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Intro

CAMUZ, Contemporary Art Museum of Uzbekistan, invites you to experience: Hello Uzbekistan: Techspressionism 2025, a groundbreaking exhibition featuring the work of innovative digital media artists.  Working in a variety of artistic styles, these artists all share a passion for exploring how new media can transform their work into new expressive imagery.

The exhibit opens to the public on September 25, 2025. An opening reception will be held on Thursday, September 25, at 15:00 (3:00 pm)

Watch the Exhibition Trailer


Shirin Tashova, the Director of CAMUZ, describes the exhibition “Hello Uzbekistan: Techspressionism 2025" as a unique cultural event that brings our world closer together. This group of artists is engaged in explorations of a new contemporary movement that combines Technology with Expressionism. She describes the work they are presenting as ". . . vivid, provocative, and fascinating. It moves us to contemplate and to delight."

Featured Exhibiting Artists:

Lee Day, Roz Dimon, Gregory Patrick Garvey, Gregory Little, Negin Ehtesabian / Patrick Lichty, Stephen Paré, Cynthia Beth Rubin, Annette Weintraub, and Michael Woodruff. While this core group is composed of 8 American artists and 1 British artist, a digital screen expands the exhibition with the work of 28 additional artists, including artists from the USA, Canada, Iran, and India. 

The exhibiting artists are part of a larger Techspressionist community. This is a global, and growing, group of artists connected through online salons, interviews, and co-working sessions. Artists from around the world are united, not by a single aesthetic but by a shared interest in using technology as a means of creative self-expression. From traditional art backgrounds to self-taught digital practitioners, the community embraces a wide range of voices and techniques.

Techspressionism is an art movement that merges technology with expressionism. It emphasizes the use of digital tools and techniques to create emotionally charged, subjective, and often abstract artworks. The term combines “technology” and “expressionism,” reflecting the movement’s focus on leveraging modern tech to convey deep emotional experiences and personal perspectives.  The movement is guided by a core group of artists who meet online in monthly Salons to share their work and discuss ideas related to art and technology. It is also a widely used hashtag on social media, used on over 80k Instagram posts by artists worldwide since the formulation of the artist group in 2021.


 

The exhibition catalogue is viewable here, in English and Uzbek