Berenice Olmedo
Mexico City-based artist Berenice Olmedo creates sculptures and kinetic installations that often integrate prostheses and orthoses. Her works—fusions of medical plastics, armatures, and surgical implants—challenge notions of human wholeness and draw attention to the political dimensions of disability, illness, and care. In her practice, Olmedo considers standardized or hegemonic expectations of the human body and explores the extent to which external aids are essential to contemporary life. By reusing forms and materials from the medical field, she challenges dominant fixations on efficiency and optimization in favor of a more mutualistic, politically inextricable view of embodiment.
Berenice Olmedo (b. 1987 Oaxaca, Mexico) lives and works in Mexico City. Selected solo exhibitions include Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, Kunsthalle Basel, Basel; Simian, Copenhagen; and Jan Kaps, Cologne. Her work has been shown in institutional group exhibitions including Museo de la Ciudad de México; Museo Jumex, Mexico City; 36th Bienal de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil; 14th Mercosul Biennial, Porto Alegre, Brazil; Musée d’Art Contemporain de Bordeaux, Bordeaux; ICA Boston, Boston; Boros Collection, Berlin; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Monterrey; the Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt; Museo Tamayo, Mexico City, amongst others. She will be included in New Humans: Memories of the future at the New Museum in New York in March 2026.
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Berenice Olmedo’s Transhuman Futures
Oliver Basciano, ArtReview, February 6, 2026 -
Berenice Olmedo
Interview by Antoine Clauss and Louis Dufreche, Arcane, May 1, 2024 -
Berenice Olmedo considers how technology mediates life
Camila Palomino, Art21, September 1, 2023 -
Berenice Olmedo: The Myth of Autonomy
Jane Ursula Harris, Flash Art, June 20, 2022 -
Berenice Olmedo
Fabian Schöneich, CURA. 38, June 1, 2022 -
About the Distinction between Crutches and Chains: Berenice Olmedo
Anna Goetz, Mousse Magazine, September 1, 2020 -
Berenice Olmedo’s Sculptures Use Debris and Dog Caracasses to Honor Those on Society’s Margins
Emily Watlington, Art in America, May 21, 2020
