Exhibition: Hello Brooklyn! // Techspressionism 2024
Techpressionism: Hello Brooklyn is a showcase of groundbreaking digital art, running from August 7 to September 25 at The Kingsborough Art Museum in Brooklyn, New York. Sponsored by the PSC-CUNY Research Foundation, the exhibition features over 40 expressive and innovative works across a variety of styles and mediums that celebrate Techpressionist art.
Immersive Art Exhibition: Banksy
The buzz around immersive exhibitions featuring Banksy’s art is undeniable. Featuring a collection of replicas of a hundred artworks from the elusive British graffiti artist, this exhibit promises to immerse visitors in Banksy's provocative universe – but not without raising a great number of questions and ethical concerns.
Exhibition: My Veins Are the Wires, My Body Is Your Keyboard
The art world is in awe as My Veins Are the Wires, My Body Is Your Keyboard, the first major survey of pioneering internet-artist and sculptor Auriea Harvey, opens its doors to the public. The exhibition, organized by Regina Harsanyi, Associate Curator of Media Arts, and supported by the Terra Foundation for American Art, features over 40 of Harvey's works. Spanning over three decades of her career, the exhibition showcases her remarkable journey and enduring influence in the realm of digital and interactive art.
Exhibition: LIE DOGGO
On Saturday, Jack Shainman Gallery opened its doors to LIE DOGGO, a monumental exhibition by acclaimed artist Nina Chanel Abney. The digital art installation is a result of Abney's residency with CryptoPunks, which is the first-ever Punk in Residence Program by the acclaimed Web 3 organization. The collection addresses the disparities in value assigned to digital avatars based on gender and race, challenging societal notions of inherent value.
Exhibition: The Indivisible Atomo
On Thursday March 14th, the artist-led collective Subjective hosted an intimate event for the first look at Pedro Baez’s inaugural solo show, The Indivisible Atomo. The exhibition is on view at Tribeca’s LUME Studios, where I got to meet the brilliant artist and see his new collection. Large-scale oil paintings, 3D-designed sculptures, and digital works welcome us to Atomo’s colorful world where several planes of reality exists in a geometric realm of inspiration, right here, among us.
Virtual Exhibition: CYBERIANA
Techspressionism is a contemporary art-history term to describe fine artists using digital technology to convey subjective and emotional content. “Expressionists presented the world from a subjective perspective, distorting it radically in order to evoke moods or ideas, seeking to express their emotional experience rather than physical reality” — Techspressionism emerges with the same idea in the age of technology.
Exhibition Recap: FigurAltion
On September 15th, digital art lovers came together at New York City’s Bright Moments Gallery for a fun night in honor of figurative art in the age of artificial intelligence. FigurAltion is curated by Grant Yun and features AI artwork by six talented digital artists.
Exhibition Review: Delusions of a Time-Traveling Cactus
Delusions of a Time-Traveling Cactus by Alexander Reben at NYC’s bitforms gallery features art that reflects human–machine feedback loop. Using his experience as a mathematician and robotics engineer, Alexander Reben creates artwork such as tapestries, prints, colorful polaroid film, as well as an interactive AI art experience, that’s humorous, absurd, and brilliant.
Exhibition Review: How High The Moon
Early this month, the first fully digital Africa and the Diaspora exhibition in the United States opened its doors to visitors in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Curated by Jessica Deutsch for The NFT Gallery, How High the Moon brings together digital artwork by 14 African artists who celebrate the transformative impact and complexity of their culture while exploring intrinsic values to be shared.
Digital Art Exhibitions you shouldn’t miss: September 2023
As summer fades into the horizon, September emerges as a vibrant canvas, showcasing a kaleidoscope of creativity in the realm of digital art. This month, we invite you to explore a curated selection of the most exhilarating digital art exhibitions. Here’s 5 of the best digital art exhibitions that you shouldn’t miss this month:
Virtual Exhibition: CATALYST
CATALYST is a group exhibition organized by EPOCH in partnership with Honor Fraser Gallery. The exhibition is a brilliant collection which explores themes around history and archiving — and what’s kept and what’s forgotten in a post apocalyptic world.
Virtual Exhibition: No Beginning No End
Critique plays a pivotal role in enhancing the quality and depth of one’s art. Through thoughtful analysis and constructive feedback, artists are able to gain new perspectives, refine their skills, and push the boundaries of their creativity. No Beginning No End is a virtual exhibition that’s result of valuable critique amongst Loop Lab’s fourth cohort.
Exhibition Review: 404: error
Glitches are understood as malfunctions or inconveniences that lead to unwanted results; but these events that disrupt our everyday life oftentimes are the best opportunities to discover a new way of thinking. The collection in 404: error presents a variety of works where errors, malfunctions, and failures are opportunities to challenge existing conventions instead of problems that need fixing. The exhibition is about embracing these moments of disruptions and seeing them as a meaningfully disruptive force that produces a new way of thinking.
Exhibition Recap: HOMAGE at LUME Studios
On Friday June 16th, the artist-led collective Subjective hosted HOMAGE at Lume Studios in NYC. The digital art exhibition is organized by Accelerate Art in partnership with Art Bees to be presented at the Constantin Brâncuși Center of the Craiova Museum in Romania. The exhibition is a tribute to the revolutionary pioneer of modern sculpture, Constantin Brâncuși.
Exhibition Review: SuperRare IRL: Artifacts by Claire Silver
For Artifacts, Claire Silver created seven different forms of AI-generated art to underline the multifariousness: video, generative, still, poetry, music, 3D, and an avatar with an AI voice.
Exhibition Review: Enter the Inclusiverse
HUG’s debut exhibition, Enter the Inclusiverse, transcends boundaries and challenges the status quo by being the “inclusiverse” in the Metaverse. From the representation of underrepresented communities to the empowerment of marginalized voices, the exhibition provides a holistic view of the ongoing efforts to create a Web3 ecosystem that values and embraces the richness of human diversity.