Found 2 results for “technology”
## The Eastern Color Wheel Beijing Fashion Week AW2026 brings together more than 120 events across the Chinese capital, with new product launches up 75% year-on-year. The opening show featured 80 models in a visual spectacle the organizers call the "Eastern Color Wheel" — a statement about China's fashion identity that goes far beyond imitation of European houses. The defining tension this season: quiet luxury versus conceptual design. Chinese Gen Z and millennials are rejecting logo-heavy branding in favor of authenticity, sustainability, and cultural connection. The result is a generation of designers who are fusing traditional Chinese craft — embroidered heritage, Hanfu-inspired silhouettes — with frontier technology: 3D-printed latticework, AI-assisted tailoring, and sustainable fabrication. This is the split personality of Chinese fashion in 2026. On one side, whisper-quiet luxury rooted in refinement and restraint. On the other, conceptual design that treats the runway as installation art. Beijing Fashion Week is where those two impulses collide, and the collections emerging from it are unlike anything coming out of Paris, Milan, or New York. ## Why It Matters China isn't just the world's largest luxury consumer market — it's becoming a design originator. The shift from consumption to creation mirrors the broader creator-class transfer: Chinese designers are no longer interpreting Western aesthetics. They're building their own design language, exporting it, and finding an audience that values cultural specificity over global homogeneity. Beijing Fashion Week is smaller and less hyped than its counterparts in Paris or Milan. That's the point. The work here is rougher, more experimental, and less concerned with commercial viability. If you want to see where fashion goes next, watch the edges, not the center.
## 60,000 Square Feet of New Art The New Museum’s long-awaited 60,000-square-foot building expansion opens on March 21, 2026. The inaugural exhibition — *New Humans: Memories of the Future* — spans the entire museum alongside several major new commissions. This is the most significant museum expansion in New York since the Whitney’s move to the Meatpacking District. The New Museum has always been the institution that shows what’s next before anyone else validates it. The expansion doubles their exhibition space and signals a bet that contemporary art needs more room, not less, in an era when every other cultural institution is cutting back. ## Why It Matters The title tells the story: *New Humans*. In a week where AI agents are replacing jobs, energy infrastructure is on fire, and central banks are debating whether to raise rates into a war economy, an exhibition about what it means to be human in the future isn’t academic. It’s the cultural conversation that every piece of technology and every market call we publish ultimately points toward. The New Museum doesn’t curate for collectors. It curates for the curious. That’s why it’s worth the trip.