{"id":1838591,"date":"2026-03-19T14:45:51","date_gmt":"2026-03-19T11:45:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1838591"},"modified":"2026-03-19T14:45:51","modified_gmt":"2026-03-19T11:45:51","slug":"the-new-museum-finally-has-a-building-to-match-its-ambitions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1838591","title":{"rendered":"The New Museum Finally Has a Building to Match Its Ambitions"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[analyse_image type=&#8221;featured&#8221; src=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0203.jpg?w=1024&#8243;]<\/p>\n<div class=\"a-content a-content--offset lrv-a-floated-parent lrv-u-font-family-body lrv-u-line-height-normal lrv-u-font-size-18 lrv-u-position-relative\">\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAlmost two years ago to the day, the New Museum in New York closed its doors to the public, leaving behind a void\u2014this is one of the country\u2019s few major museums that is focused solely on contemporary art, after all. Now, following an expansion overseen by OMA, the museum is finally back and ready to welcome visitors once more.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAhead of the public opening on Saturday, the museum hosted a press preview on Wednesday to show off its refreshed digs, which are occupied almost entirely by the group show \u201cNew Humans: Memories of the Future.\u201d Organized by the New Museum\u2019s curatorial team under the leadership of artistic director Massimiliano Gioni, the show spans more than a century\u2019s worth of art and features more than 200 artists.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tSpread across the museum\u2019s three main floors, and even spilling into the elevators and lobby, \u201cNew Humans\u201d is a monumental endeavor\u2014so monumental, in fact, that one perspective is unlikely to do the show justice. To that end, <em>ARTnews<\/em> senior editors Maximil\u00edano Dur\u00f3n and Alex Greenberger opened a Google Doc to discuss their initial impressions of the new New Museum and \u201cNew Humans.\u201d<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Maximil\u00edano Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>To start off bluntly, I have loathed visiting the New Museum ever since my first trip there about 15 years ago. That has everything to do with its building as opposed to its programming\u2014I\u2019ve often said to you that the New Museum is the worst place in New York to see art, since its SANAA-designed building is quite literally form over function. The overall feel of the building is a little cold, some of the ceilings feel too low, and the publicly accessible freight elevator cutsup the architecture. A back staircase connecting the fourth and third floors is perilous at best and I\u2019ve rarely liked how curators stuck art in there. An editor once slipped in a phrase into a piece of mine that suggested the New Museum was a \u201cgleaming, futuristic confection\u201d\u2014and that\u2019s about the only praise you\u2019d have heard from me prior to the museum\u2019s two-year closure. Need I go on?<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/04_New-Museum_Photos-by-Jason-ORear_low-res.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A museum facade at dusk, with an angular building composed of rectangular floors in varying sizes attached to another building that appears to be formed from metallic triangles.\" height=\"812\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">The New Museum has doubled in size, thanks to its new, OMA-designed building, at right.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Jason O\u2019Rear\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Alex Greenberger: <\/strong>I\u2019m no fan of the old New Museum either\u2014I always found it awkward, claustrophobic, and a pain in the ass to navigate, both for the museum\u2019s curators and its visitors. The good news is that the just-opened expansion improves the New Museum greatly. Designed by OMA, the sleek expansion adds 60,000 square feet of space. It\u2019s seamlessly integrated, with the new portion of the building centered around a spiral staircase with a handsome Kl\u00e1ra Hosnedlov\u00e1 sculpture dangling through its middle. The New Museum\u2019s Bowery building has always lacked a staircase like this one, and with it, the museum finally feels complete.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tBigger is not always better, of course: one of the pleasures of the New Museum\u2019s previous iteration was that one needed only an hour to visit it. Accounting for all the space added through the new expansion, I\u2019d advise visitors to now set aside the better portion of an afternoon. I actually think it\u2019s a good thing that it now takes so long to visit the New Museum. At long last, the New Museum has a building that matches its ambitions.