Showing posts with label performances. Show all posts
Showing posts with label performances. Show all posts

17/01/25

Movements Toward Freedom @ MCA Denver

Movements Toward Freedom 
Museum of Contemporary Art Denver 
September 20, 2024 - February 2, 2025

Kambui Olujimi 
Props, 2023 
Watercolour, ink, graphite on paper 
Courtesy of the artist and Audrey Yvette Washington

The Museum of Contemporary Art Denver (MCA Denver) presents Movements Toward Freedom. The exhibition explores the power, possibility and vulnerability of bodily movement in contemporary life.

Linking physical and social definitions of movement, Movements Toward Freedom examines how the articulation of our bodies, collectively and singularly, informs and shapes a vital society. Showcasing recent work and new commissions that span genres of performance, sculpture, video, painting and installation, the exhibition considers the ways that physical movement plays an integral role in exercising personal and collective agency as a means for community-building, civic change and liberation, as well as serving as an antidote to strife and a vehicle for healing and care. 
Exhibiting artists: Sadie Barnette, Ben Coleman, Elena Dahn, Karon Davis, Brendan Fernandes, Geovanna Gonzalez, EJ Hill, Karlo Andrei Ibarra, tara jae, Steffani Jemison, Liz Magic Laser, Carolyn Lazard, Francisco Masó, Senga Nengudi, Kambui Olujimi, Ronny Quevedo, Eric-Paul Riege, Davina Semo, Laura Shill, Naama Tsabar and Cosmo Whyte.

Karon Davis 
Overture, 2023 
Plaster, steel, glass eyes, tulle, crown, and ice pack
Courtesy the artist and Salon 94
© Karon Davis

Karon Davis 
Overture, 2023 
Plaster, steel, glass eyes, tulle, crown, and ice pack
Courtesy the artist and Salon 94
© Karon Davis
Karon Davis (b. 1977, Reno, Nevada) creates sculptures and multimedia installations that touch on issues of history, race, and violence in the United States, using materials as varied as plaster strips, chicken wire, glass, and readymade objects. Drawing on her background in theater and film, Davis creates haunting tableaux inhabited by protagonists both historical and imagined. The figures are created using the artist’s unique plaster method, amalgamations of life-size casts taken from friends and family as well as her own body. The material reflects her longtime interest in ancient Egyptian mummification practices, using wrapping to memorialize different bodies and their complex histories. 

 

Cosmo Whyte, Portrait
Photography: Barret Lybbert

Cosmo Whyte
 
Wading in the Wake, 2020 
Beaded curtains, paint. 
Courtesy of the artist and Anat Ebgi, Los Angeles / New York 
Photography: Barret Lybbert 

Cosmo Whyte
 
Wading in the Wake (detail), 2020 
Beaded curtains, paint. 
Courtesy of the artist and Anat Ebgi, Los Angeles / New York 
Photography: Barret Lybbert 
Cosmo Whyte (b. 1982, St. Andrew, Jamaica) employs drawing, sculpture, and photography to explore the intersections of race, nationalism, and displacement. His large scale drawings pose the celebratory body of Jamaican and diasporic communities in states of jubilation. His figures, adorned with gold leaf and black glitter, defy their colonial past, tearing it from their bodies through unbridled dance.
Movements Toward Freedom considers questions about how we move - and move together - in the year 2024,” said exhibition curator Leilani Lynch. “Emerging from the disconnectedness of the pandemic era, the exhibition aims to ground viewers in their physical bodies, creating a dynamic space activated by performances and programs, while also inviting active participation from museum visitors.”
Time-based programming is core to the framework of Movements. The selected artists engender expanded notions of performance and movement into the artworks on view in the exhibition, over half of which will be activated during monthly programming of live activations, performances, and participatory events. This exhibition hosts the most accompanying programs of any project MCA Denver has organized to-date.

Sadie Barnette 
Mirror Bar, 2022 
Neon, vinyl on mirror plexiglas in arched frame, 
holographic vinyl upholstery, and glitter Plexiglas
Collection Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 
T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2024
Photo courtesy the artist and Jessica Silverman, San Francisco
Photo: Phillip Maisel

Sadie Barnette 
Mirror Bar, 2022 
Neon, vinyl on mirror plexiglas in arched frame, 
holographic vinyl upholstery, and glitter Plexiglas
Collection Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 
T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2024
Photo courtesy the artist and Jessica Silverman, San Francisco
Photo: Phillip Maisel

Sadie Barnette 
Mirror Bar, 2022 
Neon, vinyl on mirror plexiglas in arched frame, 
holographic vinyl upholstery, and glitter Plexiglas
Collection Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 
T. B. Walker Acquisition Fund, 2024
Photo courtesy the artist and Jessica Silverman, San Francisco
Photo: Phillip Maisel

Sadie Barnette 
Eagle Creek I, 2021 
Archival pigment print photograph 
with overlaid rhinestones 
Courtesy the artist and Jessica Silverman, San Francisco 
Photo: John Wilson White

Sadie Barnette
 
Eagle Creek I, 2021 
Archival pigment print photograph 
with overlaid rhinestones 
Courtesy the artist and Jessica Silverman, San Francisco 
Photo: John Wilson White


EJ Hill 
Heartline, 2022 
Wood, acrylic, and neon. 51 x 26 x 138 inches
Courtesy the artist and François Ghebaly 

EJ Hill 
joy studies (never ever giving up), 2022 
Acrylic and crayon on wood panel. 40 x 30 inches 
Courtesy the artist and François Ghebaly

EJ Hill 
joy studies (triple rainbow), 2022 
Acrylic and crayon on wood panel. 40 x 30 inches
Collection of Daniel Sager and Brian McCarthy 

EJ Hill 
joy studies (lift), 2022 
Acrylic and crayon on wood panel. 40 x 30 inches 
Courtesy the artist and François Ghebaly
EJ Hill is an artist born, raised, and based in South Central, Los Angeles. François Ghebaly said: "Widely recognized for his durational performance-based practice, Hill is equally accomplished in installation and object-based work. Grounded in lived experience, Hill’s recent paintings and sculptural installations center possibilities of healing, considering joy as a critical component of social equity".
Many artists in the exhibition – including Sadie Barnette, EJ Hill, Kambui Olujimi and tara jae – look to historical examples of radical spaces of gathering and togetherness in order to find inspiration and perspective, while other works by GeoVanna Gonzalez and Naama Tsabar act as platforms and structures that foster self-empowerment and creative expression. 

