Hubbry Logo
Jonathan MonaghanJonathan MonaghanMain
Open search
Jonathan Monaghan
Community hub
Jonathan Monaghan
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Jonathan Monaghan
Jonathan Monaghan
from Wikipedia

Jonathan Monaghan (born September 14, 1986 in Rockaway Beach, Queens, New York) is a contemporary visual artist who creates sculptures, prints, and video art with 3D modeling and animation software.[1][2]

Key Information

Biography

[edit]

Monaghan received his B.F.A. in computer graphics from the New York Institute of Technology in 2008.[3] Monaghan then went on to receive a M.F.A. from the University of Maryland.

Work

[edit]

Monaghan's animations have been exhibited at the Sundance Film Festival[4] and the Palais de Tokyo.[5] Monaghan's work sits in numerous public and private collections such as The DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities and The Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.

As he stated, "My first artistic interests were [...] video game designers and science fiction movies".[3] His work Sacrifice of the Mushroom Kings is an eight-minute video of cryptic reproductions of video games characters from Street Fighter, G.I. Joe and Super Mario Bros.[6] He created the French penguin (2009), an "absurd and sad representation of power as a slave of itself"; Rainbow Narcosis (2012), a "journey through absurd worlds, loaded with historical and artistic references"; and Robot Ninja (2013), where "the environments become abstract and the spirit more masculine, almost macho".[7]

According to Token Supremacy: The Art of Finance, the Finance of Art, and the Great Crypto Crash of 2022, by Zachary Small, Monaghan created what is arguably the first NFT in 2013, when he processed the editions of his digital artwork 'Mothership' through the first iteration of a bitcoin blockchain registration framework called Keidom, later ascribe.[8] In 2017, he released a series of digital futuristic Fabergé eggs.[9]

Monaghan is represented by bitforms gallery in New York.[10]

Exhibitions

[edit]

Solo

[edit]

Select screenings

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jonathan Monaghan is an American contemporary visual artist known for his sculptures, prints, and computer-animated videos created using 3D modeling and animation software, which blend historical art references with futuristic and mythological elements to explore anxieties surrounding technology, consumerism, and power. Born in 1986 in Rockaway Beach, New York, Monaghan earned his BFA from the New York Institute of Technology in 2008 and his MFA from the University of Maryland in 2011; he currently lives and works in Washington, D.C. His interdisciplinary practice draws on diverse sources including art history, science fiction, ancient mythology, and nostalgia for childhood video games, producing highly detailed, fantastical works that often feature symbols of finance, corporations, and authority reimagined in surreal forms. Monaghan's notable series include Soft Power, Zephyr, and earlier pieces such as Mothership and Starship Baroque, which have been exhibited internationally. He has held solo exhibitions at bitforms gallery in New York, including Den of Wolves (2021), Disco Beast (2017), and Escape Pod (2015), and his work has appeared in group presentations at venues such as the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, Palais de Tokyo in Paris, the Sundance Film Festival's New Frontier program, and Art Dubai Digital. Monaghan was an early pioneer in blockchain art, with Mothership becoming one of the first works minted on the beta version of Ascribe. His art has received coverage in publications including The Washington Post, Forbes, and The Art Newspaper.

Early life and education

Early life

Jonathan Monaghan was born on September 14, 1986, in Rockaway Beach, Queens, New York. He grew up in the area, in one of the large Robert Moses-era apartment projects, where the limited outdoor activities available in such an environment drew him toward video games and online or imaginative virtual worlds. Monaghan has described his first artistic interests as lying not with traditional painters, sculptors, or video artists, but with video game designers and science fiction movies. These early fascinations with video games from his youth, including titles such as Super Mario Bros. and Street Fighter, proved formative in shaping his artistic direction.

Education

Jonathan Monaghan earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in computer graphics from the New York Institute of Technology in 2008. He subsequently completed a Master of Fine Arts at the University of Maryland in 2011.