<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/22_New-Museum_Photos-by-Jason-ORear_low-res.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A giant hanging textile running through the middle of a spiraling staircase.\" height=\"996\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">A Kl\u00e1ra Hosnedlov\u00e1 sculpture runs through the new stairwell of the New Museum.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Jason O\u2019Rear\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>I think the expansion and renovation was necessary: the New Museum needed more space for exhibitions and its New Inc. incubator, and it needed to fix some of those flaws in its original design. The spiral staircase is a stroke of genius in terms of museum architecture. It\u2019s easy to navigate at a leisurely place, and via the windows, you get some great SoHo sightlines. The reconfigured lobby is airy, and the line to reach the coat check no longer blocks the entrance. Though I will miss the cafe and the ground-floor project space gallery, which is now a gift shop.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tI agree the integration of the two structures is well done. The New Museum now has room to breathe\u2014and most importantly, the art looks so much better in its galleries than it ever did. I took one of the older building\u2019s interior stairwells up to the fourth floor and was pleasantly surprised at what I saw. Extending past its former edge was a new gallery where a Tau Lewis sculpture is beautifully installed. That work, from 2024, feels perfectly scaled for the new building. A floor up, two helium-filled, jellyfish-like sculptures by Anicka Yi are able to float above visitors\u2019 heads, emphasizing the airiness of the new space.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger: <\/strong>Those are just two pieces on the checklist for the 700-work group show \u201cNew Humans: Memories of the Future,\u201d which fills nearly every cranny of the museum\u2019s refurbished exhibition spaces. Put in the broadest terms, the show is about humanity as it has been molded and remolded since the dawn of the 20th century. It\u2019s a big show, and a busy one: the galleries are a cacophony of disparate sculptures, clanging videos, and brilliantly hued paintings. But the chaos of the exhibition is also the point, since the show is also a means of processing anxieties surrounding machinery, emergent technologies, social unrest, and AI. I found the exhibition to be pretty persuasive, all the more so because ambitious, sprawling group shows like this one are an endangered species in New York.<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0005.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A sculpture of a black-faced figure with large, flowing whitish robes. A large painting of ballet dancers appears next to it.\" height=\"900\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">A sculpture by Tau Lewis (at left) emphasizes the scale of the New Museum\u2019s new galleries.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Dario Lasagni\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>I was actually surprised when you mentioned \u201cNew Humans\u201d had 700-plus works. It\u2019s definitely a dense show with a lot of art, but it never feels overhung. When there are dense clusters of work, they make sense together. The exhibition design is superb. Of course, in true New Museum fashion, the wall labels for every single work are about twice as long as they need to be, but if you take the time reading them through, you\u2019ll definitely leave the exhibition with your head filled with new information, and you\u2019ll likely want to return, given by how much there is on view.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tTo my mind, the exhibition, despite its size, works because it\u2019s organized thematically, with niftily titled sections like \u201cAuto Women,\u201d \u201cProsthetic Gods,\u201d and \u201cDream Machines.\u201d My favorite, though, has to be \u201cMechanical Ballets,\u201d which mixes avant-garde choreography, via documentation of restagings of ballets by the likes of Oskar Schlemmer and Kurt Schmidt, with paintings by Jacqueline Humphries, drawings by El Lissitzky, and a 1923 sculpture by Lavinia Schulz and Walter Holdt. This also allows for the inclusion of some deep cuts, like lithographs by Sargent Claude Johnson that show a whole new side of this artist, who was associated with the Harlem Renaissance, even though he was based on the West Coast. There are also sculptures by Ovartaci, who made these works when she was forcibly committed to a psychiatric hospital in Denmark. They\u2019re sure to be a revelation to anyone who missed the 2022 Venice Biennale.