The strength, vulnerability and resilience of the body are explored in many artworks in the exhibition, including examples by Karlo Andrei Ibarra, Liz Magic Laser, Ronny Quevedo, and Laura Shill. These artists borrow tropes, aesthetics and techniques from the athletic and fitness industries to investigate and critique contemporary wellness culture while asking us to think about what “fitness” means, especially when confronted with threats to social and political health. 

Elena Dahn
Cámara, 2016 
Still from filmed performance 
Courtesy the artist

Elena Dahn 
Brutas, 2021
Performance, at Arte BA Fair
Courtesy the artist. 

Elena Dahn
,
Pendiente, 2024
Performance at PROA21, 2022 
Courtesy the artist

Elena Dahn 
Pendiente, 2024 
Performance at PROA21, 2022
Courtesy the artist

Elena Dahn
Courtesy of the artist

Elena Dahn was born in Buenos Aires in 1980, where she currently lives and works. She graduated with a degree in Communication studies. She continued to study visual arts at the University of Buenos Aires, as well as in workshops and discussion spaces of prominent artists from Buenos Aires. Between 2009 and 2010 she completed the Universidad Di Tella Program for artists, under the mentorship of Jorge Macchi. In 2010 she won first prize in the Curriculm 0 Competition at the Ruth Benzacar Gallery. In 2011 she obtained a scholarship from the MNSEN Foundation and completed a postgraduate program at the sculpture department of the Royal College of Arts, London. She exhibited her work at art galleries, museums and art spaces in Buenos Aires, New York, Brazil and London.

Other artists like Senga Nengudi and Elena Dahn, foreground the experience of motherhood and birth through their works, highlighting the inherent elasticity and memory of skin. 

Movements Toward Freedom features newly commissioned installation and performance works by Brendan Fernandes and Steffani Jemison. 

Brendan Fernandes 
Ballet Kink, 2019 
Live performance, lighting, staging and DJ set 
Courtesy the artist

Commissioned by the Guggenheim Museum, "Ballet Kink" combines the vocabulary of Ballet and S&M bondage. Dancers collaborate with rope masters to challenge their endurance and expand their repertoire. The work explores metaphors for: how do we find new freedoms within social and political restraints?

Brendan Fernandes 
Contract and Release, 2019 
Live performance and choreography for (3) dancers, scaffolding, 
costuming, edition of (6) custom rocking chairs 
Courtesy the artist

Commissioned by The Isamu Noguchi Museum, "Contract and Release" responds to the collaborations between sculptor, Isamu Noguchi and choreographer, Martha Graham. New sculptures by Brendan Fernandes and objects from the Noguchi collection are activated by performers and a Graham-referencing choreography.

Brendan Fernandes 
The Master and Form II, 2019 
Performance/Installation 
Image courtesy of the Whitney Museum of American Art 
Exhibition design in collaboration with  Norman Kelley

The second iteration of the Master and Form was staged for the 2019 Whitney Biennial. Master and Form explores the dynamics of mastery and discipline as embodied by ballet. The sculptural installation—comprising five structures that he calls “devices,” ten hanging ropes, and a central cage—is animated at times by a group of dancers. Both assisting and encumbering the performers, the minimalist objects enable poses that test their endurance in overt displays of physical tension and self-control.

Brendan Fernandes 
Free Fall, for Camera, 2020 
Digital. Duration: 13:47 minutes 
Courtesy the artist

Free Fall is a large-scale, multimedia dance and video installation. Initiated by a Canada Council for the Arts, Special Projects, Canada 150 Grant, Free Fall explores the falling body as a metaphor for queer politics. The first phase of the project was Free Fall, for Camera, a film. Featuring a team of (16) dancers; a unique choreography in collaboration with Toronto’s Hit & Run Dance Productions; and an original soundtrack by Experimental Sound.

Brendan Fernandes
 
72 Seasons, 2021
Performance
Courtesy the artist

72 Seasons engages with ballet history to envision the same passages of time demarcated by seasons for the twenty-first-century. Initiating the project in the Lurie Garden within the City of Chicago’s Millennium Park, the movement-based piece brings together a group of dancers in acts of utilitarian choreography. Departing from a Western vision of phases, where the division of all perceptible change in our environment is collapsed into four categorical types, Brendan Fernandes encourages a deeper observation of humans’ relationship to the natural world.

Brendan Fernandes
Photograph by Kevin Penczak

Brendan Fernandes’ project manifests as a hybrid of sculpture, sound, a space for performances choreographed by Fernandes, and a platform for Denver’s dance community. The installation resembles the construction of a dance studio, incorporating the museum’s ergonomic “sprung” floor, in addition to familiar elements like barres and mirrors regularly used by dancers during class and rehearsal in preparation for performances. These practical forms are reimagined by Brendan Fernandes to invite professionals, enthusiasts, and interested visitors to move within the space. Etched mirrors adorning the walls and vinyl patterns on the floor provide scores that performers and visitors alike can follow. Additionally, the space is available for local dancers and companies to use for rehearsal. By offering the installation as accessible and open, Brendan Fernandes aims to address the scarcity of studio and performance space regularly experienced throughout the dance community.

