About The Work
персик is Russian for peach.
Jennifer Steinkamp uses 3-D computer animation and new media to create video installations that activate architectural space and alter phenomenological perception. She designs and digitally simulates movement of organic and abstract forms—trees, flowers, DNA structures, and colorful waves. Her works are displayed as site-specific projections that amplify the architectural setting by blurring the boundary between real and illusionistic space. These animated environments, while beautiful and visually alluring, often carry subtle ominous references. Time plays a significant role in Steinkamp’s work, which often depicts cyclical occurrences such as changing seasons and life cycles. These cycles do not typically have a beginning, middle, or end, but are rather about the importance and necessity of change itself.
Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin
About Jennifer Steinkamp
From The Magazine
- News & Events: Neil Patrick Harris Named His Son After Gideon Rubin—Who Else Does the Actor Collect?
- Contributors: Tiffany Zabludowicz on the Business Lessons of "Work in Progress," Her Corporate Times Square Artist Residency
- News & Events: Only Connect: 7 Visions of the Future From the New Museum's Seven on Seven Conference
Archival pigment print
49.00 x 15.00 in
124.5 x 38.1 cm
This work is signed, dated, and editioned on verso.
About The Work
персик is Russian for peach.
Jennifer Steinkamp uses 3-D computer animation and new media to create video installations that activate architectural space and alter phenomenological perception. She designs and digitally simulates movement of organic and abstract forms—trees, flowers, DNA structures, and colorful waves. Her works are displayed as site-specific projections that amplify the architectural setting by blurring the boundary between real and illusionistic space. These animated environments, while beautiful and visually alluring, often carry subtle ominous references. Time plays a significant role in Steinkamp’s work, which often depicts cyclical occurrences such as changing seasons and life cycles. These cycles do not typically have a beginning, middle, or end, but are rather about the importance and necessity of change itself.
Courtesy of Lehmann Maupin
About Jennifer Steinkamp
From The Magazine
- News & Events: Neil Patrick Harris Named His Son After Gideon Rubin—Who Else Does the Actor Collect?
- Contributors: Tiffany Zabludowicz on the Business Lessons of "Work in Progress," Her Corporate Times Square Artist Residency
- News & Events: Only Connect: 7 Visions of the Future From the New Museum's Seven on Seven Conference
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- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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