Career

Early career

Jonathan Monaghan's early career took shape following his BFA, marked by his selection for the Hamiltonian Fellowship with Hamiltonian Artists in Washington, D.C. in 2009. During this time, he began producing computer-animated video works that blended surreal and mythological elements with contemporary references. His 2009 work French Penguin fused Gothic architecture with an emperor penguin to create an absurd hybrid creature, depicting a cyclical, hellish narrative akin to one of Dante's circles. In 2011, Monaghan served as an artist in residence at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, New York. His early video works increasingly incorporated video game aesthetics and influences. By 2012, he completed Sacrifice of the Mushroom Kings, which placed popular video game characters within gilded-age American capitalist architecture, and Rainbow Narcosis, which followed a headless lamb through shifting photo-realistic and game-like otherworldly environments. In 2013, he created Robot Ninja, a confrontational video installation merging male-centric video game stereotypes with symbols of institutional power and sacrifice, and Mothership, a 15-minute looping animation satirizing systems of power, wealth, and technology through fantastical corporate-branded landscapes. Notably, a limited edition of Mothership was registered and authenticated through the Keidom SPOOL (Secure, Public, Online Ownership Ledger) in Fall 2013, making it one of the first artworks to use a blockchain as a decentralized ledger and a prototype for modern NFTs. Monaghan's recognition grew with his receipt of the Trawick Prize First Place in Bethesda, Maryland in 2015, alongside an artist residency at Lademoen Kunstnerverksteder in Trondheim, Norway that same year. His solo exhibition debut with bitforms gallery, Escape Pod, was presented at bitforms gallery in New York in 2015. This was followed in 2016 by Gotham at Galerie 22,48 m² in Paris, France.

Established career and major exhibitions

Jonathan Monaghan's established career solidified through long-term representation by bitforms gallery in New York and Galerie 22,48 m² in Paris, galleries focused on digital and new media art. His work gained institutional validation during this period through prominent solo exhibitions at both commercial and museum venues. In 2017, Monaghan presented Disco Beast, his second solo exhibition at bitforms gallery in New York (October 26–December 17, 2017), featuring new video, sculptural, and print works that critiqued surveillance technology, Beaux-Arts architecture, and consumer culture through hyper-realistic renderings of dystopian luxury environments. That same year, the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore hosted After Fabergé, a focused exhibition of five large-scale digital prints by Monaghan displayed concurrently with Fabergé and the Russian Crafts Tradition beginning November 12, 2017. His third solo with bitforms, Den of Wolves, opened in 2021 and presented a new body of work exploring the aesthetics of authority and digital power structures. Monaghan's time-based works received international exposure through screenings at leading festivals, including Sundance New Frontier in 2016 and Ars Electronica in 2017, as well as LOOP Barcelona. He participated in notable group exhibitions such as State of the Art at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art (touring from 2015) and a presentation at Palais de Tokyo in 2018. Works from this period expanded on themes of power, technology, and myth, as detailed in his broader artistic practice.

Recent work and public commissions

In recent years, Jonathan Monaghan has maintained an active exhibition schedule with solo presentations that extend his distinctive digital baroque style into new immersive and sculptural formats. In 2022, he created Move The Way You Want for The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., as part of the museum's Intersections series; the site-specific multi-channel video installation transformed the historic Phillips House dining room into a phantasmagoric environment blending surreal animal forms, architectural elements, and consumerist motifs. In 2024, Monaghan exhibited Power Trip at Addison/Ripley Fine Art in Washington, D.C. from April 13 to May 25, with a concurrent curated presentation at SLEEK Mag in Berlin organized by Anna Finke. Monaghan's recent creative output includes the ongoing Soft Power series (initiated in 2020), alongside discrete works such as Mythological Menagerie (2023), Unicorn in the Garden (2023), and Crown Juuls (2023), which deploy opulent digital renderings to probe intersections of authority, luxury branding, and mythological imagery. These projects continue his broader investigations into power and consumerism, manifesting across animation, prints, and sculpture. Looking forward, Monaghan has secured a prominent public commission for 2025, The Gilded Passage at Grand Central Madison in New York through MTA Arts & Design.

