Hayden Dunham
Hayden Dunham (born 1988) is an American interdisciplinary artist, musician, and performer based in New York and Los Angeles, renowned for their immersive installations and performances that blend organic and synthetic materials to explore themes of transformation, energy systems, and sensory perception.[1] Born in Austin, Texas, Dunham's practice spans sculpture, video, sound, and music, often creating "world-building" environments that challenge boundaries between the physical and immaterial, drawing on elements like water, light, and industrial byproducts to evoke alchemical processes and environmental co-evolution.[2] Their work has been exhibited internationally at prestigious institutions, including solo shows at Company Gallery and group presentations at MoMA PS1, the New Museum, and the Fondation Louis Vuitton.[3] Dunham's artistic career gained prominence in the mid-2010s through multimedia projects that integrate performance and installation with conceptual "systems." In 2015, they presented GEL at Andrea Rosen Gallery in New York, an installation featuring a chemical substance designed to alter perceptions of space and embodiment, marking their early exploration of augmentation devices like silicone, rubber, and minerals.[4] This was followed by BIO:DIP (2016) at Red Bull Arts New York, a site-specific exhibition of liquid-based sculptures that simulated energy exchanges and bodily immersion, emphasizing fluidity between human and environmental forms.[2][5] More recent solo exhibitions include Burns Blue (2019) and Transmutation (2022) at Company Gallery, where they introduced innovative materials like H+—a semi-liquid compound that shifts states over time—accompanied by soundscapes and vapor elements to create dynamic, living ecosystems, as well as Salt of a New Earth (2024) at Thula Gallery in Iceland.[6][7] These works often incorporate performative elements, such as the 2019 7 Sisters at MoMA PS1, which combined music, poetry, video, and scent to investigate darkness and sensory deprivation.[2] Parallel to their visual art, Dunham has developed a multifaceted music practice under aliases that extend their thematic concerns into sonic and performative realms. As QT, their 2014 debut single "Hey QT"—a hyperpop track promoting a fictional energy drink—critiqued consumer culture and ranked among the year's top songs on platforms like Pitchfork and Spin, blending electronic music with visual and sculptural components.[4] Transitioning to Hyd in 2020, they released the debut single "No Shadow" in 2021 and the self-titled EP Hyd later that year, followed by the 2022 album CLEARING, which features lush electropop landscapes tied to their installations, emphasizing healing and geothermal imagery.[8] Through these projects, Dunham facilitates transformative experiences that merge art, music, and materiality, positioning them as a key figure in contemporary multimedia practice.[9]Early life and education
Childhood and upbringing
Hayden Dunham was born on June 16, 1988, in Austin, Texas, and uses they/them pronouns.[10] They grew up in Austin, a city known for its dynamic cultural landscape.[4] Dunham has cited a lifelong fascination with geological surroundings as a key early influence, informing their multidisciplinary creativity through observations of natural processes and environmental interactions.[11] This foundation in environmental curiosity contributed to their later pursuits in formal education.Formal education
Hayden Dunham attended the Gallatin School of Individualized Study at New York University, where they pursued a Bachelor of Arts degree. The program's flexible structure enabled Dunham to craft a personalized curriculum drawing from diverse fields, including aesthetic theory, sustainable design, psychology, and environmental studies.[12][11] This interdisciplinary focus fostered Dunham's interest in the intersections of human perception, material environments, and sensory experiences, laying groundwork for their later explorations in performance and installation art.[12] During their studies, Dunham engaged in collaborative projects that highlighted emerging artistic practices, such as participation in the 2010-2011 Gallatin arts initiatives involving multimedia and performative elements.[13] In 2011, as part of the Gallatin Arts Festival, Dunham presented the installation "Until It’s All Gone," which used products associated with feminine power to create a natural space addressing power structures and needs for humans and animals.[14][12] These student-led endeavors previewed Dunham's multidisciplinary approach, blending design innovation with conceptual inquiry. Dunham graduated with their BA in 2011, transitioning soon after into professional artistic pursuits in New York.Artistic career
