Showing posts with label Whitney Museum of American Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whitney Museum of American Art. Show all posts

16/09/25

Mary Heilmann: Long Line @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Mary Heilmann: Long Line
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Through January 19, 2026

Mary Heilmann Long Line
Mary Heilmann 
Long Line, 2020 
Acrylic on wood panel, 24 × 96 × 3.25 in. (60.96 × 243.84 × 8.26 cm) 
Collection of Megan & Mark Dowley
Courtesy of the Artist, 303 Gallery, New York, and Hauser & Wirth 
© Mary Heilmann.
Photograph by Thomas Barrat

Mary Heilmann Photography Whitney Terrace
Artist Mary Heilmann on the Terrace 
Installation view of Mary Heilmann: Sunset 
(Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 
May 1, 2015 – September 27, 2015) 
Photograph by Marco Anelli

Inspired by Mary Heilmann’s expansive practice and ethos of social connection, this new site-specific project celebrates the 10th anniversary of the opening of the Whitney Museum’s downtown building, for which Mary Heilmann (b. 1940, San Francisco, CA) created Sunset (2015) on the fifth-floor terrace. That project, which included a large-scale reproduction of a vibrant painting, a film, and Heilmann’s signature Monochrome Chairs, inaugurated the Museum’s largest outdoor gallery and transformed it into a site of reverie, memory, and leisure.

Mary Heilmann and curator Laura Phipps
Mary Heilmann and curator Laura Phipps
Photograph by Matthew Carasella
Installation view of Mary Heilmann: Long Line
(Whitney Museum of American Art, New York,
April 9, 2025-January 19, 2026)  
On floor: Monochrome Chairs, 2015; April Chairs, 2025

Installation view of Mary Heilmann: Long Line
Installation view of Mary Heilmann: Long Line
(Whitney Museum of American Art, New York,
April 9, 2025-January 19, 2026)  
On wall: Long Line, 2025 
On floor: Monochrome Chairs, 2015; April Chairs, 2025 
Photograph by Matthew Carasella

Mary Heilmann: Long Line further considers the relationship between the Museum's architecture and the city. Heilmann's immersive environment includes a hand-painted enlargement of her 2020 painting Long Line, as well as a variety of chairs related to furniture she has displayed in homes and exhibitions. Serving as elements in her larger composition, this furniture also encourages visitors to recharge and interact with one another and the environment outside the Museum.

Mary Heilmann: Long Line is organized by Laura Phipps, Associate Curator.


WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART, NEW YORK

22/08/25

Sixties Surreal @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Sixties Surreal
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
September 24, 2025 – January 19, 2026

Linda Lomahaftewa
Linda Lomahaftewa 
Untitled Woman's Faces, 1960s 
Oil on canvas, 36 × 48 in. (91.4 × 121.9 cm)
Heard Museum, Phoenix
Gift of the artist
© Linda Lomahaftewa

Robert Crumb
Robert Crumb 
Burned Out, 
Cover for The East Village Other 5, no. 10, 1970 
Ink on paper, 16 × 10 in. (40.6 × 25.4 cm) 
Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Los Angeles, CA. 
© Robert Crumb, 1970 
Courtesy the artist, Paul Morris, and David Zwirner

Shawn Walker
Shawn Walker
 
Man with Bubble, Central Park (near Bandshell), c. 1960-79, 
printed 1989. Gelatin silver print, 8 x 10 in. (20.3 x 25.4 cm) 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 
Purchase with funds from the Photography Committee 2020.62. 
© Shawn Walker

Oscar Howe
Oscar Howe 
Retreat, 1968 
Casein on paper: sheet, 26 1/8 × 20 1/4 in. (66.4 × 51.4 cm); 
image, 24 × 18 1/4 in. (60.96 × 46.3 cm)
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase with funds from the Director’s Discretionary Fund 2023.86. 
© Oscar Howe Family

The Whitney Museum of American Art presents Sixties Surreal, a sweeping, ambitious, revisionist look at American art from 1958 to 1972 through the lens of the “surreal,” both inherited and reinvented. The exhibition features the work of 111 artists who embraced the psychosexual, fantastical, and revolutionary energy of an era shaped by civil unrest, cultural upheaval, and boundless experimentation. 

Rather than adhering to familiar movements of the 1960s like Pop Art, Conceptualism, or Minimalism, Sixties Surreal uncovers alternate histories and recontextualizes some of the decade’s best-known figures alongside those only recently rediscovered. The exhibition considers how artists turned to Surrealism, not as a European import, but as a way to navigate the strange, turbulent realities of American life. Featuring iconic works by Diane Arbus, Yayoi Kusama, Romare Bearden, Judy Chicago, Nancy Grossman, Christina Ramberg, David Hammons, Louise Bourgeois, Jasper Johns, Fritz Scholder, Peter Saul, Marisol, Robert Crumb, Faith Ringgold, H.C. Westermann, Jack Whitten, and many others, the exhibition brings new visibility to a generation of artists who challenged mainstream narratives in pursuit of radical freedom.

