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Buhmann on Art: New Museum’s 2015 Triennial

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BY STEPHANIE BUHMANN | 2015 TRIENNIAL: SURROUND AUDIENCE

Installation image: 2015 Triennial: “Surround Audience.” Courtesy New Museum, New York (photo by Benoit Pailley).
Installation image: 2015 Triennial: “Surround Audience.” Courtesy New Museum, New York (photo by Benoit Pailley).

The New Museum’s Triennial signifies the only recurring international exhibition in New York City devoted to early-career artists from around the world. Besides providing an important platform for an emergent generation of contemporary artists, it embodies the institution’s 37-year commitment to exploring the future of culture through the art of today.

Eva Koťátková: “Not How People Move But What Moves Them” (2013, various mediums). Courtesy the artist.
Eva Koťátková: “Not How People Move But What Moves Them” (2013, various mediums). Courtesy New Museum, New York (photo by Benoit Pailley).

This year’s edition, which is organized by curator Lauren Cornell and notorious video artist Ryan Trecartin, features 51 artists and collectives from over 25 countries. While incredibly varied, the Triennial reflects the curator’s overall passion for probing the social and psychological effects of digital technology. The increasing tension between the newfound freedoms and threats of today’s society marks the core of their contemplation.

Installation image: 2015 Triennial: “Surround Audience.” Courtesy New Museum, New York (photo by Benoit Pailley).
Installation image: 2015 Triennial: “Surround Audience.” Courtesy New Museum, New York (photo by Benoit Pailley).

The artists here explore a culture replete with impressions of life, be they visual, written, or construed through data. They present a world in which most of us move through streams of chatter, swipe past pictures of other people’s lives, and begin to frame our own experiences in digital format.

From the New York-based artist collective, DIS: 2015’s “The Island (KEN).” Photo by Heji Shin, courtesy the artists.
From the New York-based artist collective, DIS: “The Island (KEN)” (2015). Photo by Heji Shin, courtesy the artists.

Through May 24 at the New Museum
(235 Bowery
btw. Rivington & Stanton Sts.). Hours: Tues.–Wed. & Fri.–Sun., 11 a.m.–6 p.m.
Thurs., 11 a.m.–9 p.m.
Admission: $16
($14 seniors, $10 students). Free admission every Thurs. from 7–9 p.m. Call 212-219-1222. Visit newmuseum.org.