Performance and visual art
Hayden Dunham's performance and visual art practice centers on immersive installations and live pieces that explore material transmutation, sensory immersion, and the interplay between body, environment, and audience. Drawing from organic and synthetic materials, Dunham creates ecosystems that challenge perceptions of physical reality through fog, light, and mutable forms, often evoking themes of empowerment and ecological cycles.[3] Their work emphasizes fluid states—liquid, solid, vapor—and invites participants to engage tactilely or olfactorily, fostering a sense of embodiment and transformation.[4] A seminal performance, 7 Sisters (2019), presented at MoMA PS1, unfolded in seven acts that investigated the changing states and cultural symbolism of oil as a nexus of empowerment and activation.[15] The piece integrated sculptural environments with dance, poetry, and video projections, incorporating scents to heighten sensory involvement and drawing the audience into interactive spatial dynamics that blurred performer and observer boundaries.[16] This live work exemplified Dunham's approach to performance as a communal ritual, where bodily movement through installed landscapes activated themes of internal energy and material flux.[17] In visual installations, Dunham has pioneered fluid art pieces involving scent and touch, such as the Gel chemical developed for the 2015 "Everythings" exhibition at Andrea Rosen Gallery. Existing in liquid, solid, and gaseous forms, the gel was diffused through the gallery's air vents, creating an inhalable atmosphere that permeated the space and engaged visitors' olfactory senses directly.[4] Similarly, the Bio:Dip exhibition at Red Bull Studios New York in 2016 featured energy-system sculptures utilizing the building's HVAC system, including an ice form that melted into vapor and an aqueous substance transformed into an inhalable mist, emphasizing tactile and respiratory interactions with ephemeral materials.[18] Dunham's solo exhibition Burns Blue (2019) at Company Gallery furthered these explorations through glass-based installations that depicted material regeneration at sites of trauma. Suspended plates of fractured glass, tempered from a "fevered river" state, captured light and shadow in prismatic effects, evoking sensory experiences of instability and multiplicity while symbolizing chemical and corporeal shifts.[19] The works integrated viewer proximity to the cooling, shattered forms, prompting reflections on exchange between body and space.[20] The 2022 exhibition Transmutation at Company Gallery presented an immersive array of living sculptures as a "tool kit for a new world," centered on water's four phases—liquid, solid, vapor, and semi-liquid—drawn from a mineral-rich hot spring in Southern California.[21] Key elements included "water spray holiday" and "ICE WALL," mutable forms of a new material called H+ that shifted during the show, inviting tactile engagement and underscoring themes of forgiveness, agency, and surrender through environmental energy flows. Most recently, Salt of a New Earth (2024) at Þula Gallery in Iceland gathered sculptures reflecting the human figure as a vessel for meaning and spiritual-material connections.[7] The installation emphasized process-driven transmutation, where salt cycles embody renewal and interconnection, transporting viewers into a ritualistic embodiment of environmental transformation.[22] In 2025, Dunham continued their performative practice with live appearances, including a performance as Hyd at Jeffrey Deitch's exhibition in September and at JOAN's 10-year celebration benefit in October.[23][24] Through collaborations with galleries such as Company and Þula, Dunham has evolved their style toward increasingly interactive ecosystems that merge performance with visual media, occasionally overlapping with immersive environments in design contexts.[3]Design and multimedia projects