Raymond Saunders
Raymond Saunders 
Untitled, 1968 
Oil on canvas with collage, 52 × 81 in. (132.1 × 205.7 cm) 
Courtesy the artist and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York 
© Raymond Saunders 
Photograph by Thomas Barratt

John Outterbridge
John Outterbridge 
No Time for Jivin', from the Containment Series, 1969 
Mixed media, 56 × 60 in. (142.2 × 152.4 cm) 
Collection of Mills College Art Museum, Northeastern University; 
Museum Purchase, Susan L. Mills Fund. 
© Courtesy the Estate of John Outterbridge 
and Tilton Gallery, New York 
Photograph by Paul Kuroda

Lynn Hershman Leeson
Lynn Hershman Leeson
Giggling Machine, Self Portrait as Blonde, 1968
Wax, wig, feathers, Plexiglass, wood, sensor, and sound, 
16 1/2 × 16 1/2 × 13 in. (41.9 × 41.9 × 33 cm) 
Promised gift to Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
© Lynn Hershman Leeson
Sixties Surreal has been nearly three decades in the making, dating to my time as a Whitney intern and subsequent college thesis. Through intense collaboration with curatorial colleagues Dan Nadel, Laura Phipps, and Elisabeth Sussman, the project has grown into a sweeping reexamination of a turbulent and transformative chapter in American life and art,” said Scott Rothkopf, the Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney. “Sixties Surreal reveals how artists across the country embraced and reinvented surreal tendencies to challenge conventions and mirror the strangeness of a time marked by radical political, social, and cultural change. By bringing their visionary contributions into fuller view, this exhibition helps to reshape how we understand the art and spirit of the 1960s, as well as our own roiling moment.” 

“Our years of conversations and research showed us a new map of the 1960s, one that sprawls out across the country and includes networks of artists and ideas that have too often been left out of institutional histories,” said curators Laura Phipps, Dan Nadel, and Elisabeth Sussman. “We hope that this view of the long sixties will offer a vibrant and capacious new version of the decade and leave visitors with ideas for how to build a new future.” 

Sixties Surreal is the perfect embodiment of the Whitney’s longtime commitment to reexamining art histories and celebrating understudied narratives in art of the United States,” added Kim Conaty, Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator of the Whitney. “We’re excited to highlight this ambitious historical retelling as part of a dynamic fall program featuring much-anticipated presentations of iconic Whitney collection works, such as Alexander Calder’s Circus, and bold emerging talents like Grace Rosario Perkins.” 
Carlos Villa
Carlos Villa 
Ritual, 1970 
Wig, chicken bones, canvas 
101 × 95 in. (256.5 × 241.3 cm) 
Collection of Kim and Lito Camacho 
© Carlos Villa Art Estate 
Courtesy the Asian Art Museum 
Photograph by Jay Jones


Jae Jarrell
Jae Jarrell 
Ebony Family, ca. 1968 
Velvet dress with velvet collage, 
38 1/2 x 38 x 1/2 in. (97.8 x 96.5 x 1.3 cm) 
Brooklyn Museum, Gift of R.M. Atwater, Anna Wolfrom Dove, 
Alice Fiebiger, Joseph Fiebiger, Belle Campbell Harriss, 
and Emma L. Hyde, by exchange, Designated Purchase Fund, 
Mary Smith Dorward Fund, Dick S. Ramsay Fund, 
and Carll H. de Silver Fund. 
© Jae Jarrell

Mel Casas
Mel Casas 
Humanscape #56 (San Antonio Circus), 1969 
Acrylic on canvas, 72 × 96 in. (182.9 × 243.8 cm) 
Mel Casas Family Trust 
© The Mel Casas Family Trust 
Photograph by Ansen Seale

Karl Wirsum
Karl Wirsum
 
Gargoyle Gargle Oil, c. 1969 
Acrylic painted on mirror, 
22 × 16 3/8 × 5 in. (55.9 × 41.6 × 12.7 cm) 
KAWS Collection 
© The Estate of Karl Wirsum

Spanning painting, sculpture, photography, film, and assemblage, twenty percent of the works on view in Sixties Surreal are drawn from the Whitney’s collection. The exhibition traces how artists working in cities like Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, and New York grappled with identity, sexuality, race, and power in ways often overlooked in canonical art histories. Influenced by, and taking permission from, the ethos of historical Surrealism—dream logic, eroticism, irrationality—these artists channeled that spirit into new and localized forms, producing work that is deeply personal and politically pointed.

From the experimental films of Jordan Belson to the biomorphic sculptures of Barbara Chase-Riboud and the visionary imagery of Jay DeFeo, the show unites diverse voices under a shared impulse to depict the world as it felt at the time, and still today—surreal.


