Untitled Art Fair Miami 2025
December 3 - December 7, 2025
Untitled Art Fair, Miami
VIP & Press Preview on Dec 2, Public open days Dec 3-7
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Saturday, November 22, 3 PM
Book Launch and DiscussionA conversation about a pioneering group of artists who radically humanized working with computers + systems.

June 7, 2025Museum of the Moving Image
THING+YOU Performance at Museum of the Moving ImageIn conjunction with the exhibition, is this thing on?, the Museum will host a hybrid in-person and livestreamed interactive event with artists Christopher Clary, Sarah Rothberg, Bhavik Singh, and Molly Soda, taking place throughout the Museum’s ground floor and online via thing.tube.
June 12 - July 13, 2025Various Artists
Siebren Versteeg, Possession with Intent at Various ArtistsVarious/Artists is pleased to present Possession With Intent, an exhibition of new solo work by New York-based artist Siebren Versteeg. The show’s title gestures toward both juridical charge and supernatural haunting, suggesting an uneasy entanglement of control and surrender in a world ubiquitously documented and augmented by media. Across sculpture, screen, and installation, Versteeg poetically asks what happens when the subject is not only represented but re-performed—endlessly fed back, algorithmically rendered, and offered up for sale.
May 21, 2025e-flux
Digital Witness – Review by Brian Droitcour“Digital Witness: Revolutions in Design, Photography, and Film” is an exhibition about the digital as a medium, and it is every bit as ambitious, rewarding, and frustrating as you might expect. 
May 13, 2025Impulse Magazine
Claudia Hart’s Rhythms of Deferral and Renewal by Natasha ChukIn a cultural moment teetering between spectacle, speed, and collapse, Claudia Hart’s solo exhibition Illuminations stages a quiet revolution.
May 8, 2025Hyperallergic
Internet Misinformation Is the New Medieval Magical Thinking by Claudia HartReaders might enjoy the gross and gory fairy-tale quality of this new book — or its parallels to the Trumpian internet.
May 9, 2025Whitney Museum of American Art
Walkthrough with Marina Zurkow and James SchmitzJoin us for a special walkthrough with artists Marina Zurkow and Jim Schmitz at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Explore Parting Worlds, a selection of her software-based works reflecting on the interplay between nature and culture, ecological complexity, and environmental change. Marina will guide guests through her gallery exhibition and The River is a Circle, her Hyundai Terrace Commission engaging with the Hudson River’s shifting ecologies.
May 7, 2025The Brooklyn Rail
The State of AI Agents by Charlotte KentWhat is an AI agent and why is one that will call elderly parents on your behalf merely troublesome, where others are legally and ethically dubious?
May 3, 2025Artist Talk | Claudia Hart x The Second Guess
Navigating the Now: A Confrontation with Reality Beyond the Digital RealmOn the occasion of Claudia Hart’s fifth solo exhibition at bitforms, the gallery and the curatorial collective The Second-Guess are hosting the panel Navigating the Now: A Confrontation with Reality Beyond the Digital Realm.
December 20, 2024Whitney Museum of American Art
Hyundai Terrace Commission: Marina Zurkow Opening April 2025Marina Zurkow’s The River is a Circle consists of an animation based on custom software and an accompanying installation. The animation presents a view of the Hudson River in a horizontal split between the world above and under water, depicting a complex ecosystem of rivergoing vessels, wildlife, and the evolution of the meatpacking district. The installation extends the underwater environment to the terrace in a landscape combining maritime wreckage and oyster reef balls, devices used to provide habitat for oysters. The River is a Circle speculates on a circular economy, and a potentially positive cyclical flow back to modest strategies of maintaining ecosystems.
December 6, 2024designboom
hollywood protest meets AI news in marco brambilla’s US media critique video installationVisual artist Marco Brambilla unveils Limit of Control, his first solo exhibition with bitforms gallery, New York, a two-channel video installation that interrogates America’s media landscape, civil unrest, and the visceral intersection of violence, power, and news coverage in contemporary society. 
December 4, 2024Center For Performance Research
OPEN AiR | Sarah Rothberg: MEETINGS RESEARCH (HUMAN IN THE LOOP)MEETINGS RESEARCH (HUMAN IN THE LOOP) is a performance-experiment by 2024 Artist-in-Residence Sarah Rothberg which uses improvisation, conversation, and AI language models to (literally) reflect the present moment.