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tI didn\u2019t expect that so much historical work would be on view, given that we\u2019re talking about an institution whose original name was the New Museum for Contemporary Art, but I think those pieces help bolster the exhibition\u2019s argument that artists have been engaged with technology-induced anxiety for just as long as it\u2019s been a part of the human condition. Some of the works on view that were made a century ago could have easily been made in the past few days, and that\u2019s part of the joy of seeing the exhibition. I didn\u2019t think I\u2019d like the exhibition as much as I did; it left my head churning.\u00a0<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0096.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A gallery with red walls lined all over with paintings.\" height=\"900\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">A gallery of \u201cNew Humans\u201d focuses on how painters and sculptors reimagined the human body following wars and social uprisings.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Dario Lasagni\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger: <\/strong>This approach of comparing modern art to recent work is an approach seen widely in international biennials right now, and indeed, \u201cNew Humans\u201d has such a knotty premise that it could have sustained an entire Venice Biennale or Documenta. Plus, \u201cNew Humans\u201d even feels like it\u2019s responding to those shows\u2014most notably the 2022 Venice Biennale, which smartly tethered the present-day turn toward spiritual worlds and absurdism to Surrealist art by women of the 20th century. Not for nothing, \u201cNew Humans\u201d and the 2022 Biennale\u2014which was curated by Cecilia Alemani, whose husband is New Museum artistic director Massimiliano Gioni\u2014share more than 40 artists. Alemani said that her Biennale was \u201crooted in posthuman thought.\u201d \u201cNew Humans\u201d clearly is, too.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tWhere I think \u201cNew Humans\u201d differs, though, is in its inclusion of artworks alongside creations from the past that weren\u2019t necessarily meant as art. For example, there\u2019s a 1976 model of a nude man with enormous hands and a big bottom lip by the American neurosurgeon Wilder Graves Penfield; it\u2019s exhibited alongside a 2019 drawing of a nervous system by Hong Konger artist Angela Su. This inspired juxtaposition traverses not just time and space, but multiple disciplines as well. It suggests that the artistic drive to envision the body under duress is in many ways rooted in science.<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0129.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"Four paintings of futuristic creatures with a golden, orb-like sculpture set on a pedestal before them.\" height=\"900\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">\u201cNew Humans\u201d pairs modern art with contemporary work. Seen here are new works by Wangechi Mutu (at back), with a Constantin Brancusi sculpture set before them.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Dario Lasagni\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>I found this aestheticization of science fascinating because it didn\u2019t fetishize the images being shown. Lennart Nilsson\u2019s photographs of embryos, made between 1965 and 2003, felt at home here. I was also mesmerized by Jean Painlev\u00e9\u2019s 1927 film <em>L\u2019OEuf d\u2019\u00c9pinoche<\/em> (The Stickleback\u2019s Egg), showing the reproduction of stickleback fish through intense magnification. As the wall text points out, the avant-garde of Painlev\u00e9\u2019s time, from Man Ray to Sergei Eisenstein, was enthralled by science. A more contemporary take on this is artist Yuri Ancarani\u2019s <em>Da Vinci<\/em> (2012), which shows surgeons at work using a surgical tool called Da Vinci intercut with head-on shots of the robot moving its limbs as if in a choreographed routine. Though the robot\u2019s \u201cdancing\u201d is clearly meant to tap into the long-held fear of \u201crobots taking over,\u201d the work is perhaps of the least scary one on view.\u00a0<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0266.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A sculpture of an alien with a sharp tail next to a sculpture of a floating person with a screen beneath their chin.\" height=\"900\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">\u201cNew Humans\u201d is explicitly engaged with science fiction and horror. At left is a sculpture by H. R. Giger, who designed the extraterrestrials for the \u201cAlien\u201d franchise.