Kiki Kogelnik
Kiki Kogelnik 
Gee Baby - I'm Sorry, 1965 
Acrylic and oil on canvas, 50 1/8 × 39 7/8 in. (127.4 × 101.4 cm) 
Kiki Kogelnik Foundation, New York 
© Kiki Kogelnik

Rupert Garcia
Rupert Garcia
Unfinished Man, 1968 
Acrylic on canvas, 48 × 48 in. (121.9 × 121.9 cm) 
Rena Bransten Gallery, San Francisco 
© 2024 Rupert García 
Photograph by John Janca

T.C. Cannon Art
T.C. Cannon
“Andrew Myrick - Let Em Eat Grass”, 1970 
Acrylic on canvas, 46 × 40 in. (116.8 × 101.6 cm) 
United States Department of the Interior, 
Indian Arts and Crafts Board, 
Southern Plains Indian Museum, Anadarko, OK 
© US Department of the Interior, Indian Arts and Crafts Board

Organized thematically rather than chronologically, Sixties Surreal invites visitors to move through immersive galleries that explore how artists across the US responded to a decade in which the world itself felt increasingly surreal. In an era marked by political unrest, radical liberation movements, shifting social norms, and an expanding media and technology landscape, the poet John Ashbery wrote, “We all ‘grew up Surreal’ without even being aware of it.” By the late 1960s, the Surrealist movement, which began in 1920s Paris and inspired artists such as Salvador Dalí and René Magritte to explore dreams and the unconscious, had influenced everything from film and dance to design and advertising. Surrealism was pervasive throughout American popular culture, yet it was often seen as tasteless or passé, particularly by a New York-centric art world. However, for many artists working in the 1960s, Surrealism—or the more general idea of the “surreal”—became a liberating force. It offered a way to make art amidst profound cultural changes.

Sixties Surreal opens with an installation of three life-sized, lifelike camel sculptures by artist Nancy Graves. Initially exhibited in Graves’s solo exhibition at the Whitney’s Breuer Building uptown in 1969, the three camels in this gallery are not true taxidermy but are patchworked together out of natural and synthetic materials. They serve as a reminder for visitors as they enter the exhibition that reality is strange and that even what is real may not be quite what it seems.

While Pop Art was a predominant artistic movement of the 1960s, artists like Martha Rosler, Jim Nutt, and Lee Lozano were dismantling the consumerist promises of the American Dream in their work by blending domestic imagery with violent, sexual, and psychological associations. The works on display here can be understood in terms of their destabilizing effect on the viewer. They question the reciprocal relationship between consumption and identity, a relationship that was increasingly fraught in the consumerist boom of the post-World War II era. In 1966, curator Gene Swenson organized The Other Tradition, an exhibition in Philadelphia that included many of the artists in this gallery alongside historic Surrealists like Salvador Dalí and Max Ernst. The works presented in The Other Tradition and in this gallery highlight how surreal sensibilities infiltrated Pop’s sheen with undercurrents of dread and critique.

Abstraction through a surreal lens is explored and becomes embodied through the work of artists who forged new forms to reckon with the tactile and emotional reality of inhabiting a body. Some works on view in this section of the exhibition are erotic, while others are anxious, but they all evoke physicality through unorthodox materials. Bridging East and West Coast practices, many of the featured artists were included in two 1967 exhibitions: Eccentric Abstraction in New York and Funk in Berkeley, California. Eccentric Abstraction, curated by Lucy Lippard, presented artists, including Bruce Nauman, Don Potts, Louise Bourgeois, and Eva Hesse, whose work was rigorously abstract yet retained a sensuous quality. The artists whose work was shown by the curator Peter Selz in Funk, among them Jeremy Anderson, Ken Price, and Franklin Williams, were more explicit in their references to guts, fingers, and anthropomorphic forms. The objects these West Coast artists produced may seem innocuous at first glance, but the subtle protrusions and openings of works such as Price’s S. L. Green (1963) or Williams’s Untitled (1966) evoke both the anxieties and the ecstasies of our physical being. Looking beyond these historic exhibitions, the works on view in this portion of Sixties Surreal bring together artists from across the country who worked with unorthodox materials to create objects of embodied abstraction.

Paul Thek
Paul Thek 
Untitled (from the series Television Analyzations), 1963 
Oil on canvas, 39 1/2 × 39 3/4 in. (100.3 × 101 cm) 
Collection of the BRD Family Foundation 
© Estate of Paul Thek

Many artists in the 1960s presented everyday American life as being off-kilter, uncanny, or unexpected—in other words, surreal. This was particularly true of photographers who increasingly found that if they looked at the world from a certain angle, the disorientation of modern life became evident. Images and videos capturing the strangeness of postwar American life became even more ubiquitous as television sets transmitted this novel visual language directly into American homes. Artists such as Lee Friedlander, Paul Thek, and Luis Jimenez were unnerved by television’s presence—the oddity of bringing this technology into a domestic space, an object that might confront you with images of Count Dracula one moment and the Vietnam War the next.

In a dedicated gallery, Edward Owens’s work, Private Imaginings and Narrative Facts (1966) is showcased. This lush, lyrical film offers a layered portrait of the artist’s mother and aunt that combines staged and documentary footage to create complementary visions of reality and fantasy. This work showcases Owens’s queer, avant-garde sensibility and reveals how personal memory can be reshaped through surreal cinematic techniques.

Fritz Scholder
Fritz Scholder
Indian and Rhinoceros, 1968 
Oil on canvas, 68 × 120 in. (172.7 × 304.8 cm) 
National Museum of the American Indian, New York 
Smithsonian Institution; purchase 26/8066

Violence and oppression confronted American households of the 1960s head-on as imagery of war, state violence, and systemic racism played on television for the first time. Artists such as Fritz Scholder, Nancy Spero, Peter Saul, and Ralph Arnold channel rage, grief, and resistance in works that echo this brutality and inequity. Drawing from mass media and protest, their works use surreal exaggeration, satire, and fragmentation as forms of social critique. Here, the surreal is not escapist, but rather a tool of dissent.

