The Whitney Museum of American Art announced today that seventy-five artists have been selected to present their work in the 2019 Whitney Biennial, co-organized by two Whitney curators, Jane Panetta and Rujeko Hockley. This will be the seventy-ninth in the long-running series of exhibitions launched by the Museum’s founder, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, in 1932. Considered the country’s foremost survey of contemporary American art, the Whitney Biennial delivers a frontline report on what’s happening in American art today. The 2019 edition will run from May 17 through September 22.
Panetta remarked: “Ru and I especially focused on emerging artists and first time Biennial participants: approximately seventy-five percent of the artists in the show are under forty and only five have previously appeared in a Whitney Biennial. In part, this emphasis resulted from what we saw during our research across the U.S., as we were struck by the profound difficulties of our current moment and the ways in which so many artists we encountered are struggling and facing fewer opportunities to present their work publicly.”
Hockley noted, “Although intentionally broad in scope, the exhibition explores key themes, including the mining of history in order to reimagine the present or future, a profound and sustained consideration of questions of equity along financial, racial, and sexual lines, a concern with climate change, and explorations of the vulnerability of the body. Artists in the exhibition are engaged with notions of what community means and can provide while using art to confront and cope with our current world.”
Adam D. Weinberg, the Museum’s Alice Pratt Brown Director, commented: “Taking the pulse of American creativity and culture, the Whitney Biennial has been finding the future of contemporary art for nearly a century. The Biennial is an essential strand of the Museum’s DNA, a chance to reaffirm one of the Whitney’s deepest commitments: to support the work of living artists and to engage in a cultural dialogue about what contemporary art is and why it matters.”
The artists selected for the 2019 Whitney Biennial, ranging from emerging to well-established individuals and collectives, are working in painting, sculpture, drawing, installation, film and video, photography, performance, and sound. Work will be presented throughout the Fifth and Sixth Floor exhibition galleries, as well as in numerous spaces both inside and outside the Museum. The curators traveled throughout the country and made more than 300 studio visits over the past year. Panetta and Hockley noted, “Our studio visits were an opportunity to meet new artists but also to see new work by many we already knew. These visits were a critical opportunity to get a general feel for what artists were doing and making across the United States in 2018-19. While we might have expected to find work that was more strident in tone given the difficulties and instabilities of the times we are living in, the art we encountered continues to put forth a deliberate sense of forward-looking optimism. We found something incredibly hopeful—and even productive—about the work we’ve selected for this exhibition.” A small number of the artists in the exhibition are Canadian, several are based in Puerto Rico, and a number were born abroad or now live and work outside the U.S.
Scott Rothkopf, Senior Deputy Director and Nancy and Steve Crown Family Chief Curator, noted, “Jane and Ru have gathered an extraordinary group of artists to create a show that will feel extremely timely. Much of the work has an intensely personal and even a deliberately handmade quality, which will be amplified through a strong presence of live performance. In addition, the exhibition’s galleries will emphasize groupings of artists, rather than monographic installations, to create poetic—and at times pointed—conversations among their works.”
A broad range of performance projects and artists will be presented, with some artists directly engaged with dance (and the history of the medium), and others working in the space of social engagement and critique. Eight artists (including one collective) will be working in the galleries, in the theater, outdoors, and in various interstitial spaces throughout the Museum. The curators noted, “It felt particularly important to us to include a dynamic performance program in the exhibition, given that artists in this area often struggle even more than their peers with object-based practices.” Among the artists in the performance program are Morgan Bassichis, who combines stand-up comedy, music, and mysticism into stories of queer alienation, love, and liberation; Brendan Fernandes, whose sculptural installation in the galleries will be activated by ballet dancers; Madeline Hollander, whose choreographic work questions the boundaries between our bodies and the environments we inhabit; Sahra Motalebi, who will present a new iteration of her opera Directory of Portrayals in the theater; and Las Nietas de Nonó, comprised of two sisters, Lydela and Michel Nonó, whose joint practice encompasses performance, theater, dance, and visual art, combined with activism and education, in work that focuses on their home neighborhood, Barrio San Antón in Carolina, Puerto Rico.
