Linda Brumbach is an independent creative producer based in New York City working across mediums of performance, installation, and film. She founded her company Pomegranate Arts in 1998 to center her practice around both helping to realize an artist’s vision and supporting ambitious provocative work that often falls outside of traditional genres and structures. Pomegranate Arts has produced the Olivier Award-winning production of Philip Glass and Robert Wilson’s Einstein on the Beach; Lucinda Childs’ DANCE and Available Light; Phelim McDermott and Julian Crouch’s Shockheaded Peter, Taylor Mac and Matt Ray’s Bark of Millions, Taylor Mac’s A 24-Decade History of Popular Music for stage and film; Robin Frohardt’s The Plastic Bag Store; Laurie Anderson and the Kronos Quartet’s Landfall; and many more. Prior to founding Pomegranate Arts, she was a producer at International Production Associates from 1987 - 1998 for Philip Glass and the Philip Glass Ensemble, Twyla Tharp, Spalding Gray, Diamanda Galás, Eric Bogosian, Elizabeth Streb, Karen Finley, The Improbable Theatre, Richard Foreman, Roger Guinevere Smith, Meryl Tankard, Lisa Kron, and the Serious Fun! Festival at Lincoln Center.
Linda is an executive producer of the HBO Documentary film Taylor Mac’s A 24-Decade History of Popular Music and the ALL ARTS film short Whitman in the Woods. She conceived and co-authored her first publication, a special box set edition of the Philip Glass Piano Etudes published by Artisan Books in November 2023. Linda has served on the advisory committees for Celebrate Brooklyn and the Urban Bush Woman’s choreographic initiative producing program, consulted for Creative Capital, is a founding member of the Creative and Independent Producer Alliance (CIPA), and served on the board of the Association of Performing Arts Professionals and the International Society for Performing Arts. In 2016, Linda received the Patrick Hayes Award for longstanding achievement in the performing arts.