The Surrealist tradition of collage and utilizing found objects is reclaimed in the 1960s by artists like Noah Purifoy, Bruce Conner, Melvin Edwards, and Ed Bereal, who employed assemblage to engage directly with contemporary political conditions. Whether responding to the Watts Rebellion, racism, war, or nuclear anxiety, these artists reconfigure cultural debris into poetic and provocative forms. The gallery emphasizes how assemblage became a language of protest and renewal during a period of social rupture.

Barbara Hammer
Barbara Hammer 
Schizy, 1968 
Super 8mm film transferred to video, 
color, silent; 3:59 min 
Courtesy of the Estate of Barbara Hammer, New York 
and Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI), New York 
© Estate of Barbara Hammer

Luchita Hurtado
Luchita Hurtado
Untitled, 1971 
Oil on canvas, 50 × 34 7/8 in. (127 × 88.6 cm) 
© The Estate of Luchita Hurtado. 
Courtesy The Estate of Luchita Hurtado and Hauser & Wirth
Photograph by Jeff McLane

Before the women’s liberation movement entered wider public consciousness in the early 1970s, women artists were creating an early feminist aesthetic and imagining new fields of possibility for themselves and their work. For historic Surrealists, the radical juxtapositions made possible by collage were appealing for their apparent capacity to communicate unconscious thoughts and desires. For the Proto feminists of the 1960s, like Martha Edelheit, Barbara Hammer, Luchita Hurtado, and Shigeko Kubota, collage techniques offered a way to highlight the myriad social, political, and psychological expectations for women. Although the presence of sexual content meant their work was often sensationalized as “erotic art,” such artists held an expansive set of concerns, from gender and sexuality to objectification and artifice.

Wally Hedrick
Wally Hedrick 
HERMETIC IMAGE, 1961 
Oil on canvas, 84 × 60 in. (213.36 × 152.4 cm)
Collection of Mills College Art Museum, Northeastern University 
© Wally Hedrick
Photograph by MCAM

Eduardo Carrillo
Eduardo Carrillo 
Testament of the Holy Spirit, 1971
Oil on panel, 47 3/4 × 60 in. (121.3 × 152.4 cm) 
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
Purchase with funds from the Maude T. Pook Acquisition Fund 
© The Estate of Eduardo Carrillo

Sixties Surreal concludes with a turn toward the spiritual and mystical. Organized religion was one of the many institutions that came under question in the 1960s. For many artists, the search for alternatives led to the exploration of expansive forms of spirituality, influenced by cultural roots, ancestral knowledge, and the occult. Many practitioners of historic Surrealism promoted esotericism and the magical sciences as tools for unlocking the subconscious mind and critiquing the dominant institutions of the period, like family, church, and state. Artists followed that line of thinking to various critical ends. Some, such as Jordan Belson and Ching Ho Cheng, sought spiritual knowledge by using meditation, psychedelic drugs, and divination as tools for elevating consciousness. Others, including Claes Oldenburg and Eduardo Carrillo, looked outward, questioning the dominance of religious institutions and reappropriating conventional iconography for new ends. Still others, such as Oscar Howe and Carlos Villa, evoked ritual practice in their work to assert claims to cultural identity and counter the destabilizing effects of colonization and Christianity upon Indigenous systems of belief.

Sixties Surreal is organized by Dan Nadel, Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawings and Prints; Laura Phipps, Associate Curator; Scott Rothkopf, Alice Pratt Brown Director; and Elisabeth Sussman, Curator; with Kelly Long, Senior Curatorial Assistant, and Rowan Diaz-Toth, Curatorial Project Assistant, at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Sixties Surreal - Catalogue

Sixties Surreal is accompanied by a scholarly publication that complements the exhibition and aims to reevaluate American art of the 1960s by foregrounding the role of Surrealism during a period of social and political upheaval. By challenging what we think we know about art of the 1960s, this volume moves beyond the established movements of Pop art, Minimalism, and Conceptualism to shine a light on how American artists created a unique type of Surrealism, making works suffused with eroticism, dread, wonder, violence, and liberation. A series of essays reveals how this new Surrealism enabled artists to reconnect art to an increasingly untethered reality following the period of rapid postwar transformation and to imagine new worlds and models for art rooted in political and social change. Presenting a new framework to understand the work of artists such as Lee Bontecou, Franklin Williams, Nancy Grossman, Mel Casas, Yayoi Kusama, Jim Nutt, John Outterbridge, Ralph Arnold, H. C. Westermann, Romare Bearden, Louise Bourgeois, Christina Ramberg, and Robert Arneson, this study features an expansive chronology that highlights how a broad group of artists across the United States connected to each other through exhibitions, galleries, and collectives, offering a fresh perspective on how artists in the 1960s harnessed psychoanalysis, wordplay, and assemblage, among other strategies, to create new horizons for subject matter and form that continue to reverberate in American art today. Sixties Surreal is published by the Whitney Museum of American Art in association with Yale University Press.

