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whitney biennial technology machine human artists

The 2026 Whitney Biennial features a wave of artists grappling with the unsettling intersection of human identity and advanced technology. Works by Cooper Jacoby and Isabelle Frances McGuire highlight a shift away from the sleek, optimistic 'Y2K' tech aesthetic toward a 'techno-horror' that explores data extraction and biometric surveillance. Jacoby’s 'Estate' series uses AI-generated scripts derived from the social media data of deceased individuals, while McGuire’s sculptures utilize 3D medical scans to create distorted, ghostly figures that blur the line between the organic and the digital.

Is the local art industry ready for AI’s impact?

Ugandan visual artists are confronting the disruptive rise of generative artificial intelligence, which many local creators view as a tool for intellectual property theft. Prominent figures like batik artist Nuwa Wamala Nyanzi highlight the lack of consent, credit, and compensation as AI models scrape internet data to replicate unique artistic styles. The local industry is currently navigating a precarious landscape where traditional techniques meet digital automation, raising urgent questions about the future of creative labor in East Africa.