
Daniel Arsham
Daniel Arsham, a multidisciplinary American artist, has shaped a remarkable career by blurring the lines between art, architecture, and performance. Originally from Cleveland, Ohio, and growing up in Miami, Arsham experienced a youth marked by Hurricane Andrew, an event that permeates his artistic approach focused on time, transformation, and the ephemeral.
A graduate of New York's Cooper Union, where he received the Gelman Trust Fellowship Award, Arsham explored his unique vision of negative space and altered perception, influenced in part by his own experience with color blindness. This aspect fueled his artistic palette, initially dominated by shades of white and gray, before he incorporated more vibrant colors after acquiring special glasses that corrected his color perception.
Co-founder of Snarkitecture, an architectural exploration studio, with Alex Mustonen, Arsham works to make architecture surprising and interactive, often through interventions that defy conventional expectations of spaces. The studio has completed several notable projects, seeking to infuse art and architecture with a sense of play and discovery.
Arsham's career is marked by multidisciplinary collaborations, notably with choreographer Merce Cunningham, and in the fashion field with figures like Kim Jones for Dior. These projects have allowed Arsham to explore and merge his interests in space, design, and performance, while also developing his concept of "future relics"—everyday objects transformed to suggest future archaeological discoveries.
In his work, Arsham invites us to reflect on the fragility of our present and how the objects around us might be perceived in the future, a recurring theme in his series of works such as "Future Relic." His ability to play with expectations makes him one of the most innovative and influential artists of his generation.