November 27, 2024bitforms gallery
Marina Zurkow: Exploring Ecological Art Through Digital MediaIn a wide-ranging conversation with bitforms gallery, Zurkow discusses her artistic practice, her relationship with scientific research, and how she uses technology to explore environmental themes.
November 20, 2024Cultured Mag
The Crowd Goes Wild: Marco Brambilla’s Timely Video Confections of Violence and ProtestA new installation at bitforms gallery weighs the possibilities and pitfalls of A.I. art in a moment of political upheaval, our critic reports.
November 19, 2024Buffalo AKG Art Museum
Electric Op at Buffalo AKG Art MuseumAn emerging movement called “Op” (short for “Optical”) took art and popular culture by storm. Op artists use abstract patterns to create optical illusions that are dynamic and interactive, much like the electronic images of the time.
November 19, 2024designboom
quayola to transform gaudi’s casa batlló facade with arborescent digital mapping projectionItalian multimedia artist Quayola will reimagine the iconic facade of Antoni Gaudí’s Casa Batlló in Barcelona with Arborescent, an immersive projection mapping inspired by natural growth systems and environmental responses.
October 11, 2024Wallpaper Magazine
Quayola x LG OLED bring digital Impressionism to Frieze LondonQuayola conceived Jardins d’Été using the complexity of floral formations moved by the wind as a dataset to generate new computational paintings. Speculating on the traditions of landscape painting, the work ‘explores a hybrid substance between the pictorial and the algorithmic.’ 
June 24, 2024Surface Magazine
Marco Brambilla Debuts a Times Square UtopiaOn June 18, film artists Marco Brambilla took over more than 95 of Times Square's LED billboards with Approximations of Utopia.
June 4, 2024Maxim
THESE TRIPPY ‘APPROXIMATIONS OF UTOPIA’ ARTWORKS ARE TAKING OVER TIMES SQUAREFor Approximations of Utopia, Marco Brambilla harnessed AI to help produce the visuals—all based on archival imagery from six World’s Fairs, starting with the 1958 edition in Brussels through the 2010 edition in Shanghai.
April 12, 2024King's College London
King’s College London: Claudia HartClaudia Hart has always been at the forefront of experimentation with virtual imaging, using 3D animation to make media installations and projections, then later as they were invented, other forms of VR and AR. Hart’s work is about issues of the body, perception, nature collapsing into technology and then back again.
March 16, 2024Design Boom
BITFORMS GALLERY EXHIBITED A GROUP SHOW THAT EXEMPLIFIES NEW MEDIA ART A pioneer and champion of new media, digital and internet-based art, New York-based gallery bitforms presented the works of Ellie Pritts, Claudia Hart, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, Manfred Mohr, Jonathan Monaghan and Refik Anadol.
March 12, 2024Times Square Chronicles
Midnight Moment: StormsEvery night in March, London-based Italian artist Quayola takes over Times Square with Storms, a mesmerizing depiction of deep-sea waves that engages and reimagines canonical imagery, particularly landscape painting, through the use of contemporary technology. 
March 9, 2024Art Plugged
The Evolution of Landscape Painting in the Digital AgeBy uniting code, datasets, and human touch, Quayola creates vivid digital landscapes that synchronize in a fluid ballet of texture and colour, echoing an impressionistic aesthetic.
March 8, 2024ArtNet
Artist Quayola On Why Algorithmic Art Is Like ImpressionismIn his artistic practice, Quayola employs technology as a tool, exploring the interplay of dichotomies: the tangible and the simulated, figurative and abstract. Storms comes to life with high-definition footage of stormy seas in Cornwall, England, captured by contemporary technology.
February 26, 2024Forbes
http://Web3 Travel Guides: Future Horizons, Art Dubai Digital And BeyondOne of the longest-running and most well respected new media art galleries, bitforms represents established, mid-career, and emerging artists critically engaged with new technologies, offering an incisive perspective on the fields of digital, internet, and time-based art forms.
January 28, 2024The Art Newspaper
Going big: digital artists who show on a grand scale at immersive institutionsMarco Brambilla, the London-based film-maker and digital artist, made a version of his Hollywood epic Heaven’s Gate for Outernet, London, in January 2023, and King Size, a work about the rise of Las Vegas and the death of Elvis, at Sphere.
