Tiffany Trenda is a performance and new media artist based in Los Angeles, with a career spanning over two decades. Her performances have been presented at prestigious venues, including the Broad Art Museum, the World Expo in Shanghai, Architecture + Design Museum, Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Exploratorium: The Museum of Science, Art & Human Perception. Notably, she was featured in the performance program of Metamorphoses of the Virtual during the 55th Venice Biennale. Trenda's work has also been exhibited at the Faena Art Center in Buenos Aires in the acclaimed show Auto Body and in the special projects section of Context Art Miami. More recently, her art has exhibited at Laboratorio Arte Alameda in Mexico City, Art Center Nabi in South Korea, Brand Library and Art Center, and Art in Flux at the Barbican in London. Additionally, her pieces are part of the permanent collections at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art and Beinecke Library at Yale University. Trenda holds a BFA from Art Center College of Design and an MFA from UCLA's Design and Media Arts program.Tiffany Trenda's work engages with the intersection of the human body and emerging technologies. Rooted in performance and new media, her practice navigates the shifting boundaries between the real and the virtual, prompting viewers to confront the evolving concepts of identity and embodiment in today’s increasingly digital landscape. Trenda challenges the way our presence is mediated by technology, urging us to reconsider the ways we experience and understand the world around us.Her work investigates how technology is transforming our phenomenological understanding of the body and material reality. She focuses on the subtleties of human experience as mediated through digital constructs, creating a conversation that blurs the lines between traditional and future mediums. Trenda’s practice opens a conversation between human subjectivity and machine perception, encouraging reflection on the ever-evolving relationship between the body, technology, and materiality in the digital age.
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