Hayden Dunham's design work in fashion and accessories emphasizes unconventional materials and wearable art that challenge traditional boundaries between sculpture and adornment. In 2011, Dunham launched the "New Dust" collection, a series of necklaces crafted from melted plastic, leather, human hair, metal, rope, and wool, drawing on personal symbolism tied to Southern roots and transformation. These pieces, described as braided human hair bling, were showcased at the Williamsburg Fashion Weekend Spring 2011 and quickly gained international attention, with distribution in stores across New York City, Paris, and London. The collection positioned Dunham as an emerging designer blending artisanal techniques with conceptual depth, influencing experimental accessory trends in the early 2010s New York fashion scene. Dunham's collaborations with fashion brands further integrate design with interdisciplinary art. Beginning in 2018, Dunham partnered with designer Rosetta Getty on multiple projects, including an immersive installation in Getty's Tribeca studio that explored tactile and elemental forms to inspire ready-to-wear collections. This partnership extended to Getty's Resort 2019 line, where Dunham's influence on transformative fabrics and structures informed fluid, body-conforming silhouettes. More recently, for Getty's Fall 2025 collection, Dunham created a moody, elemental installation as the runway backdrop, echoing natural symbolism and wearable utility while weaving artistic concepts into commercial fashion. These collaborations have bridged contemporary art and luxury design, contributing to dialogues in New York's interdisciplinary creative communities. In multimedia projects, Dunham has developed installations and video works that incorporate digital and sensory elements, often blending visual art with technology and everyday materials. The 2016 "BIO:DIP" exhibition at Red Bull Studios New York featured sprawling sculptures with liquids in various states—ice, water, condensation, and vapor—creating immersive environments that viewers could "inhale and drink," as described in contemporary profiles. These works, using silica coatings and kinetic elements, evoked ecological fluidity and material transformation, exhibited alongside vapor-based atmospheric activities. Dunham's video projects include a commissioned two-story video column for Forty Five Ten in New York, a mesmerizing piece tracking energy flows through synthetic and organic forms. Additionally, installations like "Transmutation" (2022) at Company Gallery presented living sculptures as a "tool kit for a new world," combining disparate objects such as silicone, oil, and rubber to produce hybrid realities that subtly reference performance through static, applied outputs. Through these, Dunham has impacted broader design scenes by pioneering sensory, tech-infused multimedia that reimagines everyday objects in international galleries and fashion contexts.Musical career
Early songwriting and collaborations
Hayden Dunham's early engagement with music was shaped by their upbringing in Austin, Texas, where they were immersed in a diverse array of sounds including country, religious, and pop genres. As a child, Dunham memorized lyrics from songs like Sixpence None the Richer's "Kiss Me," Enya's ethereal tracks, and The Cranberries' hits, treating them as poetic forms that evoked emotional landscapes. This formative listening process fostered a deep appreciation for pop's ability to convey complex feelings, such as crushes, which Dunham first recognized in middle school through ballads by artists like Mandy Moore.[25] After moving to New York to attend New York University's Gallatin School of Individualized Study around the late 2000s, Dunham began integrating sound into their visual art practice, experimenting with audio elements in large-scale sculptures involving liquids to enhance sensory movement. These informal experiments marked an initial bridge between their artistic background and music, emphasizing a collaborative and process-oriented approach to creation. Dunham's sensitivity to sound, often processed visually, influenced this phase, where audio served as a sculptural tool rather than a standalone pursuit.[26][25] Dunham's entry into songwriting emerged through key collaborations in the early 2010s, particularly with producer SOPHIE, whom they began dating around 2012. During a session at Dunham's family home in Texas in 2012 or 2013, they contributed lyrical ideas to SOPHIE's track "VYZEE," suggesting the phrase "Crazy in the pop" as an alternative to the original line, highlighting an intuitive, supportive role in the creative process. This behind-the-scenes work underscored Dunham's focus on pop's emotional and structural alchemy, honing skills in lyric crafting for other artists amid emerging electropop influences from contemporaries like SOPHIE. These experiences laid the groundwork for Dunham's later public-facing projects.[25]QT project (2014–2016)