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Dario Lasagni\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger: <\/strong>There are plenty of works that are more unsettling than that film in \u201cNew Humans,\u201d which frequently draws on science fiction and horror, at times even directly: one of the offerings is H. R. Giger\u2019s 1990\u20132005 sculpture <em>Necronom 2005 (Alien-III-Model)<\/em>, which envisions a kneeling creature with a fang for a tail. It\u2019s a being that looks quite a lot like the extraterrestrials Giger cooked up for the \u201cAlien\u201d franchise, and it can be found here just a stone\u2019s throw from a wonderful Ivana Ba\u0161i\u0107 sculpture featuring a gender-ambiguous being that appears to be melting into liquid soup. Elsewhere, there\u2019s body horror on offer: one memorable Jana Euler painting turns a pair of feet into uncircumcised penises; a Hans Bellmer sculpture features a little girl\u2019s leg attached to a many-breasted torso; and a remarkable Maina-Miriam Munsky painting envisions childbirth as a mass of flesh broken up by a square armature.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThis is a similar kind of horror to what\u2019s on display at the current Whitney Biennial, and I have a feeling that both shows are indirect responses to the uncertainty of the present. But \u201cNew Humans\u201d intriguingly shows that none of this horror is entirely new\u2014the past was scary, too. One of the show\u2019s most disturbing works is from 1979: documentation of a Lenora de Barros performance called <em>Poema<\/em>, for which she ran her mouth around a typewriter. In one picture, de Barros\u2019s tongue seems to have gotten trapped between the typewriter\u2019s gears. I find this shot sort of abject and strangely beautiful, just like \u201cNew Humans\u201d itself.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>I actually think the horror is even more embodied\u2014pun only somewhat intended\u2014in \u201cNew Humans\u201d than in the Whitney Biennial. But to my mind, there\u2019s more than just regular body horror that we often see in movie theaters or contemporary art exhibitions today. What I think the curators are drawing out is the body horror of war. To go chronologically, I\u2019m thinking of the series of photographs commissioned by the French government that document military inventions made for World War I; Anna Coleman Ladd\u2019s <em>Painted metal facial prosthesis<\/em> (1917\u201320), one example of the devices she crafted for soldiers whose faces had been disfigured too much for plastic surgery after World War I; Natsuyuki Nakanishi\u2019s 1959 painting <em>Ningen no Chizu<\/em> (Map of Human), which looks like the disfigured skin of the <em>Hibakusha<\/em>, or a survivor of either the Hiroshima or Nagasaki atomic bombings; and Zoran Mu\u0161i\u010d\u2019s bone-chilling 1974 painting <em>Non siamo gli ultimi<\/em> (We are not the last), which reflects on the artist\u2019s own experience of being in a concentration camp three decades earlier and which he connected to the US\u2019s deadly interventions in Vietnam and Latin America of the \u201970s.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThese works find a moving counterpart in a Paul Thek sculpture from his \u201cTechnological Reliquaries\u201d series in which a gray-painted limb rests in a Plexiglas case, partially covered by a piece of fabric and a wig. Thek drew inspiration from Catholic reliquaries, which frequently preserved a saint\u2019s body part, and applied that to the carnage he saw taking place in the Vietnam War. The Thek work is included in the exhibition\u2019s \u201cHall of Robots,\u201d the most dynamically installed of these sections. If you take that perilous staircase up, you\u2019ll leave Ancarani\u2019s <em>Da Vinci <\/em>video, check out a stellar contribution by Precious Okoyomon on the way up, and emerge into this gallery, where it really does feel like the robots have taken over. Be sure not to step on Pamela Rosenkranz\u2019s robotic snake as it slithers across the room\u2019s pink carpeting.\u00a0<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0158.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A sculpture of a leg attached to a many-breasted torso on a pedestal before a screen showing a tentacled digital being floating through the clouds.\" height=\"900\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">Works by Hans Bellmer (at front) and Cao Fei (at back) in \u201cNew Humans.