Steffani Jemison 
Bound, 2024 
HD video, color, sound. Duration 20:22 min. 
Courtesy the artist and Greene Naftali, New York

Steffani Jemison 
Bound, 2024 
HD video, color, sound. Duration 20:22 min. 
Courtesy the artist and Greene Naftali, New York

Steffani Jemison 
Bound, 2024 
HD video, color, sound. Duration 20:22 min. 
Courtesy the artist and Greene Naftali, New York
Steffani Jemison’s commission builds from her intensive research into the politics of flight as they relate to Black liberation efforts. Her installation combines drawing, a recycled cyclorama (theater backdrop) to produce the effect of distance, and her video "Bound" (2024) to allude to the revolutionary and liberatory potential of physical movement. Steffani Jemison also stages a performance in the form of a play, titled "Flight Theater", at the museum’s satellite space, The Holiday, as an interdisciplinary meditation on untethering ourselves from earth; floating,drifting, and soaring; and the unexpected limitations of an omniscient point of view.

MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART DENVER
1485 Delgany St., Denver, CO 80202

22/03/24

Whitney Biennial 2024 - Exhibition Overview, artists and Select Works - Even Better Than the Real Thing

Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 
March 20 – August 11, 2024

Harmony Hammond
Harmony Hammond 
Black Cross II, 2020–21 
Oil and mixed media on canvas 
90 3/8 × 72 1/4 × 2 3/4 in. (229.6 × 183.5 × 7 cm) 
© Harmony Hammond. 
Courtesy the artist and Alexander Gray Associates, New York 
Photograph by Eric Swanson

Mary Lovelace O'Neal
Mary Lovelace O'Neal 
Self Portrait–She Now Calls Herself Sahara 
(from the series Two Deserts,Three Winters), c. 1990s 
Acrylic paint on canvas, 81 × 138 in. (205.7 × 350.5 cm).
Collection of the artist
Courtesy Jenkins Johnson Gallery, New York and San Francisco
© Mary Lovelace O'Neal

Eamon Ore-Giron
Eamon Ore-Giron 
Talking Shit with Viracocha's Rainbow (Iteration I), 2023 
Mineral paint and Flashe on canvas, 
72 x 72 in. (182.9 x 182.9 cm). 
Collection of Dr. and Mrs. Jeremy Finkelstein, Houston, TX 
© Eamon Ore-Giron, 2024. 
Courtesy the artist and James Cohan, New York 
Photo Charles White / JWPictures.com

Edward Owens
Edward Owens 
Still from Remembrance: A Portrait Study, 1967 
16mm film transferred to video, color, sound; 5:36 min 
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 
Purchase, with funds from the Film and Video Committee 2021.86 
© The New American Cinema Group, Inc./The Film-Makers' Cooperative

Sydney Frances Pascal
Sydney Frances Pascal 
Still from distance, 2022 
Video, color, sound; 6 min 
© Sydney Frances Pascal

Maja Ruznic
Maja Ruznic 
The Past Awaiting the Future/Arrival of Drummers, 2023 
Oil on linen, 99 1/2 × 151 1/2 × 2 1/2 in. (252.7 × 384.8 × 6.4 cm) 
Collection of the artist  
© Maja Ruznic. Courtesy Karma
Photograph by Brad Trone

Chanelle Tyson
Chanelle Tyson 
Still from Artificial, 2023 
Digital video, color, sound; 12 min 
© Chanelle Tyson. Courtesy the artist

Zulaa Urchuud
Zulaa Urchuud 
Still from Nuudelch Khand’laga’ (Nomadtitude), 2021 
Video, black and white, sound; 6 min 
© Zulaa Urchuud. Courtesy the artist

Takako Yamaguchi
Takako Yamaguchi 
Issue, 2023 
Oil on canvas, 42 × 50 in. (106.7 × 127 cm) 
Collection of the artist; courtesy Ortuzar Projects, New York 
© Takako Yamaguchi. Photograph by Gene Ogami

Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing features the work of 71 artists and collectives, working across media and disciplines, representing evolving notions of American art. The 2024 Biennial marks the 81st edition of the Museum’s landmark exhibition series, the longest-running survey of American art, and addresses many of the most relevant ideas of our time.

Organized thematically, the exhibition presents artwork across most of the Museum’s gallery spaces and through a robust series of film and performance programs available at the Museum and online. The 2024 Biennial focuses on notions of “the real.” This examination of reality is highlighted through various throughlines and connections between artists, material, and ideas and acknowledges that today, society is at a critical inflection point. This apex has been brought on by the introduction of machine learning models to daily life and media, including the use of artificial intelligence, and society’s complex relationship to the body, the fluidity of identity, and the precariousness of the natural world.

Whitney Biennial 2024 co-organizers Chrissie Iles and Meg Onli began the process of building this Biennial in 2022 by meeting with and listening to artists from across the country and around the world. These artists reflected on their present moment and where their creative practices stood in a world still recovering from the COVID-19 pandemic. During this listening tour, artist Ligia Lewis identified that she and many of her peers were trying to create, through their work, a “dissonant chorus” of different ideas in a fractured time. One of the greatest challenges Lewis identified within her peer group and society at large is how to meet one another in the face of differences—differences in geography, identity, history, and lived experience. Iles and Onli examined this notion of what it means to be different and congregate together and found it resonated not only with the present but also with the framework of the Whitney Biennial.

The subtitle of this Biennial, Even Better Than the Real Thing, reflects discussions Iles and Onli had with artists about ideas of reality and combats rhetoric around “authenticity” that is used to perpetuate transphobia and restrict body autonomy in the United States. While developing this Biennial, sweeping legal changes, from the overturning of Roe v. Wade to attacks on gender-affirming care, occurred. The exhibition title responds to these developments and draws allusions to the long history of deeming people of marginalized race, gender, and ability as less than real. Iles and Onli’s curatorial process and the artworks featured are animated by these unfolding histories and the techniques that artists use to confront them, from the use of unstable materials to subversive humor, expressive abstraction, and non-Western forms of cosmological thinking.

​WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2024​: Even Better Than the Real Thing — Exhibition Overview and Select Works

Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing presents the work of a multigenerational group of 71 artists and collectives working across media and disciplines to examine various throughlines that reflect the precarity of the past two years. The exhibition questions contemporary notions of reality and authenticity and acknowledges that society is at a critical inflection point influenced by the past, salient to the present, and imperative to the future.

The 2024 Whitney Biennial examines rapidly advancing technologies and machine learning tools. Artists Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst present work that is part of a project focused on training the data behind AI models, with the hope that AI can be used in creative, even liberating ways. Herndon and Dryhurst’s work is presented in the galleries and via a text-to-image AI program on artport, the Whitney's portal for Internet art and online gallery space for net art commissions.

The body and subjectivity as it pertains to queer identity, body sovereignty, motherhood, the aging body, and the trans body is a critical throughline of the 2024 Whitney Biennial. 

Carmen Winant
Carmen Winant
 
Women's blueprint for survival I and II, 2022 
Sun-bleached construction paper, painter's tape, 
inkjet prints, two works of 47 1/2 × 36in. each (120.7 × 91.4 cm) 
© Carmen Winant 
Courtesy of the artist and PATRON Gallery, Chicago 
Photograph by Jamie Alvarez

Carmen Winant’s work consists of 2,500 prints assembled to form a collective portrait of the ordinary, daily tasks required to provide abortion health care—a project that became much more urgent with the overturning of Roe v. Wade in 2022. In conceiving the work, Carmen Winant worked across the Midwest and the South with the archives of special collections, university hospitals, and predominantly clinics in order to collect photographs of staff, physicians, and volunteers taken over a 50-year period.

Mary Kelly is presenting part of the final project of her career at the 2024 Biennial. The work titled Lacunae (2023), meaning blank spaces or missing parts, starts with the calendar. She uses this calendar as a framework to document her own aging and the passing of friends and loved ones and invites viewers to reflect on materiality as well as the body and its final passage or transformation.

Jes Fan
Jes Fan 
Cross Section (Right Leg Muscle III), 2023 
PLA filaments, fiberglass, resin, pigment, glass 
19 x 31 x 13 in. (48.26 x 78.74 x 33.02 cm) 
Collection of the artist 
Commissioned by M+ Museum, Hong Kong 
Courtesy the artist; Empty Gallery, Hong Kong; 
and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York 
Photograph by Olympia Shannon

For Jes Fan, the body is a site of making. The four sculptures presented were created from 3D-printed CAT scans of the artist’s own body. In these sculptures, injury becomes an allegory of an interior state of being, suggesting that something precious might be generated by invisible wounds borne by queer bodies and bodies of color.

On the Museum’s third floor, artist Pippa Garner presents an installation that references the ubiquity of mass-produced consumer goods and the ways that the marketing and design of these goods imply human-like qualities, such as personality and gender. The “impossible inventions” presented in the gallery adopt an almost “mad scientist” approach to the oddity of anthropomorphizing manufactured goods, imagining fantastical second lives for objects that have become obsolete. Some of the works reflect on the artist’s transition—or genderhacking, as she refers to it—which she began at the end of the 1980s.

Material agency and the use of unstable media is a throughline that several artists employ and result in some works in the 2024 Whitney Biennial changing over time.

Suzanne Jackson
Suzanne Jackson 
Rag-to-Wobble, 2020 
Acrylic, cotton paint cloth and vintage dress hangers 
91 1/2 x 54 1/2 in. (232.4 x 138.4 cm), variable; 
with 14 inches variable bulge 
Courtesy the artist and Ortuzar Projects, New York 
Photograph by David Kaminsky

Suzanne Jackson’s translucent paintings hang in space, suspended without canvas or visible support; the paint becomes an armature for itself. Made from acrylic paint applied in layers, each work is malleable and moves, changing shape over time.

Lotus L. Kang presents a major installation that immerses viewers in a world situated between inside and outside, life and regeneration, and emptiness and fullness, suggesting a constant state of transformation. The installation consists of photographic films unfurling from steel joists suspended from the ceiling and a series of floor sculptures made of tatami mattresses and cast aluminum objects. The materials are industrial, portable, modular, and open to change. The installation is exposed to sunlight throughout the run of the Biennial, which causes the exposed film to undergo a “tanning” process and change color. Kang likens the film surface to skin and brings the material back to ideas of the body, particularly its porous relationship with environments. By doing this, the artist hints at an unfixed understanding of one’s body, diasporic identity, and the processes of memory.

Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio presents a newly commissioned monumental sculpture made primarily with tree amber that moves over time in relation to ambient sunlight and heat. The natural materials used in this work are from trees that were imported to Southern California in the 1950s and 1960s, around the same time as many Central Americans and Mexicans were brought there to work through joint immigrant labor programs. Eventually, the city of Los Angeles began removing the trees after realizing their roots lacked space to grow along city sidewalks, which coincided with an Eisenhower-era immigration policy that began to deport many of these workers who had arrived in the United States legally. Embedded in the amber are facsimiles of archival documents from El Salvador, relating to the mass killings by the military government in the 1930s following the Indigenous rebellion of 1932. As the sculpture changes shape, the objects within it move, suggesting the ways memory and trauma are held in the body and shift over time.

Another persistent throughline in the 2024 Biennial is the psychological implications of architectural spaces and the systems of power that they represent.

