NEW YORK, NY.- The Whitney Museum of American Art launches Camoflux Recall Grotto, a digital art project by Leo Castañeda commissioned for Whitney Biennial 2026, and available on artport, the Museums online gallery space for Internet art. Camoflux Recall Grotto is a web-based game that invites players to cultivate a garden within its surreal, primordial landscape. The games environment draws inspiration from the Brazilian Amazon rainforest and the Everglades in South Florida, as well as works by Colombian artists Maria Thereza Negreiros, Ever Astudillo, and Alfonso Quijano. Blending organic and technical infrastructures, the games virtual grotto offers a space to examine processes of growth in a technology-driven ecosystem.
As players enter the game, they assume the role of an organic drone hovering above water in a shadowed grotto. Players navigate through the otherworldly landscape, collecting water and sunlight resources to nourish the cyberflora organisms. Holographic memories from past and future worlds emerge from the cyberflora as they sprout, intertwining natural ecosystems and computational networks within a shared environment, revealing the relationality and tension that exists. With Camoflux Recall Grotto, Castañeda challenges conventional game patterns of rapid, continual progression. The games tempo fluctuates in an unpredictable way, slowing to a calm, meditative cycle when seeds are sparse, then accelerating when seedlings multiply beyond sustainability.
Its so meaningful to work with the team to bring to life the surreal landscapes I grew up with and spark reflection on relationship between mechanical, biological and collective memory, said artist Leo Castañeda.
Through its shifting rhythm and responsive environment, Camoflux Recall Grotto reimagines cultivation as a feedback system rather than an experience of cumulative progression. Growth unfolds from reciprocal exchanges between the players interactions and the games framework, foregrounding the ways balance, adaptation, and response are influenced by the systems they occur within. By placing ecological and technological processes in dialogue, Castañeda reflects on the intertwined infrastructures that increasingly organize contemporary life.
Whitney Biennial 2026 is organized by Marcela Guerrero, DeMartini Family Curator, and Drew Sawyer, Sondra Gilman Curator of Photography, with Beatriz Cifuentes, Biennial Curatorial Assistant, and Carina Martinez, Rubio Butterfield Family Fellow.
Camoflux Recall Grotto is accessible within artport, the Museums portal to Internet art and an online gallery space for commissions of net art and new media art. More information about artport and past projects can be found at whitney.org/artport.
Leo Castañeda (b. 1988, Cali, Colombia) is a multimedia artist and video game designer exploring Latin American Surrealism in the digital age. His artwork primarily takes the form of episodic games and immersive installations that meld atmospheric paintings, video, mixed reality, wearables, and sculpture. Castañeda is a Knight Foundation Arts + Technology Fellow, YoungArts Artist Technology Fellow, Emergent Strategy Ideation Institute Praxis Project Fellow, and an Ellies Creator Award, and Harpo Foundation grantee. Castañeda has exhibited at Pérez Art Museum Miami; Bronx Museum of the Arts; Haus der elektronischen Künste Basel; Museu do Amanhã, Rio de Janeiro; Museo National de Arte Guatemala; Espacio ArtNexus, Bogotá; Locust Projects Miami; Museo de Arte Moderno La Tertulia Colombia; Bienal de Antioquia y Medellin and the Bienal de Artes Mediales, Santiago, Chile. His work has been featured on PBS, Rhizome, Killscreen, Vice, Hyperallergic, ArtNexus, El Pais, Spike Art Magazine, and New American Paintings. He is currently a resident at the Bakehouse Arts Complex in Miami.