THE WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART
99 Gansevoort Street, New York City

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04/04/25

Amy Sherald: American Sublime @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York - A Major Exhibition

Amy Sherald 
American Sublime
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
April 9 – August 10, 2025

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
Michelle LaVaughn Robinson Obama, 2018 
Oil on linen, 72 1/8 × 60 1/8 × 2 3/4 in. (183.1 × 152.7 × 7 cm) 
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
The National Portrait Gallery is grateful to the following lead
donors for their support of the Obama portraits:
Kate Capshaw and Steven Spielberg; 
Judith Kern and Kent Whealy; 
Tommie L. Pegues and Donald A. Capoccia. 
Courtesy of the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
Breonna Taylor, 2020 
Oil on linen, 54 × 43 × 2 1/2 in. 
The Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky, 
Museum, purchase made possible by a grant from the
Ford Foundation; and the Smithsonian National
Museum of African American History and Culture, 
purchase made possible by a gift from Kate Capshaw 
© Amy Sherald. Photograph by Joseph Hyde

The Whitney Museum of American Art presents Amy Sherald: American Sublime, the artist’s debut solo exhibition at a New York museum and the most comprehensive showing of her work. American Sublime considers Amy Sherald’s powerful impact on contemporary art and culture, bringing together almost fifty paintings spanning her career from 2007 to the present. This exhibition positions Amy Sherald within the art historical tradition of American realism and figuration. In her paintings, she privileges Black Americans as her subjects, depicting everyday people and foregrounding a population often unseen or underrepresented in art history. The exhibition features early works, never or rarely seen by the public, and new work created specifically for the exhibition, along with iconic portraits of First Lady Michelle Obama and Breonna Taylor—two of the most recognizable and significant paintings made by an American artist in recent years.

Amy Sherald places her work within the lineage of American realism and portraiture, alongside artists like Robert Henri, Edward Hopper, Alice Neel, and Andrew Wyeth—all represented in the Whitney Museum’s collection. The early American realists sought to capture the ethos of American places and people. However, there is an evident absence of Black Americans in theserepresentations. Deeply committed to expanding notions of American identity, Sherald’s compositions center her subjects, inviting viewers to meet them eye to eye and empathetically step into their imagined worlds. Employing props and iconography—a tractor, a beach ball, the American flag, a toy pony, or a teacup—the artist crafts universally relatable narratives, illuminating her subjects’ idiosyncrasies and their unique life experiences. By including symbols that resonate with common ideas of American identity and history, these portraits offer a more complete view of the complexity of twenty-first-century American life. The resulting body of work attests to the multiple facets of American identity, reinforcing Sherald’s profound belief that “images can change the world.”

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
If You Surrendered to the Air, You Could Ride It, 2019
Oil on linen, 130 × 108 × 2 1/2 in. (330.2 × 274.3 × 6.4 cm)
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 2020.148 
purchase with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee, 
Sascha S. Bauer, Jack Cayre, Nancy Carrington Crown, 
Nancy Poses, Laura Rapp, and Elizabeth Redleaf
© Amy Sherald. Photograph by Joseph Hyde

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
What's precious inside of him does not care to be known by 
the mind in ways that diminish its presence (All American), 2017 
Oil on canvas, 54 × 43 × 2 1/2 in. (137.16 × 109.22 × 6.35 cm) 
Private collection, courtesy Monique Meloche Gallery 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photograph by Joseph Hyde

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
Planes, Rockets, and the Spaces in Between, 2018 
Oil on canvas, 100 x 67 x 2 1/2 in. (254 x 170.1 x 6.35 cm) 
Baltimore Museum of Art, Purchase with exchange funds 
from the Pearlstone Family Fund and partial gift of 
The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc., 
BMA 2018.80. 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photograph by Joseph Hyde
“It is a great honor to work with Amy Sherald, one of the most compelling, generous, and impactful artists of our time,” said Rujeko Hockley, Arnhold Associate Curator at the Whitney Museum. “Her unwavering dedication and commitment to what she has called the ‘wonder of what it is to be a Black American’ is deeply felt, and I am thrilled to share her visionary work with our audiences.”

“American Sublime is a salve,” said artist Amy Sherald. “A call to remember our shared humanity and an insistence on being seen.”

“Few contemporary artists make images as gripping and indelible as Amy Sherald. Each of her paintings distills the essence of an individual while also conveying a broad sense of humanity,” said Scott Rothkopf, the Whitney’s Alice Pratt Brown Director. “Over the years that I’ve been in dialogue with Amy, we’ve visited works in the Whitney’s collection by Paul Cadmus, Barkley Henricks, and Edward Hopper, among so many American painters whose legacy she both inherits and extends. I can think of no better home for this important exhibition, which we’re honored to present.”
Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
They Call Me Redbone, 
but I'd Rather Be Strawberry Shortcake, 2009
Oil on canvas, 54 × 43 × 2 1/2 in. (137.16 × 109.22 × 6.35 cm) 
National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC, 
gift of Steven Scott, Baltimore, in honor of the artist and 
the 25th anniversary of National Museum of Women in the Arts 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. 
Photograph by Ryan Stevenson