Mavis Pusey
Mavis Pusey 
Within Manhattan, 1977 
Oil on canvas, 73 × 115 in. (185.4 × 292.1 cm)
Collection of Neil Lane 
© Estate of Mavis Pusey. Photograph by Elon Schoenholz

The 2024 Biennial  presents the work of Mavis Pusey, including works that have not been seen since the 1970s. Mavis Pusey’s work explores ideas of demolition of architecture and, specifically, demolition of buildings in NYC and the Chelsea neighborhood where Mavis Pusey lived and worked in the 1970s and 1980s, blocks away from the Whitney’s current location.

Cannupa Hanska Luger’s work takes stereotypical Native American iconography of a tipi and flips the structure upside down to celebrate Native technologies and innovations created by the artist's ancestors and upend viewers’ grounding in time and space to make way for imagined futures free of colonialism and capitalism, where broader Indigenous knowledge can thrive.

In the Museum’s ground-floor Lobby gallery, artist Ser Serpas presents sculptures made from natural materials and found objects that function as dual portraits, first of New York City, as seen through cycles of consumption and decay, and then as portraits of the artist herself through the expressive choices she has made.

The Museum’s Lobby gallery is accessible to the public free of charge as part of the Whitney Museum’s enduring commitment to supporting and showcasing the most recent work of emerging artists.

Larger histories, particularly those of non-Western communities, and how myth, cosmologies, land, water, Earth, and geological ecosystems relate are also examined in the 2024 Whitney Biennial.

Dala Nasser creates a space of reflection that intermingles history and myth, past and present, mourning, and the potential for collective mourning. This site-specific sculpture comprises a row of columns draped with bed sheets that create paintings made from charcoal rubbings of rocks found in the Adonis Cave and Temple on Mount Lebanon, north of Beirut. The sheets are then dyed with iron-rich clay from the banks of the Abraham River in Lebanon.

Rose B. Simpson’s work consists of four sculptural figures gazing at one another, creating a force field of protection and solidarity that stands in contrast to an unstable world. The work titled Daughters: Reverence (2024) conveys strength through the figures’ formal relationship with each other and through
their shared ancestry.

Five major new immersive video installations address the impact of war, dictatorships, colonialism, and the resurfacing of lost cultural histories.

Clarissa Tossin’s film Mojo’q che b’ixan ri ixkanulab’ / Antes de que los volcanes canten / Before the Volcanoes Sing (2022), a collaboration with the Maya K’iche ’Kaqchiquel poet Rosa Chávez and the Ixil Maya artist Tohil Fidel Brito Bernal, looks at ways in which contemporary Maya culture is activated by means of both reclamation and recreation. Presented nearby are 3D-printed copies of ancient Maya flutes that appear in the film.

Isaac Julien
Isaac Julien 
 
Iolaus/In the Life (Once Again… Statues Never Die), 2022 
Inkjet print, 59 × 78 3/4 in. (150 × 200 cm) 
© Isaac Julien 
Courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro, London

Ideas of restitution also appear in Isaac Julien’s Once Again… (Statues Never Die) (2022), a five-screen film installation that includes a display of sculptures by Richmond Barthé and 2019 Biennial artist Matthew Angelo Harrison. The installation features interwoven stories addressing the dialogue between American collector Albert C. Barnes and the Harlem Renaissance philosopher Alain Locke, as well as appearances by the poet Langston Hughes, in a critique of colonialism, cultural valuation, and queer desire.

Ligia Lewis
Ligia Lewis
Still from A Plot, A Scandal, 2023 
HD video, color, sound; 20 min 
© Ligia Lewis

In choreographer Ligia Lewis’s first video installation A Plot, A Scandal (2023), dancers use movement to explore histories of marronage and revenge.

Diane Severin Nguyen
Diane Severin Nguyen
Still from In Her Time (Iris’s Version), 2022–23 
HD video, color, sound; 62:37 min 
© Diane Severin Nguyen

Diane Severin Nguyen’s film installation In Her Time (Iris’s Version) (2023–24) depicts an actress named Iris as she rehearses for a leading role in a historical war film about the Nanjing Massacre of 1937 by the Japanese Imperial Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–45). The immersive environment, where visitors recline on a daybed in a room surrounded by pink and purple ribbons, explores the ways history circulates in the present.

Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich
Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich
 
Still from Too Bright to See (Part I), 2022 
16mm film, color, sound; 24 min 
Courtesy the artist © Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich 

Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich’s Too Bright to See (2023–24) highlights the previously obscured life and work of Suzanne Césaire (1915–1966), the Martinican writer and feminist thinker, and a key figure in the Caribbean philosophy known as Négritude, which fused anti-colonialist policies with Surrealist aesthetics. A light installation that is fused with the moving images onscreen suggests the mercurial weather and precarity of the Caribbean.

Sonic space and the use of sound are introduced in the 2024 Whitney Biennial like never before.

In the Museum’s main staircase and large freight elevator, artist Holland Andrews composed two site-specific sound works. The work located in the stairwell consists entirely of vocal sounds that, at times, have an ambient effect and, at other times, offer a range of harmony, dissonance, and melody. The artist manipulated the sounds using a pedal-operated effects processor so that their body would be involved in the process of creation. The work meditates on the sensation of receiving information on multiple channels as if the mind were switching stations on a radio. The work located in the elevator features voice and mechanical sounds, including those made by the elevator itself, to create a restorative space. Here, Holland Andrews plays with our perceptions of the machine hum so that we might wonder if the sound is intentional or just the magic of the world, ultimately to discover that it is, in fact, both.

For the 2024 Whitney Biennial, JJJJJerome Ellis was invited to score the exhibition, responding to its sounds, artworks, and spaces to create a musical composition. The project—which offers another interpretation of the Biennial and point of entry—requires the full installation of the exhibition in order for the artist to begin, and, once complete, will exist on the gallery walls as a set of drawings and notations.

These musical scores are also inform a series of performances during the run of the show.