Artistic practice

Themes and influences

Jonathan Monaghan's work explores the intersections of power, wealth, technology, and consumerism, blending ancient mythology and historical ornamentation with science fiction, corporate symbols, and video game aesthetics to create fantastical yet unsettling visions. His practice uncovers subconscious anxieties tied to the digital age, including the dehumanizing effects of technological dependency, the alienating nature of mass surveillance, and the ecological consequences of unchecked consumerism. These themes manifest as contemporary myths that personify fears about an increasingly technological future, where hyper-capitalist systems succeeding fully represent a more profound dystopia than their failure. Monaghan draws influences from art history, particularly Baroque opulence and symbols like Fabergé eggs as emblems of wealth, desire, and power, which he reinterprets to critique modern materialism and decadence. He combines these historical references with science fiction motifs and corporate heraldry, creating seductive digital imagery that appropriates the sleek aesthetics of video games and advertisements while eliciting critical reflection on the technological landscape. Nostalgia from childhood video games informs his work, infusing it with a sense of journey through familiar virtual worlds that simultaneously comment on broader global conditions. In his own words, symbols of power, finance, and corporations converge in a fever dream mixed with ancient mythology and references to childhood video games, serving as vehicles for both nostalgic exploration and satirical commentary on contemporary systems. Recurring motifs of birthing, dying, and rebirth underscore the idea of technology as an autonomous life-form, highlighting anxieties about human nature in a mediated, consumer-driven era. Through these elements, Monaghan's art operates in complicity with commercial digital aesthetics to draw viewers in, only to confront them with the emptiness and dehumanization behind such surfaces.

Media and techniques

Jonathan Monaghan's practice centers on computer-animated video, digital prints, and sculpture, all derived from the same virtual spaces constructed using 3D modeling and animation software. The artist builds intricate digital environments by placing elements, determining lighting, reflections, and textures, employing rendering software to generate highly detailed, hyper-realistic imagery that mimics lavish and ornate surfaces. He appropriates commercial animation and digital fabrication tools—originally developed for film, entertainment, engineering, and industrial applications—to produce his work, creating everything from virtual objects to physical outputs within a unified digital workflow. Digital prints often result from these rendered images, while sculptures emerge through digital fabrication processes including 3D printing and computer-controlled robotic milling. Materials for sculptures include powder-coated steel, 3D-printed 18K gold-plated brass and porcelain, Carrara marble, and others, frequently combined with hand finishing to achieve hybrid forms that bridge virtual design and physical craft. Monaghan's early work focused primarily on computer-animated videos, many screened at animation and experimental film festivals, while his practice later evolved to integrate video with sculptures and prints in larger-scale installations for gallery and museum contexts. Video remains the central element of his practice, typically produced as seamless loops for projection in physical spaces, with sculptures and prints serving as extensions of the same digital processes.

Recognition

Awards and residencies

Jonathan Monaghan has received several awards, grants, fellowships, and residencies in recognition of his work as a contemporary artist. He was awarded the Hamiltonian Fellowship by Hamiltonian Artists in Washington, D.C., in 2009. In 2011, he served as an artist in residence at Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, New York. Monaghan received an Emergency Grant from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts in New York in 2013. The following year, he was granted the Artist Fellowship from the DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities in Washington, D.C. In 2015, he won First Place in the Trawick Prize in Bethesda, Maryland. Later honors include his residency at the Millay Colony for the Arts in New York in 2017. In 2019, he was an artist in residence at Palazzo Monti in Brescia, Italy, and received the VisArts Studio Fellowship in Rockville, Maryland. Monaghan was a finalist for the Janet and Walter Sondheim Artscape Prize in Baltimore, Maryland, in 2021. In 2022, he received the Expanded Media Award: Media in Space from the Stuttgarter Filmwinter Festival for Expanded Media in Stuttgart, Germany.

Collections

Jonathan Monaghan's works are held in several prominent public and institutional collections. His pieces form part of the permanent holdings of The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., where the museum acquired the digital video installation Move the Way You Want (2022), an eight-minute work featuring surrealist dreamscapes with opulent architectural elements and everyday mass-produced objects. Monaghan's art is also included in the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas, the Microsoft Art Collection in Redmond, Washington, and the DCCAH Art Bank Collection in Washington, D.C.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.