Explore Installation Artists
Discover artists working in the Installation style
Heidi Bucher
Winterthur, Switzerland
Bucher's transformative works, involving latex casts of architectural interiors, explore themes of memory, domesticity, and the body. Her practice challenged traditional notions of sculpture.
Mickael Marman
Paris, France
Marman's sculptures and installations explore themes of architecture, memory, and the built environment. His work often incorporates found materials and site-specific interventions.
Antoine Catala
Paris, France
Catala's installations and sculptures explore the relationship between language, technology, and emotion. His work often incorporates animated sculptures and digital projections.
Nolan Simon
New York City, New York, United States
Simon's sculptures and installations explore the relationship between technology, the body, and the environment. His work often incorporates digital fabrication and found objects.
Stewart Uoo
New York City, New York, United States
Uoo's sculptures and installations explore themes of identity, sexuality, and the body. His work often incorporates found objects and performative elements.
Alisa Baremboym
New York City, New York, United States
Baremboym's sculptures and installations explore the relationship between the body, technology, and materials. Her work often incorporates industrial materials and digital fabrication.
Ajay Kurian
New York City, New York, United States
Kurian's sculptures and installations explore themes of childhood, technology, and the Anthropocene. His work often incorporates found objects and digital fabrication.
Bin Woo Hyuk
Seoul, South Korea
Hyuk's sculptures and installations, often incorporating natural materials and found objects, explore the relationship between nature, culture, and the human body. His work is marked by a sense of organic form and tactile materiality.
Song Burnsoo
Seoul, South Korea
Burnsoo's sculptures and installations, often incorporating found objects and industrial materials, explore themes of urban life and social commentary. His work is marked by a raw and direct aesthetic.
Tatsuo Miyajima
Tokyo, Japan
Miyajima's installations, often incorporating LED counters and digital technologies, explore themes of time, life, and death. His practice is marked by a sense of conceptual rigor and a deep engagement with Buddhist philosophy.