Constantina Zavitsanos
Constantina Zavitsanos 
Call to Post (Violet) and All the Time, 2019 and 2021 
(installation view, Helmhaus, Zurich, 2021). 
Plywood, two-channel sound at 5–20 Hertz, transducers, and wire;
two-channel overlapping open captions, 
240 x 144 x 60 in. (609.6 x 365 x 152.4 cm).
Photograph by Zoe Tempest 
Image courtesy the artist and Helmhaus, Zurich

Constantina Zavitsanos’s installation is composed of blue-violet light, projected captions, and a ramp that plays speech modulated with infrasonics. Each element of this environment works with and against the limits of perception. The color violet is just within the visible light spectrum, while infrasonic sound waves are frequencies below the threshold of audibility, allowing them to be felt as vibrations but not heard. As visitors interact with the work, it change the shape of the sound and vibrations, and the captions that transcribe them may also become more or less readable as visitors block the projected light. With this work, Constantina Zavitsanos seeks to make space for collective acts of sensing and feeling that highlight some joys of the cross-disability community.

Terrace Commissions — The Whitney has commissioned two artists to present work on the Museum's fifth- and sixth-floor terraces, respectively.

Torkwase Dyson’s work is described by the artist as a “monastic playground” and is meant to be activated by visitors, who are invited to touch, sit on, and experience the work in a tactile way. This prompt for engagement speaks to Torkwase Dyson's conviction that liberation can be found at every register of movement and that “freedom is an ongoing spatial question of motion and imagination.” For Torkwase Dyson, the intertwining of abstraction and Blackness is a central philosophical concern in her work and came out of an interest in public infrastructure. Torkwase Dyson’s work on the Museum's fifth floor is the first artwork presented in conjunction with the Whitney Museum’s 10-year partnership with Hyundai Motor that enables artists to test their aspirations and incubate their creativity.

Kiyan Williams’s outdoor sculpture represents the north facade of the White House and leans on one side, sinking into the floor. The sculpture is composed of earth. The artist selected this natural material for the work to reflect how the earth carries history, an idea that Kiyan Williams explores extensively in their artistic practice. In this work, the artists point to the fragility of the political foundations of the United States, while the earth’s erosion embodies a critique of institutions at a moment when they are toppling. Looking on from nearby is a smaller sculpture of celebrated trans activist Marsha P. Johnson witnessing the erosion of the White House.

Public Art — The work Stuttering Can Create Time is a public art installation presented at 95 Horatio Street, on the facade of the building across the street from the Whitney and the south end of the High Line. Created by the collective  People Who Stutter Create (PWSC),  this work marks the collective's first project together and activates the Whitney’s exhibition billboard as a place to publicly celebrate the transformational space of dysfluency, a term that can encompass stuttering/stammering and other communication differences such as aphasia, Tourette’s, and dysarthria.

​WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2024​: Even Better Than the Real Thing — Film Program

The 2024 Whitney Biennial includes a robust film program featuring 25 artists, filmmakers, and collectives whose work explores the porousness of boundaries and identities. Presented across five separate screening days at the Museum, each program was developed by guest curators Korakrit Arunanondchai, asinnajaq, Greg de Cuir Jr., and Zackary Drucker, respectively. A select number of the films featured onsite for the 2024 Biennial is also available to view online.

​WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2024​: Film Program Schedule:
April 12: Speaking in Camouflage: Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich, curated by Greg de Cuir Jr.
May 3: the land wants you, curated by asinnajaq
June 21: Dear Ghost, if a memory is false does it mean it does not have real consequences?, curated by Korakrit Arunanondchai
July 12: Sis, I Don’t Know: Remembrance a Summer Flower, International Portal of Artificial Maximum Results, curated by Zackary Drucker
September 20: Speaking in Camouflage: Christopher Harris, curated by Greg de Cuir Jr.

More information about specific films, how to purchase tickets to in-person screenings, and how to view films online is available on the Museum's website.

​WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2024​: Even Better Than the Real Thing — Performance Program

The 2024 Whitney Biennial’s performance program highlights the work of interdisciplinary artists, composers, choreographers, and musicians, and will include 5 performances presented in the Museum’s theater. While sight tends to be the dominant sense experienced within museums, this Biennial performance program offers an alternate approach, forefronting sound. Guest curated by Taja Cheek, the performances are challenging, deliberate, and poignant, expanding on the explorations of identity, healing, autonomy, relationships to AI, and more.


JJJJJerome Ellis
JJJJJerome Ellis
playing the saxophone 
at Performance Space, New York, 2023 
Photograph by Annie Forrest

Holland Andrews
Holland Andrews 
performing at Weirdo Night at Zebulon, Los Angeles, 2022 
Image courtesy the artist. Photograph by Indra Dunis

​WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2024​: Performance Schedule:
April 27–28: The Long Count by Debit
June 8: Motor Tapes by Sarah Hennies
June 29–July 1: Speaker by Holland Andrews
July 20–21: FEELING$ FEELING$ FEELING$ by Alex Tatarsky
August 2–4: Offerings by JJJJJerome Ellis

Taja Cheek, also known professionally as L'Rain, is a curator and musician. She has led performance programs and MoMA PS1 and worked closely with artists to realize projects at institutions like Creative Time, Weeksville Heritage Center, and The High Line, among others. She also co-founded a DIY rehearsal and performance space in her neighborhood in Brooklyn that primarily supports independent, improvised, and experimental music.

​WHITNEY BIENNIAL 2024​: CatalogueWhitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing is accompanied by a 284-page exhibition catalogue published by the Whitney and distributed by Yale University Press. Edited by Chrissie Iles and Meg Onli, the catalogue features insightful essays by Iles, Onli, Eva Hayward, and Amber Jamilla Musser, along with a conversation among Iles, Onli, and Gregg

The 2024 Whitney Biennial is co-organized by Chrissie Iles, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and Meg Onli, Curator-at-Large at the Whitney, with Min Sun Jeon and Beatriz Cifuentes. The performance program is organized by Iles and Onli, with guest curator Taja Cheek. The film program is organized by Iles and Onli, with guest curators Korakrit Arunanondchai, asinnajaq, Greg de Cuir Jr., and Zackary Drucker.

WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART

11/02/24

Exposition A Model @ MUDAM Luxembourg - Quel est le rôle des musées aujourd'hui ?

A Model
MUDAM, Luxembourg
9 Février - 8 mai 2024

Nina Beier and Bob Kil 
All Fours, 2022  
Performance views, La Pista 500, Pinacoteca Agnelli, Turin, 2022 
Photo by Sebastiano Pellin di Persano
Courtesy of the artists, Standard (Oslo), Oslo and Croy Nielsen, Vienna

Quel est le rôle des musées, aujourd’hui ? Pour cette exposition majeure en trois volets, le Mudam Luxembourg a invité des artistes internationaux à imaginer de nouveaux modèles pour le musée.

Intitulée A Model, l’exposition qui inaugure la programmation 2024 du Mudam propose une réflexion approfondie sur le rôle du musée aujourd’hui. S’étendant jusqu’en septembre 2024, elle comprend trois volets qui affirment la nécessité de penser l’institution comme un lieu vivant, consacré à la pluralité des voix et des points de vue, un lieu en prise avec les débats contemporains, au-delà de son rôle traditionnel d’espace de présentation. 

Artistes : Alvar Aalto, Sophia Al Maria, James Richmond Barthé, Nina Beier et Bob Kil, Tomaso Binga, Anna Boghiguian, Andrea Bowers, Robert Breer et Pontus Hultén, Matilde Cerruti Quara, Ali Cherri, Tony Cokes, Nayla Dabaji, Jason Dodge, Claire Fontaine, Matthew Angelo Harrison, General Idea, María Jerez et Edurne Rubio, Isaac Julien, Marysia Lewandowska, Hanne Lippard, Renzo Martens, Melvin Moti, Oscar Murillo, Palle Nielsen, Khandakar Ohida, Daniela Ortiz, Walid Raad, Finnegan Shannon, Krista Belle Stewart, SUPERFLEX, Rayyane Tabet, Su-Mei Tse, Nora Turato, Dardan Zhegrova parmi d'autres.

Pour sa première grande exposition depuis qu’elle a pris la tête du Mudam Luxembourg – Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean en 2022, Bettina Steinbrügge a invité une dizaine d'artistes à concevoir de nouvelles oeuvres en dialogue avec la collection du musée et à réimaginer celui-ci comme un environnement activable, plutôt qu’une accumulation d’objets à préserver sous une forme immuable et intemporelle. A Model se déploie autour de trois temporalités distinctes : A Model: Prelude – Rayyane Tabet. Trilogy (jusqu’au 12 mai 2024), suivi de l’exposition collective A Model, qui présente des oeuvres d’artistes internationaux dans tous les espaces du musée (du 9 février au 8 septembre 2024), et enfin A Model: Epilogue – Jason Dodge. Tomorrow, I walked to a black star (du 4 mai au 8 septembre 2024).

« Le musée se doit de refléter les réflexions animant la société contemporaine et de remettre en question ses croyances établies », affirme Bettina Steinbrügge. « Le paysage culturel est en train de changer : la diversité se conçoit différemment aujourd’hui, des récits autrefois inaudibles se font entendre et une relecture de l’histoire a lieu afin de rétablir dans leurs droits des cultures ou des pratiques jusqu’ici méprisées ou ignorées. D’autre part, la récente pandémie a modifié les comportements, les réseaux sociaux et les nouvelles technologies peuvent aisément amplifier ou contrefaire l’information. »

Palle Nielsen
Modellen, 1968 
Moderna Museet, Stockholm

Cette volonté de se réinventer n’est pas nouvelle dans l’histoire des musées d’art moderne et contemporain. Pour A Model, Bettina Steinbrügge s’est notamment inspirée du projet The Model – A Model for a Qualitative Society de l’artiste et activiste Palle Nielsen, présenté en 1968 au Moderna Museet de Stockholm. L’institution était alors dirigée par Pontus Hultén, qui a grandement contribué à redéfinir le rôle du musée en son temps. Le projet de Palle Nielsen consistait en l’installation d’une aire de jeu dans l’une des galeries du musée, librement accessible à tous les enfants.

A Model, dont le titre s’inspire de celui du remarquable projet du Moderna Museet, fait écho à son esprit régénérant et ludique dans sa volonté de renouveler l’engagement du musée en faveur de l’art contemporain. En prenant la collection du Mudam pour point de départ, l’exposition interroge la manière dont l’art y est exposé et pensé. Ce faisant, elle atteste du rôle des artistes dans la constitution d’une conscience collective et de l’influence qu’ils exercent dans le développement du musée d’art contemporain. A Model explore la capacité de l’art à produire une pensée pouvant influer sur notre monde. Bien que la vision de l’artiste soit par nature subjective et personnelle, la forme artistique n’en demeure pas moins un mode de communication essentiel. Par ailleurs, le caractère expérimental des expositions, la place croissante laissée aux arts performatifs ou les propositions déjouant le format traditionnel d’une oeuvre d’art mettent à l’épreuve le modèle du musée, entendu comme un lieu conservant des collections en les figeant, selon une conception héritée du siècle des Lumières.

En conclusion de l’exposition collective A Model, l’artiste Jason Dodge a conçu un épilogue, intitulé Tomorrow, I walked to a dark black star. Il présentera des objets de la vie quotidienne trouvés au Luxembourg, disséminés à travers le musée. L’artiste a pour habitude de collecter des objets au cours de ses pérégrinations dans les villes où il est appelé à travailler. En transposant ces matériaux du quotidien dans un contexte muséal, il en sonde le potentiel poétique et remet en question nos systèmes de valeurs. Son approche profondément humaine témoigne d’un véritable amour pour l’art, mais aussi pour la vie en général, pour toutes ces choses qui nous semblent insignifiantes, mais qui, ensemble, constituent notre système de croyances.

