From 10/30/2018 to 03/17/2019

Group show

Featured Artists

Press Release & Details

_ data-dating-galeriec...pdf ( PDF, 1.06 MB )

Data Dating

Curator : Valentina Peri

What does it mean to love in the Internet age? How are digital interfaces reshaping our personal relationships? What do new technologies imply for the future of the romantic sphere? How do screens affect our sexual intimacy? Are the new means of connection shifting the old paradigms of adult life?

The advent of the Internet and smartphones has brought about a split in the romantic lives of millions of people, who now inhabit both the real world and their very own “phone world”. In terms of romance and sexual intimacy these phenomena have generated new complexities that we are still trying to figure out.

By bringing together the work of several international artists, the exhibition Data Dating attempts to explore new directions in modern romance: new forms of intimate communication, the process of commodification of love through online dating services and hookup applications, unprecedented meeting and mating behaviors, the renegotiation of sexual identities, and changing erotic mores and taboos.

Over the past century, the history of dating practices has shown that the acquisition of new freedoms is often accompanied by suspicions and stereotypes: what appears disturbing to one generation often ends up being acceptable for the next.

From the early computers algorithms of the 1960s, to the video cameras of the 1970s, the bulletin board systems of the 1980s, the Internet of the 1990s, and the smartphones of the last decade, every new format of electronically mediated matching has faced a stigma of some kind.

Today, the lack of broadly defined norms is creating a disconnected, two-tiered world in which some exist in a pre-internet reality, while others – who have grown up as individuals and sexual beings online – see the Internet not as an arcane elsewhere where people go to escape reality, but as reality proper.

What has changed is the “sexual script”: the roles that people feel are available for them to perform, thanks to the fact that the Internet, perhaps more than any other medium, enables self and identity to be played with.

Several authors –like Aaron Ben-Ze'ev and Lauren Rosewarne–have stressed that the online affairs world is disrupting the monogamous nature of romantic relationships and facilitating different sexual and romantic behavior, eventually confirming the “prophecy” of Herbert Marcuse’s 1955 book, Eros and Civilization.

According to a recent study, 1 couple on 5 has met through a dating website: the massive scale of this phenomenon is evidence enough of its potential for profit and an extensive collection of user data. Dating websites and hookup applications will be the most rentable business in the future of the Internet. Today they are ranking third among paid content sites online, outpacing even pornography. This aspect raises questions about the planned obsolescence that is supposedly inherent in this business model: the idea that online dating companies, having a latent interest in matches failing, acknowledge the search for partners as a recreational activity and product to be endless consumed.

As Eva Illouz has stated in Consuming the Romantic Utopia, “romantic love is a collective arena within which the social divisions and the cultural contradictions of capitalism are played out”.

Data Dating aims to promote debate on the ways in which society is responding to one of the greatest challenges of today: mapping the new connections between emotion, desire, culture, technology, and economy by considering Internet as a social practice, a shift of society at large.

Valentina Peri

VR hug

by Moises Sanabria, Tom Galle

Acrylic Print
80 x 120 cm
2016

Tinder VR

by John Yuyi, Moises Sanabria, Tom Galle

Video and acrylic print
30 x 40 cm
2016

Tinder VR


Video and acrylic print
30 x 40 cm
2016

Tinder VR


Video and acrylic print
30 x 40 cm
2016

Face Messenger

by John Yuyi, Tom Galle

Acrylic Print
60 x 90 cm
2017

Deep Love

by Antoine Schmitt

Website
2017

A Truly Magical Moment

by Adam Basanta

Interactive kinetic sculpture
2 iPhones 4S, selfie sticks, aluminum, electronics, bluetooth chips, FaceTime video chat software
1m x 1m x 1m
2016

The Men behind the Wall

by Inés Moldavsky

Video
28'
2018

The Men behind the Wall

by Inés Moldavsky

video
28'
2018

The myth of female solidarity

by Olga Fedorova

Lenticular Print

91 x 119 cm
2017

Webcam Venus

by Addie Wagenknecht, Pablo Garcia

Video

Courtesy bitforms gallery, NY
Edition of 3 + 1 AP
Dimensions variable, 2 min 41 sec
2013

Peeping Tom (version porno)

by Thomas Israël

Interactive installation
Specific software, screen or projection
5 copies + 2 ap
Dimensions variables
2006

Glaciers

by Zach Gage

Custom wood enclosure, Raspberry Pi, AdaFruit Pervasive Visions 2.7, display kit
Courtesy Postmasters gallery, NY
3 copies
12.7 × 17.8 × 5.1 cm
2015-2016

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

Exhibition view

A Truly Magical Moment

by Adam Basanta

Interactive kinetic sculpture
2 iPhones 4S, selfie sticks, aluminum, electronics, bluetooth chips, FaceTime video chat software
1m x 1m x 1m
2016