January 22, 2024Sotheby's
Sotheby’s Offers Claudia Hart’s MORE LIFE in Sale of “Natively Digital: Ordinals”“This piece, MORE LIFE, was one of the first that I produced after the series of book works that I did in the early nineties. I consider it to be the beginning of my current installation-based 3D animation practice.’’ - CLAUDIA HART
January 15, 2024Art Basel
Manfred Mohr, Refik Anadol, Quayola, Casey Reas at Art SGApplying what he has described as ‘programmed expressionism,’ Mohr is known for creating striking drawings using plotters, mechanical devices that hold a pen that sketches lines (generated by algorithms) on paper. His recent sculptural experiments, computer-generated algorithmic aluminum wall structures, will be a highlight of bitforms’ booth.
January 11, 2024The National News
Why Lulu Island is a ‘paradise for contemporary art’In an interactive exhibition entitled Translation Island, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer has transformed Lulu Island in Abu Dhabi into an interactive playground of light. 
December 22, 2023Outland
Siebren Versteeg in Outland: “The Best Digital Art of 2023”Siebren Versteeg’s For a Limited Time, released on Arsnl Art, incorporates the mechanics of blockchain editioning into the artwork itself—and the outputs are both aesthetically compelling and conceptually potent... - Sarah Zucker
November 18, 2023BBC
Lumiere 2023: Stunning images as festival returns to DurhamLumiere features 40 installations, with Bishop Auckland lit up for the first time. Spanish artist Daniel Canogar created a projection for The Spanish Gallery in Bishop Auckland.
September 1, 2023Artforum
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer: Gray AreaRafael Lozano-Hemmer is one of those rare artists who both understands complex technologies and can harness them to make works of art that are, miraculously, not only smart but spectacularly visually compelling. 
August 12, 2023The Guardian
‘There’s no such thing as a neutral algorithm’: the existential AI exhibition confronting SydneyWhen Y2K seemed like the world’s most pressing technological concern, the Mexican-Canadian artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer was using a dictionary and a set of grammatical rules to teach a computer how to write questions. 
August 12, 2023Sydney Morning Herald
New show may make you feel like you’re being watched. That’s because you areTracking technology, facial recognition and more are all at play in Atmospheric Memory, the Mexican Canadian artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s latest exhibition, which is designed to make air into something tangible.
April 11, 2021Bloomberg
Marina Zurkow profiled in ART+TECHNOLOGYWe meet artists Olafur Eliasson and Marina Zurkow who are working to help heal the disconnect, developing democratic and expressive tools for storytelling and dialogue that encourage everyday activism.
January 30, 2021The NYUAD Art Gallery
Addie Wagenknecht’s “opsec for the impending coup and LARPing lip fillers” featured in NYUAD exhibitionIn Addie Wagenknecht’s series of Youtube "Beauty Hacks" she teaches methods of cybersecurity, in the guise of hair and makeup lessons. Through humor, she subverts the make-up tutorial, repurposing it to dismantle the patriarchal and alienating status quo in information security. This work was commissioned by The Art Gallery at NYU Abu Dhabi, for the exhibition "not in, of, along, or relating to a line."
January 6, 2021Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo
Visit “A Crack in the Hourglass,” Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s memorial to the countless victims of COVID-19, online through Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo During the COVID-19 pandemic, whenever someone dies, the pain of the loss itself is aggravated by the inability to collectively express our mourning in funerary rites and rituals of farewell.October 27–November 9, 2020
Public_Public_Address: A Nationwide Virtual ProtestPublic_Public_Address is an ongoing, 24/7, national virtual protest in support of and in solidarity with Black Lives Matter. The ongoing protest stream features video submissions of both supporters who are unable to place themselves at physical risk and those who can protest in person.
October 21, 2020Hyperallergic
Claudia Hart Breathes Life into Static Tropes of Modernism, HyperallergicClaudia Hart’s new exhibition focuses on the masters of Modernism, Matisse in particular, an artist whose work straddles early 19th-century and Modern art galleries in most museums. Hart’s use of Matisse seems to relish the contradiction at the core of modern and contemporary art today; in a field with so much appropriation, borrowing, and stealing, what does copyright mean anyway?
October 12, 2020International Journal for Digital Art History
In Conversation With Claudia Hart, International Journal for Digital Art HistoryClaudia Hart’s work range in media: architecture, painting/illustration, installation, eventually moving on to study animation – leading her to 3D animation art. Theory seems to be both the starting point and the end point of all of her artistic endeavours. Here, Hart, sits down with Tina Sauerlaender to discuss her work, career and how we are experiencing a crisis of truth.
October 6, 2020Patch
Quayola selected for Texas commission, “Pioneer Tower Public Art Project”Renowned new media artist Quayola will create a projection mapping video interpreting Fort Worth's nature using high-precision 3D laser scanning and digital tracking systems projected on all four sides of Pioneer Tower.
