
Cassandra Zampini is a New York–based artist whose work explores how digital life shapes human experience and identity.
My work is an urgent response to what it feels like to live digitally—the endless bombardment of addictive information and all the ways digital life shapes us. By returning images, videos, and memes to physical space through screenprinting and aggregation, I seek to reclaim the depth and mystery of the human experience from the flattening forces of the screen and its power and control in digital life. By uncovering what subtly guides us—and why—I hope to rediscover connection and meaning, and to mark where digital life ends and real life begins
BIO
Cassandra Zampini is a New York–based artist whose work explores how digital life shapes human experience and identity. Following in the tradition of artists who have interrogated and recontextualized mass media, she turns her lens toward internet culture, where algorithms, memes, and viral images shape what we see, feel, and believe.
Through screenprinting, image aggregation from internet content, Zampini creates spaces for connection and contemplation, where wonder, meaning, and the beauty of real human experience can resurface.
Her work has been exhibited nationally at institutions including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona; the Arnot Art Museum; the Griffin Museum of Photography; and, most recently, the National Liberty Museum in Philadelphia. Her work has been featured in The Atlantic, The Art Newspaper, and The Collector Daily, and will appear in the upcoming 20th edition of Friend of the Artist. Her work has been included in the traveling exhibition A Yellow Rose Project since 2020, with a book forthcoming in Summer 2025. Her pieces are held in private, public, and corporate permanent collections, including Armoni Investments in Boston and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.