She pens a regular column for L Magazine in New York. Her work has appeared in numerous publications, including ArtReview, Art & Australia[citation needed], Art in America, artkrush, The Daily Beast,[5] FlashArt, Flavorpill, The Guardian,[6] The Huffington Post,[7] More Intelligent Life,[8] New York Press, NYFA Current, Print Magazine, The Reeler, Time Out NY.
She has worked with Location One as a visiting critic and attended the 2007 iCommons conference in Croatia as a blogger. In 2008, she served on the board of the Rockefeller Foundation New Media Fellowships and became the first blogger to earn a Creative Capital Arts Writers grant from the Creative Capital Foundation which is part of the Andy Warhol Foundation. She has also served on a panel for ArtPrize.[9]
She contributed to the book what's the deal with all the peanut centric aeroplane snacks? published by Paper Monument.[citation needed]
In December, 2011, Johnson was named in a federal libel lawsuit in United States district court for a May, 2011 article she published in Art Fag City, which suggested an art restorer was a forger and committed crimes.[10]
Sound of Art
In November 2010 Johnson released an LP called "Now That's What You Call Net Art", a DJ battle record that compiles mixes based from sounds recorded in art spaces, galleries, and museums in Manhattan and Brooklyn, pitting the neighboring boroughs against each other.
Johnson raised over $11,000[11] with a Kickstarter campaign to fund the project, calling upon sound art lovers and a cadre of collectors, even offering a dinner with herself and artist glass popcorn, a former art critic, to the highest bidder. Johnson predicts the project will spawn follow-up records, including East Coast vs. West Coast, and Canada vs. USA.[12] Johnson told WNYC's Carolina Miranda that the Brooklyn recordings sound more DIY.[citation needed]