FAD Magazine

FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

Paradigm Shift and Ryoji Ikeda exhibitions at 180 Studios extended due to popular demand

180 Studios has extended their current exhibitions: Paradigm Shift and the new site-specific audio-visual installation by Ryoji Ikeda, data-cosm [n°1]. Both are now on show until Sunday, 1 February 2026.

Paradigm Shift is a major exhibition that transforms 180 Strand’s vast subterranean spaces to present some of the most acclaimed moving image works from the 1970s to the present, drawing from avant-garde cinema, TV, music video, performance, fashion, gaming and internet culture. The exhibition features work by artists: Sophia Al-Maria, Meriem Bennani, Dara Birnbaum, Foday DumbuyaCao Fei, Tremaine Emory, Nan Goldin, Arthur Jafa, Derek Jarman, Julianknxx, Mark Leckey, Josèfa Ntjam, Pipilotti Rist, Martine Syms, TELFAR, Ryan Trecartin, Gillian Wearing and Andy Warhol.

Paradigm Shift: New Dimensions in Moving Image – Warhol Install view Photo © Mark Westall

Looking back to look forward, Paradigm Shift traces multiple revolutions in moving-image culture. From Warhol Fashion TV in the 1970s to TELFAR TV today, the screen is a stage where everyone can be a broadcaster, commentator, performer, and artist. 

Installation view of TELFAR, New Models 3, 2025. Paradigm Shift, 180 Studios. Image credit: Feiyang Xue

Technology is central to the story: it shapes how the films are created, their visual language, and reveals our ongoing relationship to the screen as a site of self-production. These screen-based works draw from the language of fashion, avant-garde cinema, TV, music video, performance, gaming, and internet culture, reframed through the lens of the artist. The experience connects the lineage of time-based media to today’s hyperconnectivity and rapid cultural exchange. 

Installation view of Pipilotti Rist, Ever is Over All, 1997. Paradigm Shift, 180 Studios. Photo Feiyang Xue

“From the Super 8 and VHS revolutions of the 1970s and 80s to the digital hyper connectivity of our present moment, video art and moving image have always operated at a crossroads: high and low, visceral and conceptual, personal and political. In Paradigm Shift, we see how great artists inspire us to engage with storytelling through screens differently: for us to feel more, imagine more and recover our senses.”

Jefferson Hack 

Several new works commissioned by 180 Studios sit alongside iconic historical works that offer a view of paradigms shifted by artists who rebelled against the status quo using the technologies available to them at the time for both realisation and distribution of their vision.  Artists as community-makers have consistently blurred the boundaries between art, fashion and technology, innovating with form and format to break and change the rules of image-making and the image economy. Visitors to the show close the loop, as native agents of digital media and broadcast themselves.

Ryoji Ikeda, data-cosm [n°1], 180 Studios, 2025. Photo by Alice Lubbock

Also on show is data-cosm [n°1], the world premiere of Ryoji Ikeda’s latest monumental installation.  Commissioned by 180 Studios, the new site-specific audio-visual installation is a unique immersive experience charting the full spectrum of data on nature – from the microscopic scale of particle physics to the macroscopic of astrophysics, as was previously evident in the artist’s data-verse project.

Paradigm Shift: New Dimensions in Moving Image + data-cosm [n°1] by Ryoji Ikeda – 1st February 2026 180studios.com

Paradigm Shift: New Dimensions in Moving Image In partnership with Ray-Ban Meta

Categories

Tags

Related Posts

Trending Articles

Join the FAD newsletter and get the latest news and articles straight to your inbox

* indicates required