A Model - Les points forts de l’exposition

Oscar Murillo 
collision of intent (Diego Rivera, Rockefeller Center), 11th June 2019, 
as part of Collision/Coalition, The Shed, New York, USA, 
19 June - 25 August 2019.
Videography & video still: Mohamed Sadek. 
Copyright: Oscar Murillo. Courtesy: the artist and The Shed

Dans l’installation collective conscience (2015 – en cours) pour le Grand Hall du Mudam, Oscar Murillo transpose au Luxembourg le concept d’une expérience muséale communautaire en créant une agora où le public peut se rencontrer et activer l’exposition. Les effigies imaginées par l’artiste, qui représentent la classe ouvrière, sont assises dans l’arène, les yeux rivés sur un grand écran sur lequel est projetée une sélection de films d’artistes et de documentaires qui explorent le concept du musée et son histoire.

Isaac Julien 
Once Again … (Statues Never Die), 2022 
Installation view, Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, 2022 
Photo: Henrik Kam 
© Barnes Foundation | Courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro

L’oeuvre Once Again... (Statues Never Die) (2022) d’Isaac Julien est une installation composée de cinq écrans dans laquelle l’artiste imagine un échange, au début du XXe siècle, entre le philosophe et critique culturel Alain Locke et le collectionneur d’art Albert Barnes, propriétaire d’une vaste collection d’art africain (et d’art moderne européen). Au travers d’images d’archives d’oeuvres d’art africain issues de pillages et conservées au British Museum, que viennent ponctuer des citations des poètes Aimé Césaire et Langston Hughes, l’installation propose une relecture de l’histoire de l’art qui contextualise les pratiques de réparation actuelles.

Les espaces extérieurs du musée donnent lieu à des rencontres fortuites. Guardians (2022) de Nina Beier, cinq lions en marbre gisant à même le sol, met à mal la symbolique des statues censées exprimer les notions de force et de vaillance associées au pouvoir royal. Cette installation dans le parc qui entoure le musée souligne par ailleurs qu’un site n’est jamais neutre. 

Finnegan Shannon 
Do you want us here or not (MMK), 2021
Installation view at Crip Time, 
Museum MMK für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt, 2021 
Photo: Axel Schne

Les bancs de Finnegan Shannon attirent quant à eux l’attention sur le manque d’accessibilité, d’inclusivité et de confort dans les espaces publics.

Dans le Jardin des Sculptures, deux installations s’intéressent au langage visuel et parlé, à ce qui est autorisé et à ce qui est interdit, et à la notion de qualité dans l’art. Many Spoken Words (2009) de Su-Mei Tse, oeuvre phare de la collection du Mudam, prend la forme d’une fontaine qui évoque la fluidité du langage. Elle côtoie ici l’installation Become a Sea (2023) de Claire Fontaine, avec qui elle noue un puissant dialogue qui reflète la diversité des réalités, langages et systèmes de valeurs existants ainsi que notre propre responsabilité vis-à-vis de ceux-ci.

Tomaso Binga 
Io sono Io, Io sono Me, 1976
Courtesy of Archivio Tomaso Binga 
and Galleria Tiziana Di Caro
Photo: Verita Monselles

Exposées dans le même espace, les oeuvres de Nora Turato et de Tomaso Binga emploient les mots et la parole pour évoquer le statut des femmes dans la société contemporaine. L’association de ces deux artistes de générations différentes révèle la continuelle nécessité de créer des espaces afin que les femmes puissent être entendues.

Krista Belle Stewart
 
Truth to Material, 2020 
Museum of Contemporary Art, Toronto, Ontario 
Images by Toni Hafkenscheid

Les oeuvres d’Anna Boghiguian, d’Andrea Bowers, de Daniela Ortiz et de Krista Belle Stewart mettent en évidence que le monde est constitué de réalités multiples, tenant compte des communautés sous-représentées ou des événements historiques jusqu’à présent négligés. Réfutant les modes de pensée linéaires et unidimensionnels, elles nous invitent à prêter attention, à rester curieux et à remettre en question les certitudes bien ancrées et les récits dominants.

Dardan Zhegrova
 
Your enthusiasm to tell a story (gold), 2016 
Collection Mudam Luxembourg 
Vue de l’installation à l’occasion de Manifesta 14, 
Grand Hotel, Prishtina, 22 juillet - 30 octobre 2022 
© Photo : Leart Rama

Tony Cokes
 
Evil.80.Empathy?, 2020
Courtesy the artist, Greene Naftali, New York, Hannah Hoffman, 
Los Angeles, Felix Gaudlitz, Vienna, and Electronic Arts Intermix, New York

Les poupées de Dardan Zhegrova invitent les visiteur·euse·s à les appréhender physiquement, tandis que l’oeuvre vidéo Evil.80.Empathy? (2020) de Tony Cokes illustre la nécessité pour les musées de refléter les débats contemporains. En jouant avec la couleur, la taille des caractères et la répétition de mots et de phrases, l’artiste oppose à la brutalité policière et à la violence systémique à l’encontre de la communauté Noire les notions d’empathie et de complicité. Par ailleurs, l’exposition présentera des archives relatives à The Model – A Model for a Qualitative Society de Palle Nielsen.

Commissaires : Bettina Steinbrügge, avec Sarah Beaumont, Clément Minighetti et Joel Valabrega

MUDAM LUXEMBOURG
Musée d’Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean
3, Park Dräi Eechelen, 1499 Luxembourg-Kirchberg