek’s hit TV-series Ugly Betty, and most recently, Tania Bruguera’s Creative Time[24]IM International project.[25]
Lasch has also served on various public and private boards, including the North Carolina Arts Council (2007–2010), and he occasionally curates exhibitions of other artists’ work that complement his artistic production. Flesh & Metal, Bodies & Buildings: Works from Jonathan Hyman's Archive of 9/11 Vernacular Memorials,[40] is a curatorial project by Lasch, related to his own 9/11 memorial painting series entitled Phantom Limbs, as well as his work with the organization of Twin Towers Go Global.[41]
^Gabara, Esther. "Recycled Photographs: Moving Still Images of Mexico City, 1950/2000," Photography and Writing in Latin America: Double Exposures. Eds. Marcy Schwartz and Mary Beth Tierney-Tello. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, (2005)
^"Free Association/Means in Common." Rethinking Marxism, Special Issue: The Commons and the Forms of the Commune. Edited by Anna Curcio and Ceren Ozselcuk. vol. 22 no. 3 (July, 2010).