Starting with a Doctorate in Fine Arts from Yale, Jonathan Reeve Price worked in conceptual art and concrete poetry, showing in co-op galleries and museums in New York. While living in Soho, he wrote articles on video art for The Nation, Art News, Esquire, and Harper’s, and published books on theater, writing, and video art. For four years, he ran the Shakespeare Institute, a summer program for teachers and graduate students, in conjunction with the University of Bridgeport and the Shakespeare Theater in Stratford, Connecticut.
He quit the art world to join Apple Computer in 1982, where the introduction of MacPaint was a life-changing event for him. He created a style guide used for many years by technical communicators-How to Write an Apple Manual, later published in several editions under the title, How to Communicate Technical Information. He also led a guerilla movement within Apple to create the first online help systems, using HyperCard, a forerunner of the links we take for granted on the web.
A Fellow of the Society for Technical Communication, he helped teams gather requirements for large and small projects in corporations and national laboratories, creating use cases and user stories, test cases, and task topics. He has coached more than a thousand technical writers at high-tech firms in the U.S. and Japan, and through the University of California, Santa Cruz, certificate program in technical communication. His book, Write a Use Case: Gathering Requirements that Users can Understand, argues that writers can contribute a lot of value to the process, standing midway between the stakeholders and the programming team, helping them reach mutual understanding of what must be built. He has also written a book aimed at helping writers read and use the eXtensible Markup Language (XML), the key standard in contemporary content management systems, called Get Past the Tags!
His art combines high-tech imagery with poetry. In a series of digital images combining satellite pictures, USGS maps, software manipulations, and poetic texts, he explores the struggles of migrants coming North across the Rio Grande, in The Liquid Border: The Rio Grande from El Paso to the Gulf of Mexico. He has also digitally remixed the famous prints from Hokusai, inserting text comments, in Viewing Hokusai Viewing Mount Fuji.
As a tenure-track professor he has taught information architecture, technical writing, content development, and databases at New York University, Rutgers, New Mexico Tech, and as an adjunct professor, through the University of New Mexico, as well as online through the University of California, Santa Cruz.
He and his wife Lisa live next to the Rio Grande, as it flows south through New Mexico.