Additionally, Greta Hartenstein (formerly a senior curatorial assistant at the Whitney, now an independent curator focused on performance) will co-curate the performance program of the Biennial, bringing in work by Autumn Knight, nibia pastrana santiago, and Mariana Valencia, each of whom will engage with the interstitial spaces of the Whitney. Knight will re-present a long-standing and ongoing performance Sanity TV, here reconsidered for specific locations and contexts within the Museum. santiago will present a new work in the building, combining her extensive background in dance with considerations around the Museum’s site downtown adjacent to the Hudson River. And Valencia will also present a new work, expanding her interest in combining research with durational choreography and dance.
Three guest curators were invited to select the eleven artists for the film program: Maori Karmael Holmes (BlackStar Film Festival founder), artist and filmmaker Sky Hopinka (whose work was shown in the 2017 Biennial), and filmmaker/documentarian Matt Wolf (Wild Combination: A Portrait of Arthur Russell and Teenage). Holmes’s program includes work by the British-born Jenn Nkiru, whose works map global Black music, fashion, and visual culture; Darius Clark Monroe, part of the team behind the HBO series Random Acts of Flyness; and the Ghana-born musician and filmmaker Blitz Bazawule, also known as Blitz the Ambassador. Hopinka selected Thirza Cuthand, who combines pop genres like sci-fi, horror, and fairy tales into highly personal, confessional works; Colectivo Los Ingràvidos, a Mexican collective, whose moving-image works confront violence and corruption in contemporary Mexico; James Luna (d. 2018), whose work over a thirty-year career interrogated America’s iconography of Indigenous experience through a wide array of practices, including multimedia installation, video, and performance; Caroline Monnet, whose moving-image works and mixed-media installations engage with the contradictions of Indigenous life and identity in Canada; and collaborators Adam Khalil, Zack Khalil, and Jackson Polys, whose video work challenges assumptions about Native American culture, notably through the story of a nine-thousand-year-old skeleton found in Washington state in 1996. Wolf will present work by Barbara Hammer, the prolific lesbian filmmaker whose films explore the bodies, relationships, and narratives of queer women in particular who have been absent from both cinema and history; Sam Green, whose documentaries fearlessly probe complex ideas and fraught historical events; and FIERCE/Paper Tiger Television, two groups who banded together to examine the conflict over the Christopher Street Pier, gentrification, and the erasure of queer histories and spaces.
Making use of an augmented reality component, Lucas Blalock will create a mural-sized photographic work to be exhibited on the façade of 95 Horatio Street, located opposite the Museum and across from the southern entrance to the High Line, on the corner of Gansevoort and Washington Streets. Jeffrey Gibson will create a work for the Lobby using fabric and text, to be installed above the admissions desk; Diane Simpson will have a solo presentation with multiple sculptures in the Lobby Gallery; Marcus Fischer’s sound installation will be heard in the stairwell; the Fifth Floor terrace will be the site of a new sculptural installation with embedded videos by Meriem Bennani; and there will be a new large-scale, multi-part sculpture by Nicole Eisenman, a tableau of monumental figures, installed on the Museum’s Sixth Floor terrace.