\u201d<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Dario Lasagni\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger:<\/strong> Perhaps all this horror is the reason that some artists in the show turn away from reality: Portia Zvavahera, for example, paints her dreams at a grand scale, and Toyin Ojih Odutola draws semi-human entities that hail from faraway places in loving detail. The tendency may also explain the coda of \u201cNew Humans,\u201d a section called \u201cFuture Cities\u201d that is focused less on bodies and more on the spaces they inhabit, with artists like Cui Jie and Constant taking urban architecture and twisting it until it appears alien. Populated mainly by greyish, humorless art, \u201cFuture Cities\u201d struck me as the exhibition\u2019s one off-key note\u2014a bland non sequitur in an otherwise thrilling show.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>The \u201cFuture Cities\u201d section was definitely the weakest and, to my mind, the one that is most out of place. I understand the impulse behind it: the mid-20th century was a time in which imagined utopias were a common coping response to the destruction witnessed in the decades beforehand. But the promise of a utopia has long been discredited, and this felt like the least useful point in this show.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger: <\/strong>I\u2019d rather have seen a section dedicated more specifically to digital art. It\u2019s not as though this is entirely absent from the show: other areas feature early computer art by the likes of Lillian Schwartz and Charlotte Johannesson, and there\u2019s also a digital self-portrait by Donald Rodney that viewers can interact with. But by and large, the show almost entirely omits net art altogether. It also leaves out artists such as Josh Kline, Ed Atkins, Ryan Trecartin, and DIS, all of whom thought about how the internet had remade people during the 2010s. These lacunae are all the more striking in light of the fact that the New Museum helped write the history around these artists and net art.<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Charlotte-Johannesson.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A digital abstraction featuring squares of alternating blue and orange lines that appear to split apart.\" height=\"839\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">Charlotte Johannesson, <em>Design<\/em>, 1984.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Courtesy the artist and Hollybush Gardens, London<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>It\u2019s also glaring because the New Museum houses Rhizome, an organization dedicated to historicizing net art and post-internet art. Net art fascinates me because the artists who made it were able to live their whole lives online. Many of them were based in Eastern Europe\u2014they were making this work after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. This all feels as just as tied to the responses to the two World Wars we see in \u201cNew Humans\u201d as anything else here.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tIt would also have been interesting to see an argument about how artists merged humanity and technology by melding their offline and online lives. The \u201cDream Machines\u201d section, in that back hallway space behind the old elevator bank, kind of gets at this, but so much of the work on view involves using typewriters or dot matrix printers, as Alison Knowles did with <em>The House of Dust Edition<\/em> (1967). Other than the Rodney work, there are basically no computers\u2014or smartphones, even\u2014in this section to illustrate how people have willingly uploaded versions of themselves into the ether between the 1990s and the 2010s. To my mind, that\u2019s a big gap.\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Hito-Steyerl.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"A blurry image of multiple people on top of another in front of a car.\" height=\"675\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">Hito Steyerl\u2019s <em>Mechanical Turks<\/em> (2025) is one of many works in \u201cNew Humans\u201d that takes up anxieties around AI.<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Courtesy the artist and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger: <\/strong>The show does, at least, include Hito Steyerl, whose contributions to digitally inflected art of the 2010s cannot be understated, even if the work she has produced since isn\u2019t quite so notable. For me, her new video, <em>Mechanical Kurds<\/em> (2025), was both the standout work of \u201cNew Humans\u201d and a return to form for one of our great artists. Her subjects are refugees from Iraq who performed a kind of labor for Amazon known as turking, wherein people manually identify objects to help train AI algorithms. Steyerl interviews these refugees, then intersperses their Zoom conversations with AI-generated images, including one featuring a group of dancers that tumble across\u2014and into\u2014one another, suggesting a total dissolution of the body politic at the hands of technological overlords.