NEW YORK, NY.- This spring, the Museum of Arts and Design presents Haas Brothers: Uncanny Valley, a wildly imaginative mid-career survey that plunges visitors into the exuberant, uncanny worlds of twin artists Nikolai and Simon Haas. The exhibition makes its New York debut as part of a nationally touring exhibition organized by Cranbrook Art Museum and brings together approximately 85 works that challenge conventional distinctions between art, design, craft, and digital innovation.
Through fantastical hybrid creatures, algorithmically generated landscapes, and meticulously hand-built ceramics, Uncanny Valley reveals the Haas Brothers singular ability to fuse cutting-edge technology with deeply tactile, human-centered making. At MAD, the exhibition comes into sharp focus as a bold exploration of how contemporary craft can shape new emotional, narrative, and material possibilitiesan approach that resonates powerfully with MADs mission to explore the future of craft and its cultural impact.
Spanning more than fifteen years of collaborative practice, Uncanny Valley offers a richly immersive survey of the Haas Brothers genre-blurring work across art, design, craft, and technology. Founded in Los Angeles in 2010, the Haas Brothers studio is celebrated for its surreal hybrid creatures, imaginative environments, and exuberant material experimentation.
The Haas Brothers embody everything MAD stands for: fearless experimentation, material mastery, and an expansive vision of what craft can be today, said Tim Rodgers, Nanette L. Laitman Director, Museum of Arts and Design. Uncanny Valley invites our audiences into worlds that are at once playful and profound, where digital processes and handwork coexist, and where imagination becomes a powerful tool for rethinking how objects are made, experienced, and valued.
The Haas Brothers refuse the traditional hierarchies that separate art, design, craft, and technology, said Elissa Auther, the MADs Deputy Director of Curatorial Affairs and Wiliam and Mildred Lasdon Chief Curator. In Uncanny Valley, visitors encounter objects and environments that feel simultaneously ancient and futuristicdeeply human, yet strangely other. It is a body of work that speaks to the emotional and narrative power of making in the 21st century.
Through a series of dynamic vignettes, Uncanny Valley invites visitors into alternate realities shaped by what the artists describes as problem-solving fantasies, a process that combines meticulous handcraft, digital technologies, and playful narrative world-building. Essentially self-taught, the Haas Brothers defy conventional categorization, seamlessly blending mediums and methods with curiosity, humor, and technical rigor.
The exhibition includes major sculptural works and key series that trace the evolution of the artists practice. Highlights include the Haas Brothers iconic Beasts, zoomorphic sculptures brimming with personality and cultural commentary. Also on view are the Endless Paintings, algorithmically generated landscapes inspired by early computer graphics, and Emergent Sculptures, which explore self-generating forms through digital code.
Collaboration is central to the Haas Brothers practice and is a recurring theme throughout the exhibition. Their Freaks series, developed in partnership with MonkeyBiz, a collective of beadwork artisans in Cape Town, South Africa, and later expanded through collaborations with women in Lost Hills, California, exemplifies the artists commitment to equitable, community-driven creative processes. These works underscore the Haas Brothers belief in making as a collective and socially engaged endeavor.
Haas Brothers: Uncanny Valley is accompanied by a major 256-page monograph published by Phaidons Monacelli Press, featuring essays, interviews, and extensive archival material that provides deeper insight into the artists' imaginative universe. The catalogue, along with a selection of exclusive merchandise, will be available for purchase from The Store at MAD.
The Museum of Arts and Design presentation of Haas Brothers: Uncanny Valley is part of a national tour that includes the Blanton Museum of Art (Austin, TX) and The Mint Museum (Charlotte, NC), following its debut at Cranbrook Art Museum (Bloomfield Hills, MI) last fall.