October 2, 2020Art21
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer featured in Art21’s “Borderlands” episdoeLozano-Hemmer highlights the intimate, personal relations in a public space that is otherwise systematically dehumanizing. The artist explains, “The most important role that art can play is that of making complexity visible. The usage of technology is inevitable; it’s up to the artist to use those technologies to create experiences that are intimate, connected, and critical.”
October 2, 2020Art 21
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Art 21 segment highlighted in artnet, “We as Artists Need to Intervene”Known for his large-scale, interactive installations, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer uses contemporary technologies like computerized surveillance, heart-rate sensors, and robotics to create participatory experiences and platforms for public participation and connection. 
September 29, 2020CNN
“Public Public Address” featured on CNN: This website helps people with illnesses and disabilities participate in Black Lives Matter protestsHigh-profile killings of several Black people by police sparked nationwide protests this summer, with marchers demanding police reform and racial justice. Jason Lazarus, Siebren Versteeg and Stephanie Syjuco founded Public Public Address on September 1 to help people with illnesses and disabilities participate in these Black Lives Matter protests without putting their lives at risk.

September 22, 2020Clot Magazine
‘Email Exhibit! Yours Sincerely, Siebren Versteeg and bitforms’ by Charlotte Kent for CLOTSiebren Versteeg’s In%20Memory is an email; a checklist of speculative objects, a series of links, and a PDF; together creating a daisy-chain as exhibition... bitforms’s webpage for the exhibit provides a space to leave your email address, after which you will receive the email that is the show. It is a charmingly irreverent approach to exhibition possibilities while also quite seriously invigorating our musings on how we might exhibit work digitally.
September 20, 2020Art 21
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer featured in the new season of Art21Lozano-Hemmer creates participatory artworks that utilize technology like robotics, heart-rate sensors, and computerized surveillance tools in order to facilitate human connection. Technologically sophisticated yet deceptively simple in their execution, Lozano-Hemmer’s spectacular, immersive works are often installed in public places as a means of transforming these sites into forums for civic engagement.
September 10, 2020The Brooklyn Rail
Claudia Hart: The Ruins reviewed in The Brooklyn RailThe front window of bitforms gallery displays Claudia Hart’s The Orange Room (2019), a bold crimson painting featuring energetic twists of lime green that slink down a wall, into and then across a table: the two dimensional wall becomes one with the three-dimensional table so that neither kind of space operates clearly. It’s a painting that allows Hart to introduce rates of time to the dimensional illusions that Matisse created in his 1908 masterpiece, The Dessert: Harmony in Red.
September 10–October 25, 2020
Daniel Canogar, Loom: Streamingbitforms gallery is proud to present a first of its kind, cloud-based, 24/7 stream of generative software-based art, presented in collaboration with Small Data Industries.
July 27, 2020ArtNews
Daniel Canogar’s Data Abstractions, Art in AmericaAfter three months with the internet as my primary portal to the outside world, I was intrigued by the premise of Daniel Canogar’s latest work: “to expose the hidden threads of data networks.” Inside bitforms gallery, six large, wavelike metal structures covered with modular flexible LED screens hang on the walls or sit on the floor, all part of the artist’s “Billow” series (2020).
July 22, 2020Artforum
Daniel Canogar, “Billow”, Artforum Critic’s PickDaniel Canogar’s sinuous, ripple-like sculptures emanate colorful LED light in “Billow,” his solo exhibition here. It’s no accident that his bending architectural forms mimic hills, valleys, and mountains: Their slumbering shapes make the works’ cascading waves all the more hypnotic. 
July 9, 2020Brooklyn Rail
The Tree of Life curated by Claudia Hart reviewed in The Brooklyn RailIn The Tree of Life, the esteemed digital artist Claudia Hart curated a show about how nature engages us amidst “the speed of time, history, archiving, memory, hard drives and resolution” that define our mediated lives. Her musings on how certain objects create moments and the way technology determines certain spans of time are thoughtful and thought-provoking, and they provide a context for the nine artists’ works. The website, designed by Shi Zheng, imitates the graphics of timelines—images and memory being two things at the heart of Hart’s opening essay written during the period of isolation.
July 8 – 21, 2020
Mesocosm (Northumberland, UK) by Marina Zurkow: Streamingbitforms gallery is proud to present Mesocosm (Northumberland UK) by Marina Zurkow as the third piece in a series of streaming generative artworks, presented in collaboration with Small Data Industries.
