But unlike a university lab, Eyebeam has no corporate sponsors dictating the research agenda. Unlike a commercial gallery, it doesn’t care if the work sells. Their mission is simple and radical: The "Eyebeam Effect" Why does this matter in 2026? Because the gap between "what technology can do" and "how technology makes us feel" has never been wider.
That’s the core. In an era of relentless AI hype, crypto grifts, and “move fast and break things” hangovers, Eyebeam moves slow and asks questions. You don’t need to know Processing or p5.js to appreciate what Eyebeam protects. The tools of our daily lives—algorithms, interfaces, sensors, bots—are not neutral. Eyebeam has spent 27+ years proving that artists are the best quality assurance testers for the future. eyebeam
If you’ve ever watched a glitch artist manipulate a CRT television, seen a speculative design project about surveillance capitalism, or wondered who funded that wild AI-generated installation at your local museum—chances are, Eyebeam’s fingerprints are all over it. Founded in Brooklyn in 1997 (before "tech" was a dirty word and when "new media" still meant CD-ROMs), Eyebeam is the OG residency and production studio for artists who work with technology. Think of it as a hybrid: part MIT Media Lab, part scrappy artist studio, part public gallery. But unlike a university lab, Eyebeam has no
Because the future isn’t just coded. It’s critiqued. What’s your favorite Eyebeam project or residency moment? Let me know in the comments. Because the gap between "what technology can do"