LONG ISLAND CITY, NY.- This fall, MoMA PS1 presents Four Dilations, an exhibition that counters the dominant ways in which time is kept today. On view from October 23, 2025, through March 2, 2026, the exhibition thematizes temporal dilation, a physical phenomenon that describes how observers with distinct frames of reference experience the passing of time differently. The presentation includes sculpture, performance, and installation works that are developed from time- based practices, such as dance, filmmaking, and sonic composition. Four Dilations features durational and spatial works by an international group of artists who came of age under the new regime of digital time management, each making their New York museum debut: New York-based duo Michèle Graf and Selina Grüter (b. 1987, Wetzikon; b. 1991, Zurich), New York-based Nandi Loaf (b. 1991, New York), Berlin-based Richard Sides (b. 1985, Rotherham), and Oslo-based Nikhil Vettukattil (b. 1990, Bengaluru). Reconsidering the concept of now in the present, their works use techniques of distortion, recursion, and elongation. Four Dilations expands on art historian Pamela M. Lees notion of chronophobia as the anxiety felt by artists in the 1960s affected by the existential crises of the nascent information age.
Under contemporary social and economic conditions that privilege expediency and rapid dissemination, the conceptual positions in Four Dilations reveal the politics of timekeeping as observer-dependent. Four colorful Machines by Michèle Graf and Selina Grüter are assembled from calculator and camera parts as well as deconstructed movements: the various springs, gears, pulleys, teeth, wheel trains, and levers that drive a clocks internal mechanism. Rewired and reprogrammed to oscillate with recalcitrancefriction and drag added via felt, fishing line, and rubberbandsGraf and Grüters kinetic sculptures work steadily to non-productive ends. Nandi Loafs performative sculptures often function as placeholders for the artists withdrawal from systems that run on economies of attention, intentionally stuttering a more fluid circulation. Newly configured for PS1, her DIY server farmpowered by USB Bitcoin Minersdemonstrates the dystopian gamble of institutional entities on short-term gains and promising individual capital via extended metaphor. In Richard Sidess longform multichannel audio work, Deep Listening (2024), transducer speakers transform an entire gallery space into a resonant chamber. Using purpose-built synthesizers to produce a spatial and temporal environment with no fixed viewpoint, the audio composition combines recent field recordings with the artists own original music and appropriated material, arranged and edited for the PS1 galleries. Presented during the run of the exhibition, three New York-based performers will realize Nikhil Vettukattils Timepiece (2022). Taking place in a setting mostly illuminated by natural light as the sun goes down, the liminal work expands and diffuses around the performers collaborative tasks, with a soundtrack by Stanislav Iordanov. Four Dilations considers the dilemma of time measurement when extreme datafication, prompt response, and doomscrolling divest the individual subject of agency. With distinct approaches to time as a material and formal structure, Graf and Grüter, Loaf, Sides, and Vettukattil use strategies of movement and collaboration to build alternate temporalities within daily life, calling into question the algorithmic measurement of time in our contemporary era.
Michèle Graf and Selina Grüter (b. 1987, Wetzikon; b. 1991, Zurich) are an artist duo living in New York. They studied media arts at Zurich University of the Arts and participated in the Whitney Independent Study Program. Recent solo and group exhibitions include Silver Star, Halle für Kunst Lüneburg (2024); Same Day, 15th Baltic Triennial, Vilnius (2024); Key Operators, Kunstverein München (2024); and More Clock Work, Fanta-MLN, Milan (2023).
Nandi Loaf (b. 1991, New York) lives and works in New York. Loaf received her BFA from the Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in 2014. Solo exhibitions include The Great Reset, Timeshare, Los Angeles (2025); 7, Profil, Paris; Ever, King's Leap, New York (both 2024); Worser, Room 3557, Los Angeles; and Lot 99, Sebastian Gladstone, Los Angeles (both 2023). Select group exhibitions include Artists Space, New York (2025); Code Switch: Distributing Blackness, Reprogramming Internet Art, MOCAD, Detroit (2025); and SEVEN, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York (2024).
Richard Sides (b. 1985, Rotherham) is an artist and curator based in Berlin. Recent solo exhibitions include Looking at Rooms in a New Light, Schiefe Zähne, Berlin; Psychology, Carlos/Ishikawa, London; Years, KIN, Brussels (all 2025); Documentary, Rinde am Rhein, Düsseldorf, (2024); Slow Dance (4) (with Nicole-Antonia Spagnola), Stadtgalerie Bern (2023); Basic Vision, KOW, Berlin (2022); The Matrix, Schiefe Zähne, Berlin (2021); and Dwelling, Kunstverein Braunschweig (2019). He is co-director of the artist-run space, The Wig, and runs Bus Editions since 2010.
Nikhil Vettukattil (b. 1990, Bengaluru) is an artist based in Oslo. They studied at Central St. Martins in London and the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy (CRMEP). Recent solo and group exhibitions include DECADE, AGIT, Berlin (2025); designofthetimes, 3236rls/Le Bourgeois, London (2025); Defund the Police, Arcadia Missa, London (2024); and Stipendutstilling, Oslo Kunstforening (2024). Vettukattil is a founding member of the Institute for Scene Experiments.