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Coded — A Digital Shows Guide

From AI-inflected bodies to digital memory and star-powered screens, NYC's current digital shows explore what it means to be human in a networked world.

Map of exhibitions
6 exhibitions

Amateur Detection

Amateur Detection

Amateur Detection (v.1) is the first in an ongoing exhibition series at V/A that brings together artists who make meaning by manipulating and re-mapping the use of image-making machines. Free from the black box of fixed-architecture software or opaque algorithms; they design their own, or modify pre-existing, apparatuses for shaping time-based media. The work is crafted through tactile and physical means - steadily guiding waveforms, dissolving light into luminous architectures, navigating syntax through video frame sync or decoding analog logic systems. Rather than seeking the quick-fix of the “effect”, they synthesize concept, process and form through an ongoing process of detecting and exploring deviations in a system or tool - by testing its limits and pressing farther.

Apr 16 - May 17

Harm van den Dorpel: Senescenence

Senescenence

Harm van den Dorpel: Senescenence presents generative animations and plotter drawings based on cellular automata similar to Conway’s Game of Life. Using simple rule-based systems, the works produce complex, evolving patterns where forms continually emerge, transform, and disappear. Drawing on references from weaving, pixel graphics, sacred geometry, and historical ornament, the project reflects on algorithmic systems, technological evolution, and the fleeting nature of structure and form.

Apr 3 - May 2

New Humans: Memories of the Future

New Humans: Memories of the Future

New Humans: Memories of the Future will inaugurate the New Museum’s expanded building with an exploration of artists’ enduring preoccupation with what it means to be human in the face of sweeping technological changes. New Humans will trace a diagonal history of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries through the work of more than 150 international artists, writers, scientists, architects, and filmmakers, highlighting key moments when dramatic technological and social changes spurred new conceptions of humanity and new visions for its possible futures. The exhibition surveys the myriad shapes that humanity might take, from robots and cyborgs to haunting, seemingly alien life forms, and moves beyond the field of art by bringing together utopian architects, sci-fi filmmakers, and eccentric writers who imagine physical, virtual, and even post-human worlds. In an age when technological advancements and their unintended consequences seem to be accelerating at uncontrollable rates, New Humans proposes art as a collective form of creative prognostication—a vital self-portrait of the humans we may become.

Maya Man: StarPower

StarPower

StarPower is a generative, software-based work by Maya Man exploring youth competitive dance through AI collaboration. Drawing on her childhood experience, Man presents AI-generated performers who dance and deliver confessional monologues. The project examines identity, performance, and femininity, merging personal memory with synthetic simulation and algorithmic spectacle.

Mar 19 - May 2

Jen Liu: Pound of Flesh

Pound of Flesh

Jen Liu presents paintings and animation that connect the erased histories of Chinese migrant women who entered the United States in the late 19th century with the invisible labor of contemporary microworkers training AI systems. Through faceless portraits and a data-driven animated figure, Liu examines anonymity, labor, and the economies that render essential workers unseen.

Mar 5 - May 2

Humid Traces

Humid Traces

Humid Traces is a group exhibition examining the relationship between water and migration amid rising temperatures and extreme weather. Bringing together artists from around the world, the works consider bodies of water as contested boundaries shaped by human systems and environmental forces. Through sensory and research-driven approaches, the exhibition addresses water’s material memory and its capacity to reveal alternative ways of understanding movement, control, and change.

Feb 19 - Jun 20

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