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tIn its own funky way, I think \u201cNew Humans\u201d is secretly an exhibition about dispossession. Take Liliana Maresca\u2019s 1983 series of pictures in which she appears nude with tossed-off objects. In one, she stands with a tall metal spiral that is placed in front of her leg, so that it appears as though she was fitted with a makeshift limb replacement. While this photograph does rhyme with Kiki Kogelnik\u2019s paintings of cyborgian women on view nearby, it\u2019s worth remembering that Maresca\u2019s picture has a different context: it was taken at the tail end of a brutal military dictatorship in the artist\u2019s native Argentina. These pictures are about a people robbed of rights and then made anew as a result.<\/p>\n<div class=\"post-content-image \/\/  \">\n<figure class=\"o-figure   size-large alignnone lrv-u-max-width-100p\">\n<div class=\"c-lazy-image  \">\n<div class=\"lrv-a-crop-16x9\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"c-lazy-image__img lrv-u-background-color-grey-lightest lrv-u-width-100p lrv-u-display-block lrv-u-height-auto\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0087.jpg?w=400\" alt=\"Three paintings on a wall. One shows a pair of feet attached to uncircumcised penises, another shows a big-eyed creature with colorful hands, and a third shows two faces meld together and abstracted, so that ears appear in the center.\" height=\"900\" width=\"1200\"><\/div>\n<\/div><figcaption class=\"c-figcaption  lrv-u-font-size-12 lrv-u-flex lrv-u-flex-direction-column lrv-u-padding-tb-025\"><span class=\"lrv-u-font-size-14@desktop\">Paintings by Jana Euler emblematize all the body horror on display in \u201cNew Humans.\u201d<\/span><cite class=\"lrv-u-text-transform-uppercase lrv-u-color-grey\">Photo Dario Lasagni\/Courtesy New Museum<\/cite><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Dur\u00f3n: <\/strong>I see a parallel between Maresca\u2019s images and Henrik Olesen\u2019s <em>\u201cA.T.\u201d<\/em> (2012), which is dedicated to Alan Turing, the mathematician whose code breaking helped change the tide of World War II in favor of the Allies and who was then convicted of homosexuality in 1952 and subjected to castration and hormone therapy. One of Olesen\u2019s collages has the phrase \u201cMACHINES AT WORK\u201d scrawled atop it, along with a 1952 quote from Turing in which he discusses the treatment he received and how \u201cone is supposed to return to normal when it is over.\u201d He adds, \u201cI hope they are right.\u201d Turing\u2019s death in 1954 was ruled a suicide, but the reality is a bit more complex than that. Turing\u2019s story always gets me.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \"><strong>Greenberger: <\/strong>I don\u2019t think \u201cNew Humans\u201d is entirely such a dour show, though. If anything, I found it occasionally hopeful. I\u2019m thinking here of Frieda Toranzo Jaeger\u2019s contribution, an altarpiece-like folding painting called <em>To Imagine Is to Absent Oneself<\/em> (2025). The painting displays a toolbox with certain wrenches embroidered by hand. Last year, Toranzo Jaeger told the <em>Observer<\/em> that technology will \u201cdisempower us slowly,\u201d and that her toolbox paintings are about \u201csurrendering to the machine, becoming one with the apparatus.\u201d But to my mind, these are also works about using that machinery against itself. Toranzo Jaeger is showing us the tools of the revolution. It\u2019s up to us to figure out what we\u2019ll build with them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>[analyse_source url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/art-news\/reviews\/new-museum-reopening-expansion-new-humans-review-1234778022\/&#8221;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[analyse_image type=&#8221;featured&#8221; src=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/New-Museum_New-Humans_0326_0203.jpg?w=1024&#8243;] Almost two years ago to the day, the New Museum in New York closed its doors to the public, leaving behind a void\u2014this is one of the country\u2019s few major museums that is focused solely on contemporary art, after all. Now, following an expansion overseen by OMA, the museum is finally back [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[61,226],"class_list":["post-1838591","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-politics","tag-artnews-com","tag-crawlmanager"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1838591","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1838591"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1838591\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1838591"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1838591"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1838591"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}