The QT project emerged in 2014 as a collaborative endeavor between performance artist Hayden Dunham, PC Music founder A.G. Cook, and producer SOPHIE, who together conceived QT as a fictional cyborg pop star named Quinn Thomas to explore themes of consumerism and digital identity through performance art.[27] Dunham served as the visible avatar for QT, embodying the character's role as a virtual entity blending synthetic pop aesthetics with satirical branding.[27] The project drew on PC Music's experimental ethos, positioning QT as an "asexual android" simulating playful, hyperreal romance amid futuristic production.[28] The centerpiece was the single "Hey QT," released on August 26, 2014, via XL Recordings, featuring pitch-shifted vocals by Harriet Pittard and production that fused squishy, hot-pink synths with hiccuping beats inspired by trance, K-pop, electro, and chiptune elements.[28] Its bubbly, over-caffeinated sound—marked by fizzy hooks and repetitive, addictive refrains—evoked a rush of simulated vitality, drawing comparisons to mainstream tracks like Ariana Grande's "Break Free" while subverting pop conventions.[28] Accompanying visuals included a promotional photo of QT in a blonde, messy bob wig, emphasizing the character's stylized, otherworldly persona.[28] Marketing for "Hey QT" integrated music with conceptual branding, promoting QT as the CEO of DrinkQT, a semi-fictional energy elixir "where organic and synthetic meet to stimulate an uplifting club sensation," complete with care packages containing cans of the drink, signed photos, and custom stickers sold for $20.[29] The 2015 music video, directed by Bradley & Pablo, doubled as a Black Mirror-esque commercial, depicting QT in a laboratory mixing elixirs amid precise dance moves, stylized poses, and prominent product placement of silver DrinkQT cans, with the tagline "Tastes fizzy, looks bouncy, feels QT."[29][27] This fusion of audio, visuals, and merchandise critiqued celebrity endorsements while blurring lines between art, commerce, and pop culture.[29] Critically, "Hey QT" earned acclaim as a "Best New Track" from Pitchfork for its joyful, clarified EDM energy free of pastiche, and it garnered a cult following within the burgeoning hyperpop scene, amassing millions of streams and inspiring a Diplo remix.[28][27] The project, limited to this single output, concluded by 2016, leaving a lasting influence on PC Music's boundary-pushing legacy and hyperpop's ironic, maximalist style.[27]Hiatus and personal reflection (2017–2019)
Following the conclusion of the QT project, Hayden Dunham entered a period of musical hiatus, shifting focus toward visual art and personal introspection amid health challenges. In 2017, Dunham underwent eye surgery that resulted in temporary blindness, beginning with the loss of vision in one eye and progressing to complete darkness for several months. This experience prompted a profound reevaluation of creativity and embodiment, as Dunham adapted to a heightened reliance on auditory and tactile senses, describing it as a non-linear immersion in time and pain that reshaped their artistic process.[30][27] During this time, Dunham intensified their engagement with interdisciplinary art projects, exploring themes of transformation, environmental resonance, and synthetic-organic interactions. Notable works included the solo exhibition Inside Darkness There Are No Lines at Times Square Space in New York from November 2018 to February 2019, which featured sensory installations emphasizing dynamic material responses. In May 2019, Dunham presented Burns Blue at Company Gallery in New York, an exhibition of sculptures that examined systems of exchange and regeneration at sites of trauma, using materials like glass and tempered elements to evoke controlled burns and elemental flows. These projects marked a pivot toward deeper artistic exploration, influenced by Dunham's background in environmental studies and a desire to transcend object-based boundaries.[31][19] A pinnacle of this phase was the immersive performance 7 Sisters at MoMA PS1 in February 2019, organized into seven acts that integrated sculptural environments, spatialized sound, dance, poetry, video, and scents to probe the cultural and empowering dimensions of oil as a hyperobject. This work reflected emerging environmental themes in Dunham's practice, alongside personal milestones in identity and creativity, such as navigating queer support networks and the "tiny seed in deep soil" of emotional processing during isolation. Public musical output remained minimal, limited to occasional DJ appearances, allowing space for these reflective pivots that informed later endeavors.[15][16][32]Hyd project (2020–present)