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
The Rabbit in the Hat, 2009 
Oil on canvas, 54 × 43 × 2 1/2 in. (137.16 × 109.22 × 6.35 cm) 
Green Family Art Foundation,
courtesy Adam Green Art Advisory 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth 
Photograph by Christina Hussey

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
Hangman, 2007
Oil on canvas, 100 × 67 × 2 1/2 in. (254 × 170.18 × 6.35 cm) 
Collection of Sheryll Cashin and Marque Chambliss 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth 
Photograph by Kelvin Bulluck

Amy Sherald: American Sublime – Exhibition Overview

American Sublime explores the work of one of the most preeminent artists of our time. Arranged chronologically, the exhibition begins with Amy Sherald’s poetic early portraits and leads into the distinct and striking figure paintings for which she is best known. In her intentional privileging of Black Americans as her subjects, Amy Sherald tells stories of a population underrepresented in traditional portraiture. Influenced by her childhood fascination with family photographs—a black-and-white portrait of her grandmother in particular—Sherald aims to portray Black people in quiet, authentic moments. She chooses subjects who vary in age, gender, and identity, placing them in scenes from everyday life to share perspectives she wants to see depicted in the world.

Amy Sherald identifies as an American realist. She tells stories of the American experience through her paintings, much like artists Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth. It wasn’t until she saw a painting with a Black person in it at a museum as a child that she realized she hadn’t yet seen herself represented in art history—a pivotal moment that continues to impact her career. Sherald’s portraits contribute new narratives to the collective American story by recasting figures in archetypal American roles, like a cowboy, a beauty queen, or a farmer. While Amy Sherald acknowledges the political dimension of her work, she wants her impact to reach beyond that. Amy Sherald invites viewers to challenge established preconceptions about race and engage with the universal stories told in her portraits, revealing the richness and complexity of humanity. Her signature gray palette for skin tones deemphasizes the focus on race, expanding her subjects’ narratives and demonstrating that there is more to an individual than can be contained in a single image or facet of their identity.

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
Miss Everything (Unsuppressed Deliverance), 2014
Oil on canvas, 54 × 43 × 2 1/2 in. (137.16 × 109.22 × 6.35 cm) 
Private Collection 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth 
Photograph by Joseph Hyde

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
The Bathers, 2015 
Oil on canvas, 72 1/8 × 67 × 2 1/2 in. (183.2 × 170.2 cm) 
Private Collection 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photograph by Joseph Hyde

Amy Sherald - American Sublime
Amy Sherald 
A Midsummer Afternoon Dream, 2021 
Oil on canvas, 106 × 101 × 2 1/2 in. (269.24 × 256.54 × 6.35 cm)
Private Collection 
© Amy Sherald. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth
Photograph by Joseph Hyde

Photography is an important element of Sherald’s creative process, serving as her sketchbook and the foundation for her compositions. With the exception of her two commissioned portraits of First Lady Michelle Obama and Breonna Taylor, the artist selects each sitter based on their inherent qualities, such as poise, style, or wit—what she calls their “ineffable spark.” During photoshoots, Amy Sherald allows her models to pose organically, allowing for the synergy to build between them so that she can authentically capture their essence. She curates each scene and styles the subjects in clothing that speaks to the narrative she wishes to craft, creating a sense of magical realism. In titling her paintings, Amy Sherald often draws inspiration from Black women writers and poets like Toni Morrison and Lucille Clifton, reinterpreting their poetry to develop different contexts around the interior worlds of her subjects. Through her explorations, Amy Sherald redefines common beliefs about American identity, weaving a broader visual story of history and belonging. Ultimately, she portrays everyday Black people as individuals, not in contention or inherently politicized, but simply existing.

In addition to the paintings on view in the galleries, Amy Sherald presents work on the facade of the Horatio Street building across from the Museum. The newly commissioned work, Four Ways of Being, brings together four portraits by the artist—some never before seen in New York—and explores the intersection of past, present, and future with each capturing a distinct way of existing in the world. 

The Whitney presentation of this exhibition is organized by Rujeko Hockley, Arnhold Associate Curator, with David Lisbon, curatorial assistant. Amy Sherald: American Sublime is organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and curated by Sarah Roberts, the former Andrew W. Mellon Curator and Head of Painting and Sculpture at SFMOMA

Amy Sherald: American Sublime is accompanied by a publication—the artist’s first comprehensive monograph—representing the broad sweep of Sherald’s painting practice and her key influences and inspirations. Contributors include exhibition curator Sarah Roberts, Elizabeth Alexander, Dario Calmese, Rhea Combs, and Deborah Willis. Amy Sherald: American Sublime is published by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in association with Yale University Press.