June 18, 2020bitforms gallery
⌘F Interview Series: Addie Wagenknecht⌘F is a conversation series focused on the presentation of time-and web-based artwork. These interviews start with a set of fixed questions that trace the effects of worldwide quarantine on artistic practice and later expand upon a single work in detail.
This week’s ⌘F invites conversation with Addie Wagenknecht. Wagenknecht is an American artist based in Austria whose work explores the tension between expression and technology. Blending conceptually-driven painting, sculpture, and installation with the ethos of hacker culture, Wagenknecht constructs spaces between art object and lived experience. Here, the darker side of systems that constitute lived reality emerge, revealing alternative yet parallel realities. In the context of post-Snowden information culture, Wagenknecht’s work contemplates power, networked consciousness, and the incessant beauty of everyday life despite the anxiety of being surveilled.
This interview was conducted via email back and forth throughout April and May. The work we are discussing is titled "Believe Me," a 2017 commission from the Whitney’s portal for internet art, ARTPORT.
June 11, 2020bitforms gallery
⌘F: Addie Wagenknecht⌘F is a conversation series focused on the presentation of time-and web-based artwork. These interviews start with a set of fixed questions that trace the effects of worldwide quarantine on artistic practice and later expand upon a single work in detail. This week’s ⌘F invites conversation with Addie Wagenknecht. 
June 5, 2020ArtNews
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer on Seductive Participation and the Oppression of Metrics, Art in AmericaCan an artist engage with surveillance technologies without being complicit in their use for control and oppression? Audiences tend to treat interactive works as a fun spectacle, a chance to take a selfie. So how do artists clarify their position? How do they present their work as commentary, rather than mere reproduction?
June 4, 2020The Art Newspaper
Art for a good cause: artists’ support for Black Lives Matter, including Addie Wagenknecht
May 20, 2020Borusan Contemporary
Close Readings 1 – Claudia Hart: SwingImages capture us somewhere. Or we write on images that capture us. The ten-minute video work, Claudia Hart's The Swing (2006), part of the Borusan Contemporary Art Collection, captured me within the first few seconds. 
May 15, 2020bitforms gallery
The Tree of Life, curated by Claudia Hart, opens online May 15The works on my website timeline originate in the year 1995. Updating the early entries with higher resolution images was always the next thing on my to-do list. When Corona hit, it rose to number one. My update was to cover projects made between 1995 and 2014, which must have been the year I started thinking of myself seriously as an artist and the start of another story. In 1995, I published an illustrated book drawn with oil-paint, but stretched on canvas. I thought I should document it. In those days, documentation meant slides. In 1996, I bought a slide scanner.
April 22, 2020bitforms gallery
Daniel Canogar, “Billow,” virtual walkthrough with Steven Sacks
April 22, 2020bitforms gallery
Virtual Opening of Billow by Daniel Canogarbitforms gallery is pleased to present our fourth solo exhibition with Daniel Canogar. The data-sphere is a driving force of society and the economy, despite its invisible nature. This lack of visibility can make it difficult to comprehend how information affects daily life. Billow attempts to expose the hidden threads of data networks.
April 2, 2020Neural
Addie Wagenknecht: My opsec haul from Sephora, politics within makeup videosThe space for politics has shrunk, either ’deported’ to social media and online spaces in general, self-ghettoized in homogeneous circles or lost in the crowd of leaders’ profiles, not to mention the pollution of human and bot paid troll armies. “my opsec haul from Sephora” is a series that Addie Wagenknecht performed on a barebone YouTube channel. 
March 27, 2020TimeOut
Nine amazing artworks made for the internet, featuring Addie WagenknechtWagenknecht makes razor-sharp, critical, satirical art that takes aim at abuses of power and technology in society. She’s painted with Roombas and pigments made from makeup, she’s made art with drones, and she’s created a robot arm to rock your baby to sleep. You know what she’s up to? Taking the piss and undermining contemporary society’s bullshit with pizzazz and aesthetics.
March 7, 2020Hyperallergic
Wet Logic reviewed by Louis Bury for Hyperallergic From behind bitforms gallery’s glass facade, an artistic toilet bowl (“Toilet Joke I,” 2020) beckons passers-by into Wet Logic, Sarah Rothberg’s and Marina Zurkow’s digitized meditation on water’s unearthliness.
February 6, 2020bitforms gallery
Wet Logic, an exhibition by Sarah Rothberg and Marina Zurkow, opens at bitforms galleryWet Logic presents a model of the world organized according to a wet, oceanic ideology rather than a dry, land-based paradigm. This is a world that manifests the circuitous nature of time and the enmeshment of humans to the planet. Rothberg and Zurkow present a series of systems that further human connection to oceans by way of action and imagination.
