SHENZHEN.- The inaugural edition of the Shenzhen Art and Technology Biennale opened to the public from May 30, 2026, to April 30, 2027 at Shenzhen International Museum of Art (SIMoA). With its theme A Glimpse of the Infinite, this edition is directed by Zikang Zhang, curated by Naiyi Wang and Mónica Bello, and brings together over fifty international artists, scientists and researchers to explore the quantum condition of perceptionwhere observation is never passive but an act of intervention that collapses possibilities into a single, fleeting present.
Drawing on quantum mechanics, the biennial posits that what appears is only a fraction of what is. Every definition casts its shadow; what remains unsaid sinks into the dark. Existence is a perpetual deferral of appearance, and certainty is merely the accidental condensation of probabilities, arrested by the act of looking. The works in the exhibition do not offer answers but function as portals to the uncollapsedspeaking in light, sound, matter, and code to narrate what language cannot hold: the blurring of boundaries, the suddenness of leaps, the absence of presence.
This inquiry into the nature of observation unfolds across multiple registers. Semiconductor's Light-in-Flight slows the speed of light to human-visible frame rates, revealing how a pulse traveling toward us arrives in reverse order due to the geometry of photon pathsa direct challenge to our intuitive sense of temporal sequence. Perry-James Sugden and Daria Jelonek's Quantum Lens employs mixed reality as a symbolic optical device, rendering visible three quantum phenomenaentanglement, probability, and tunnelingthat resist direct perception, while Ralf Baecker's Floating Codes exposes the inner aesthetics of artificial neural networks, where signals loop and mutate in an unsupervised computational ecology, mirroring the probabilistic dynamics of quantum systems. Libby Heaney's Shadowscapes (Wilderness Within) is a generative four-channel sound installation unfolding in infinite time, never repeating. It entangles Jung's shadow with quantum physicswhere observation alters systemsusing IBM quantum entanglement data in custom software. The work stages a sonic field where knowledge emerges relationally, through interference rather than direct access.
The biennale also presents a constellation of newly commissioned works that engage directly with the quantum gaze. Chen Baoyang's Mechanism and Wave stages a philosophical theater where a multi‑armed machine dissolves into a probability wave under strobe lighting, only to collapse into a single posture the moment a viewer gazes upon ita visceral metaphor for measurement and the loss of agency in AI. Yang Song's Photon and pi (note: the title contains the symbol pi) weaves steel wire into interlocking loops where light traces infinite refractive paths, turning the unmeasurable nature of pi into a sculptural conditiona structure that sustains continuity precisely by evading total capture, echoing quantum reality where observation collapses one possibility while others persist. Seph Li's The Light Named You stages the ruins of a dead universe where only quantum fluctuations persist. Viewers' gravity resonates, and the first light after silence is born from them. Its shape follows the handan infinity symbol or a circling bandbringing light and new life to a spacetime that held nothing. Tim Yip's Existential Doubt constructs four spaces representing four dimensions in an eternal cycle, each illuminated by a guiding light, inviting participants to question the purpose of existence within a multidimensional frame.
As the curatorial statement reads: "Perhaps true manifestation always lies on the other side of appearancethe unobserved still adrift." This awareness of incompleteness pervades the exhibition, which treasures decoherence and disturbance over pure coherent states. Visitors are not passive observers but participants in a delayed‑choice experiment, where each decision retroactively rewrites the work's past and future. The Biennale presents a plurality of voices that probe the entanglement between observation and realitynot seeking to fix meaning, but to keep it in suspension.
Participants (in alphabetical order): AATB (Andrea Anner & Thibault Brevet), Alex Long Yuan, Bai Shui, Black Void, Carol Prusa, Chen Baoyang, Chloé Delarue, Christa Sommerer & Laurent Mignonneau, David Young, Dennis Hong, Guo Donglai, Juan Cortés, Kate Crawford & Vladan Joler, Li Shurui, Li Xinyue, Libby Heaney, Lisa Chang Lee, Liu Jiayu, Liu Wentao, Miao Xiaochun, Perry‑James Sugden & Daria Jelonek, Qi Zhen, Qiu Zhijie, Quadrature (Juliane Götz & Sebastian Neitsch), Ralf Baecker, Semiconductor (Ruth Jarman & Joe Gerhardt), Seph Li, Shen Shaomin & Liu Shaoshan & Shen Tongyi & Jiang Suxuan, Tania Candiani, Tim Yip, Tobias Zaft, Victor Vasarely, Wang Jianwei, Wang Tianxin, Xie Xiaoze, Yael Bartana, Yang Song, Yussef Agbo‑Ola, Zhang Ding, Zou Luyang