THE WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART
99 Gansevoort Street, New York City

03/05/24

Harold Cohen: AARON @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Harold Cohen: AARON
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 
Through May 19, 2024

Harold Cohen
HAROLD COHEN
AARON KCAT, 2001 
Screenshot. Artificial intelligence software 
Dimensions variable 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase, with funds from the Digital Art Committee 2023.20
© Harold Cohen Trust

Harold Cohen
HAROLD COHEN
AARON KCAT, 2001 
Screenshot. Artificial intelligence software 
Dimensions variable 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase, with funds from the Digital Art Committee 2023.20
© Harold Cohen Trust

Harold Cohen
HAROLD COHEN
AARON KCAT, 2001 
Screenshot. Artificial intelligence software 
Dimensions variable 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase, with funds from the Digital Art Committee 2023.20
© Harold Cohen Trust

The Whitney Museum of American Art presents the exhibition Harold Cohen: AARON which examines the evolution of AARON, the first AI artmaking program, which was developed in the late 1960s by artist Harold Cohen. Beginning with AARON’s creation and early years, the exhibition explores the foundational stages of AI and its place in art history. In addition to featuring AARON’s drawings and paintings from the Whitney Museum’s collection, the show highlights the software as the central creative force behind the artworks and demonstrate AARON’s drawing process with pen plotters live in the galleries for the first time since the 1990s. The Whitney is the first and only museum to collect versions of the AARON software from different time periods. Providing an important historical perspective on current AI tools, AARON’s functionality is based on knowledge distilled into rules coded by the artist, which differs from today’s AI image creation tools like DALL-E, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion, which generate their output from existing images on the basis of a user’s text prompts.
“Harold Cohen’s AARON has iconic status in digital art history, but the recent rise of AI artmaking tools has made it even more relevant. Cohen’s software provides us with a different perspective on image making with AI,” says Christiane Paul, Curator of Digital Art at the Whitney. “What makes AARON so remarkable is that Cohen tried to encode the artistic process and sensibility itself, creating an AI with knowledge of the world that tries to represent it in ever-new freehand line drawings and paintings. Watching AARON’s creations drawn live as they were half a century ago will be a unique experience for viewers.”
Harold Cohen considered creativity a result of dialogue between the program and programmer and viewed AARON as his equal collaborator. The artist built his own pen plotters and painting machines to realize AARON’s outputs in various ways throughout its evolution. In AARON’s early years, Harold Cohen manually added color to black-and-white drawings that AARON made with a pen plotter, generating novel images on paper based on its interpretation of Cohen’s coded commands. Modernized re-creations of Harold Cohen’s early drawing machines, constructed specifically for this exhibition, will be installed in the galleries and draw images from different iterations of the AARON software. There will also be large-scale projections of two versions of the AARON program—one creating figurative outputs, the other generating images of flora.

Harold Cohen
HAROLD COHEN
AARON KCAT, 2001 
Screenshot. Artificial intelligence software 
Dimensions variable 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase, with funds from the Digital Art Committee 2023.20
© Harold Cohen Trust

Harold Cohen
HAROLD COHEN
AARON KCAT, 2001 
Screenshot. Artificial intelligence software 
Dimensions variable 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Purchase, with funds from the Digital Art Committee 2023.20
© Harold Cohen Trust

HAROLD COHEN (1928–2016) was a British artist whose innovations at the forefront of technology shaped the field of digital art. Harold Cohen’s artistic practice resulted in his famed creation AARON, the first artificial intelligence software designed to create art independently. After graduating from the Slade School of Fine Art, Harold Cohen had a successful career as a painter, representing the UK at the 1966 Venice Biennale and exhibiting at Documenta III, the Paris Biennale, and the Carnegie International. In 1968, Harold Cohen relocated to the United States as a visiting lecturer at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD), where he remained for almost three decades as a professor, chairman of the Visual Arts Department, and eventually, in 1992, director of the Center for Research in Computing and the Arts. During his time at UCSD, Harold Cohen developed AARON, an evolving artwork to which he would devote the rest of his life, exploring the possibilities of generative artificial intelligence for artmaking. Harold Cohen’s software attracted global attention and was exhibited at major institutions and venues, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Stedelijk Museum, and Documenta 6. After retiring from UCSD, Harold Cohen continued to work on AARON and produce new artworks in his studio in Encinitas, California. In 2014, Harold Cohen received the ACM SIGGRAPH Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement in Digital Art.

Harold Cohen: AARON is organized by Christiane Paul, Curator of Digital Art, with David Lisbon, Curatorial Assistant. The exhibition is organized in collaboration with the Estate of Harold Cohen, which is represented by Gazelli Art House. Modernized re-creations of the plotters were fabricated by Bantam Tools, courtesy Bre Pettis.

WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART, NEW YORK CITY

HAROLD COHEN: AARON - WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART 
FEBRUARY 3 - MAY 19, 2024

03/04/24

Kim Conaty, Chief Curator @ Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City

Kim Conat named Chief Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York

Kim Conaty
Kim Conaty 
Photograph by Bryan Derballa

The Whitney Museum of American Art has named Kim Conaty the Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator. In this new role, effective April 8, Kim Conaty will serve on the Museum’s senior leadership team and participate in shaping its mission and vision. She will oversee the Museum’s curatorial, publications, and conservation departments and assume responsibility for the Museum’s scholarly and artistic program while managing the development of the Museum’s permanent collection and exhibitions.

Kim Conaty has worked at the Whitney since 2017 as the Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawings and Prints and recently curated the landmark exhibition Edward Hopper’s New York (2022), one of the most popular and critically acclaimed exhibitions in the Museum’s history. Other Whitney exhibitions include Mary Corse: A Survey in Light (2018), Nothing Is So Humble: Prints from Everyday Objects (2020), and Ruth Asawa Through Line (2023), the first survey of Asawa’s drawing practice. Conaty’s latest exhibition Survival Piece #5: Portable Orchard featuring a major example of 1970s environmental art, opens June 29, 2024, at the Whitney.

