3 Artists transforming the Art World through new Technologies

Oil on canvas has been the symbol of classic art for centuries. However, what was once revolutionary is now established. Contemporary art has long since embraced new and different media: VR, Robotics, 3D modeling, Games, AI, e.g.

Artists in the digital age demonstrate that new technologies are not just tools, but artistic languages in their own way. They are experimental, bold, and ultra-contemporary.

For collectors, this opens up not only a new field, but also the opportunity to be part of an artistic avant-garde that defines the present state of art. 

Here are 3 positions that prove this impressively:

Ayoung Kim, an artist from South Korea, builds immersive worlds where AI and speculative fiction collide. Her installations feel like stepping into a sci-fi novel – visually pointed and poetic. In her show Many Worlds Over she shows a future shaped by nonhuman consciousness. Definitely worth a visit!

Jakob Kudsk Steensen creates hyperrealistic landscapes that intertwine nature, technology, and mythology. His immersive worlds feel like digital ecosystems in which we can get lost – beautiful, almost transcendental, and deeply meditative.

Salome Chatriot creates intimate ecosystems in which breath becomes code and body merges with machine. By activating mechanical processes with her physical rhythms - breath, heartbeat, touch - Chatriot explores a deep, almost erotic symbiosis between human and technology. Her ongoing series Fragile Ecosystem is both vulnerable and futuristic, like an intimate vision of a post-human future.

If you 'd like to learn more about time-based media art and consider getting started, I'd be happy to guide you – from your initial orientation to your first work within your own home.

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Why Collectors should now be looking at Time-based Media Art