Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Bright green abstract wall sculpture lit by spotlights against a deep blue museum wall.

Gabriela Ruiz

Read more in the artist's words.

Gabriela Ruiz: We are on the edge of a new era. If technology is the medium of the future, it cannot be separated from class, fantasy, labor, and the body. As tech aesthetics grow more minimal, more polished, more sterile, something disappears: the messy, excessive, expressive relationships to technology that once offered pleasure, identity, and power.

Homo Machina is my refusal of that disappearance.

This work is a self-portrait, but not a likeness. I build my body as exaggeration—monumental, overdetermined, impossible to smooth down. I turn myself into a machine through style: mass becomes structure, curvature becomes architecture, accumulation becomes language. The body is not erased by the interface. The body becomes the interface. A console of inputs and outputs where labor, fantasy, and desire circulate through the same system.

The title names the condition I’m staging: Homo Machina—human as machine, machine as human extension. Not metaphor. Not future. A lived reality.

For me, the machine is never neutral. It is fantasy—glamour, transformation, seduction—but it is also a tool through which violence is enacted. Surveillance, policing, extraction, and control are not side effects of technology; they are among its central functions. They shape who is seen, who is tracked, who is disciplined, who is allowed to move freely. Homo Machina holds that contradiction in the same body: technology as protection and as threat, as desire and as weapon.

At the sculpture’s center, a clear womb contains an ouroboros, animated by a motor. The snake consuming its own tail turns the body into a closed circuit—continuity sustained through self-consumption. The ouroboros makes capitalism literal and bodily: production without exit, care and endurance converted into fuel, the body asked to power systems that exceed it.

The surface is neon green—refusing the chromophobia of contemporary tech culture, where “neutral” design is treated as universal, and color is coded as excessive, childish, or low. I draw from hyper-pop, science fiction, and early Windows-era digital imaginaries—when technology was unruly, ornamental, and saturated with fantasy. I return to that excess not as nostalgia, but as strategy: fantasy as a site of agency rather than distraction.

Low-tech 3D prints, a cast face, multiple media outputs—everything insists on friction. Imperfection. Texture. The hybrid body stays unresolved. It will not become sleek. It will not become pure.

Homo Machina does not imagine escape from the machine. It stages the condition of being inside it—where bodies are expected to perform endlessly, to carry what others refuse to hold, and to survive within fantasies that remain seductive, yet ultimately unreachable.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, March 8–August 23, 2026). From left to right: Kimowan Metchewais, Without Ground, 2006; Kimowan Metchewais, Raincloud, 2010; Gabriela Ruiz, Homo Machina, 2026. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

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On the Hour

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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