In addition to developing leading exhibitions and best-selling catalogues, Conaty also co-directed the development of the Whitney’s Collection Strategic Plan (CSP), a multi-year research initiative to comprehensively assess the Museum’s collection of more than 26,000 works and set priorities for its future. In 2023, with the CSP in place, the Whitney acquired 286 works, including 57 new artists, with a focus on underrepresented areas. As Curator of Drawings and Prints, Conaty has stewarded the Whitney’s holdings of over 15,000 drawings and prints, led the programming of the Whitney’s Sondra Gilman Study Center for prints, drawings, and photographs, and steers the Museum’s Acquisition Committee on Drawings and Prints. She currently serves on the Board of Directors at the Print Council of America (PCA) and plays an active role on its DEAI Committee.

With this appointment following an international search, Kim Conaty joins the Museum’s senior leadership team, led by Alice Pratt Brown Director Scott Rothkopf. Other members include Deputy Director I.D. Aruede, Chief Operating Officer Amy Roth, and Chief Strategy Officer Andrew Cone.
“Kim brings to the role of Chief Curator an extraordinary range of talents. Her brilliance as an exhibition maker is matched by her deep scholarly expertise across the range of the Whitney’s program and collection from 1900 to the present,” said Scott Rothkopf, Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney. “Beyond the Whintey, Kim has contributed generously to the entire museum field as a colleague and mentor, while demonstrating great care for our staff, artists, and audiences. I am thrilled to partner with her—and the entire curatorial team—on the artistic vision for the Whitney’s future.”

“It’s a great honor to take on this leadership role at the Whitney, an institution that has long held a special place for me,” said Kim Conaty. “I’m excited to guide and empower our stellar curatorial team as we continue to shape the Whitney’s collection in meaningful ways and develop dynamic and rigorous exhibitions that tell stories, ask questions, and engage deeply with artists and audiences.”
Kim Conaty’s Whitney exhibitions have traveled nationally and internationally, including the 2019 presentation of Mary Corse: A Survey in Light at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and the first-ever exhibition of Edward Hopper’s work in Korea, Edward Hopper: From City to Coast (2023), organized in conjunction with Seoul Museum of Art. Ruth Asawa Through Line was co-organized with the Menil Collection, where the exhibition is currently on view. Earlier in her career, Conaty also served as Biennial Coordinator for the 2008 Whitney Biennial and as a curatorial intern and researcher at the Whitney.

Prior to the Whitney, Kim Conaty was Curator at the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, where she oversaw the museum’s renowned permanent collection of modern and contemporary art and led the curatorial program of special exhibitions, collection installations, and related programming. There, she organized several exhibitions, including Sharon Lockhart I Noa Eshkol (2016) and David Shrigley: Life Model II (2016); commissioned the major site-specific installation Tony Lewis: Plunder (2017); and served as coordinating curator for the first U.S. solo museum exhibition of Joe Bradley, Joe Bradley: A Survey (2017). While at the Rose, Conaty also curated an exhibition for Art + Practice, Los Angeles, Fred Eversley: Black, White, Gray (2016), a focused examination of the artist’s critically important monochromatic sculptures of the 1970s, which opened at A+P and traveled to the Rose.

Before joining the Rose, Kim Conaty served as the Sue and Eugene Mercy, Jr., Assistant Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at The Museum of Modern Art, New York. There, she curated Abstract Generation: Now in Print (2013) and served as curatorial assistant on the exhibition Print/Out (2012), both of which proposed a new range of approaches to contemporary print practice. At MoMA, she also collaborated on several exhibitions of postwar and contemporary art, such as Marcel Broodthaers: Retrospective (2016), Contemporary Art from the Collection (2010), Fluxus Preview (2009), and In & Out of Amsterdam: Travels in Conceptual Art, 1960–1976 (2009), among others. In addition to growing the collection with works by artists including Daniel Joseph Martinez, Janice Kerbel, and Pope.L, Conaty led a project team dedicated to MoMA’s Gilbert and Lila Silverman Fluxus Collection and was an active member of the cross­ departmental research initiative C-MAP (Contemporary and Modern Art Perspectives in a Global Context).

Kim Conaty has also held positions at the Clark Art Institute; the Grey Art Gallery, NYU; the Guggenheim Museum; and the Harvard Art Museums, where she organized an exhibition on Marcel Breuer's bent-plywood furniture from the 1930s (2002). A former instructor on modern and contemporary art for MoMA Courses and contributor to several publications, Conaty has authored texts for, among others, the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, LACMA, MoMA, and the Whitney, and has published and lectured on a variety of topics, including Joe Bradley, Wade Guyton, Nadia Kaabi-Linke, Stanley Whitney, and Avalanche magazine, the subject of her Ph.D. dissertation. A recipient of a Fulbright Fellowship to Germany in 2003 and a Clark Art Institute Summer Fellowship in 2014, Conaty earned her B.A. from Middlebury College, M.A. from Williams College, and Ph.D. from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts.

Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort Street, New York, NY 10014