In 2020, Hayden Dunham launched the Hyd project under A. G. Cook's PC Music label, marking their return to music as a solo artist following a period of personal recharge.[27] The moniker Hyd embodies themes of fluidity, renewal, and energetic transformation, drawing from Dunham's multidisciplinary background in performance and visual art.[33] Hyd's debut single, "No Shadow," was released in September 2021, produced by Cook and featuring ethereal electropop elements that evoke vulnerability and introspection.[34] This track set the stage for the self-titled EP, issued on November 5, 2021, which includes songs like "Skin 2 Skin" and explores motifs of intimate care and physical metamorphosis through lush, maximalist production involving collaborators such as Cook, Caroline Polachek, and umru.[35] The EP's sound blends hyperpop sensibilities with emotive synth layers, emphasizing emotional and material renewal.[36] Building on the EP, Hyd contributed "Skin 2 Skin" to PC Music's Volume 3 compilation in May 2022, further integrating their work into the label's ecosystem of experimental electronic music.[37] That November, Hyd released their debut full-length album, Clearing, a 10-track exploration of love's cycles—from emergence to dissolution—rendered in dynamic, texturally rich pop with seductive vocal performances and intricate electronic arrangements.[38] The album received praise for its lucid, elegantly disruptive sound, balancing catchiness with experimental depth.[39] Hyd's multimedia approach extends to visual elements, with music videos for tracks from Clearing filmed in stark natural landscapes to underscore themes of earth's energetic properties. These include footage from geothermal mud fields in Lanzarote's volcanic terrain and the arid expanses of Death Valley, creating immersive narratives of elemental transformation.[33][40] Live performances amplify this integration, such as the 2023 show at London's KOKO as part of PC Music's Volume 3 event series, where Hyd debuted material blending song, visuals, and performance art, and a set at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn featuring "Breaking Ground."[41][42] As of 2025, Hyd continues to evolve, with a forthcoming EP inspired by Lanzarote's heat-driven geology, focusing on energy and renewal, signaling ongoing experimentation in electropop's material and sonic boundaries.[40] Critics have acclaimed the project's lush electropop for its innovative probing of physical and emotional energetics, positioning Hyd as a key voice in contemporary art-pop.[35][33]Discography
Albums and EPs
Hayden Dunham's musical output under the QT project, launched in 2014 in collaboration with A.G. Cook and SOPHIE, consisted solely of the single "Hey QT," with no full-length albums or EPs released.[43] This bubblegum bass track, presented as part of a fictional energy drink campaign, gained cult status within hyperpop circles for its satirical take on commercial pop but did not expand into extended releases.[44] Under the Hyd moniker, Dunham debuted with a self-titled four-track EP on November 5, 2021, via PC Music.[45] Produced primarily by A.G. Cook, the EP features co-writing and production from Caroline Polachek on "Skin 2 Skin," with additional guitar from Waylon Rector on "The Look on Your Face."[46] Written during a period of personal reflection on Lanzarote—an island formed by volcanic activity 15 million years ago—the release explores intimate sonic landscapes blending electropop and ambient elements, emphasizing vulnerability and connection.[47] Its artwork, photographed by Torbjørn Rødland, captures ethereal, fluid visuals that evoke emotional fluidity.[8] The EP's tracklist is as follows:- "No Shadow" (3:18)
- "Skin 2 Skin" (2:47)
- "The Look on Your Face" (3:52)
- "The One" (3:11)
- "Trust" (2:52)
- "Fallen Angel" (4:25)
- "So Clear" (3:00)
- "Oil + Honey" (4:40)
- "Breaking Ground" (3:19)
- "Chlorophyll" (2:49)
- "Glass" (3:20)
- "The Real You" (3:53)
- "Bright Lights" (3:30)
- "Only Living Thing" (4:10)
- "Afar" (3:35)