January 23, 2020bitforms gallery
A Child’s Machiavelli by Claudia Hart opens at bitforms gallery
December 16, 2019College Art Association
Andrew Demirjian and Claudia Hart discuss emerging media, micro to macro.The weekly CAA Conversations Podcast continues the vibrant discussions initiated at our Annual Conference. Listen in each week as educators explore arts and pedagogy, tackling everything from the day-to-day grind to the big, universal questions of the field.
December 12, 2019On Canal
Claudia Hart’s A Child’s Machiavelli Book Release and Exhibition Opening at WallplayWallplay is pleased to host the newest edition of Claudia Hart’s A Child’s Machiavelli, published by Beatrice Books and edited by Patrick Reynolds. The original 1998 Penguin edition has been redesigned in collaboration with the author, and will be available for purchase on December 1st, 2019 through Amazon Books. A Child’s Machiavelli was initially written and illustrated by Hart in 1995, inspired by Niccolo Machiavelli’s Renaissance treatise, The Prince, long considered the first book of political philosophy. Hart’s version began as a series of oil paintings and small catalog, produced by the Realismus Studio, at the Neue Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst, Berlin, 1995.
December 5, 2019Artsy
Artsy names Rafael Lozano-Hemmer’s Border Tuner among best public art of 2019“Border Tuner, a timely and ephemeral light and sound installation by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, created a unique and powerful platform for interconnectivity and public participation at the U.S.–Mexico border. By melding performance, robotic technology, and social discourse, Lozano-Hemmer’s large-scale installation shared a lesser-told story by visibly highlighting positive counter-narratives about El Paso and Ciudad Juárez’s interdependent culture. A challenging public project to achieve, Lozano-Hemmer’s piece was able to brilliantly and poetically render intimate bridges between strangers standing in two different cities and countries that share so much.”—Nicholas Baume, Director and Chief Curator, Public Art Fund
December 4, 2019Apex Art
Claudia Hart announced as apexart FellowThe ApexArt Fellowship is an alternative educational program that invites creative individuals to leave their familiar surroundings for a month-long stay in an unfamiliar city. The program provides new sources of inspiration through exposure to new cultures, interests, and experiences.
November 19, 2019BBC
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer interviewed on BBC regarding his new work, Border TunerImagine huge searchlights which can be seen over a ten mile, 15 kilometer radius talking to one another across two countries. This is exactly what electronic media artist Rafael Lozano-Hemmer is creating this November between Ciudad Juárez in Mexico and El Paso in Texas. Called "Border Tuner," the project will see enormous bridges of light connecting the US-Mexico border for the first time.
July 12, 2019Digital Art Weekly: Medium
How Media Artists Relate to Art History: The Case of Claudia HartClaudia Hart is a pioneer of media art, one of the very few that worked at the onset of merging art and simulation technologies in the 1990s. But is being technologically vanguard enough for artists to gain credibility? Is it just about mastering new tools? These questions ask to ponder the blurring of roles between a creative and an engineer or IT specialist.
December 13, 2001Museo del Prado
Daniel Canogar presents Amalgama el Prado on the facade of the Museo del Prado
September 10, 2001bitforms gallery
Claudia Hart, The Ruins, opens at bitforms galleryThe Ruins implements still lifes, the classical form of a memento mori, to contemplate the decay of western civilization. In this exhibition, Hart revises the canons of modernist painting and the manifestos of failed utopias. Exhibited works are meditations on the flow of history, expressed as a cycle of decay and regeneration.
September 9, 2001bitforms gallery
Siebren Versteeg, In%20Memory, now liveIn In%20Memory, playful references to painting, ready-mades, and installation inquire toward the experience of isolation within our technological present. In effort to participate yet emancipate from the expectation of an artist to create “things,” In%20Memory advances viewing room culture with deep zoom technology while challenging visitors to engage in a meaningful temporal experience. The exhibition is accompanied by an essay by Katie Geha.
January 17, 2001Contemporary Art Museum St Louis
Marina Zurkow’s exhibition The Thirsty Bird opening at the Contemporary Art Museum St. LouisMarina Zurkow focuses her work on the intersection of nature and culture, offering wry and pointed critiques of this perilously dysfunctional relationship. The Thirsty Bird offers parallel narratives on two essential, yet incompatible elements: oil and water.