The full artist list is as follows:
Eddie Arroyo
Born 1976 in Miami, FL
Lives in Miami, FL
Korakrit Arunanondchai
Born 1986 in Bangkok, Thailand
Lives in New York, NY, and Bangkok, Thailand
Olga Balema
Born 1984 in Lviv, Ukraine
Lives in New York, NY
Morgan Bassichis
Born 1983 in Newton, MA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Blitz Bazawule
Born 1982 in Accra, Ghana
Lives in New York, NY
Alexandra Bell
Born 1983 in Chicago, IL
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Brian Belott
Born 1973 in East Orange, NJ
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Meriem Bennani
Born 1988 in Rabat, Morocco
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Robert Bittenbender
Born 1987 in Washington, DC
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Lucas Blalock
Born 1978 in Asheville, NC
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Garrett Bradley
Born 1986 in New York, NY
Lives in New Orleans, LA
Milano Chow
Born 1987 in Los Angeles, CA
Lives in Los Angeles, CA
Colectivo Los Ingrávidos
Founded 2011 in Tehuacán, Mexico
Thirza Cuthand
Born 1978 in Regina, Saskatchewan
Lives in Toronto, Ontario
John Edmonds
Born 1989 in Washington, DC
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Nicole Eisenman
Born 1965 in Verdun, France
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Janiva Ellis
Born 1987 in Oakland, CA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY and Los Angeles, CA
Kota Ezawa
Born 1969 in Cologne, West Germany
Lives in Oakland, CA
Brendan Fernandes
Born 1979 in Nairobi, Kenya
Lives in Chicago, IL
FIERCE and Paper Tiger Television
FIERCE
Founded 2000 in New York, NY
Paper Tiger Television
Founded 1981 in New York, NY
Marcus Fischer
Born 1977 in Torrance, CA
Lives in Portland, OR
Forensic Architecture
Founded 2010 in London, United Kingdom
Ellie Ga
Born 1976 in New York, NY
Lives in Stockholm, Sweden
Nicholas Galanin
Born 1979 in Sitka, AK
Lives in Sitka, AK
Sofía Gallisá Muriente
Born 1986 in San Juan, PR
Lives in San Juan, PR
Jeffrey Gibson
Born 1972 in Colorado Springs, CO
Lives in Germantown, NY
Todd Gray
Born 1954 in Los Angeles, CA
Lives in Los Angeles, CA, and Akwidaa, Ghana
Sam Green
Born 1966 in Detroit, MI
Lives in New York, NY
Barbara Hammer
Born 1939 in Los Angeles, CA
Lives in New York, NY
Ilana Harris-Babou
Born 1991 in Brooklyn, NY
Lives in Williamstown, MA, and Brooklyn, NY
Matthew Angelo Harrison
Born 1989 in Detroit, MI
Lives in Detroit, MI
Curran Hatleberg
Born 1982 in Washington, DC
Lives in Baltimore, MD
Madeline Hollander
Born 1986 in Los Angeles, CA
Lives in New York, NY
Iman Issa
Born 1979 in Cairo, Egypt
Lives in Berlin, Germany, and New York, NY
Tomashi Jackson
Born 1980 in Houston, TX
Lives in New York, NY, and Cambridge, MA
Steffani Jemison
Born 1981 in Berkeley, CA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Adam Khalil
Born 1988 in Nyack, NY
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Zack Khalil
Born 1991 in Newton, MA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Jackson Polys
Born 1976 in Ketchikan, AK
Lives in New York, NY
Christine Sun Kim
Born 1980 in Orange County, CA
Lives in Berlin, Germany
Josh Kline
Born 1979 in Philadelphia, PA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Autumn Knight
Born 1980 in Houston, TX
Lives in New York, NY
Carolyn Lazard
Born 1987 in Upland, CA
Lives in Philadelphia, PA
Maia Ruth Lee
Born 1983 in Busan, South Korea
Lives in New York, NY
Simone Leigh
Born 1967 in Chicago, IL
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Daniel Lind-Ramos
Born 1953 in Loíza, PR
Lives in Loíza, PR
James Luna
Born 1950 in Orange, CA
Died 2018
Eric N. Mack
Born 1987 in Columbia, MD
Lives in New York, NY
Calvin Marcus
Born 1988 in San Francisco, CA
Lives in Los Angeles, CA
Tiona Nekkia McClodden
Born 1981 in Blytheville, AR
Lives in Philadelphia, PA
Troy Michie
Born 1985 in El Paso, TX
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Joe Minter
Born 1943 in Birmingham, AL
Lives in Birmingham, AL
Keegan Monaghan
Born 1986 in Evanston, IL
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Caroline Monnet
Born 1985 in Ottawa, Ontario
Lives in Montreal, Quebec
Darius Clark Monroe
Born 1980 in Houston, TX
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Ragen Moss
Born 1978 in New York, NY
Lives in Los Angeles, CA
Sahra Motalebi
Born 1979 in Birmingham, AL
Lives in New York, NY, and Delaware County, NY
Marlon Mullen
Born 1963 in Richmond, CA
Lives in Rodeo, CA
Jeanette Mundt
Born 1982 in Princeton, NJ
Lives in Somerset, NJ
Wangechi Mutu
Born 1972 in Nairobi, Kenya
Lives in Brooklyn, NY, and Nairobi, Kenya
Las Nietas de Nonó (Lydela Nonó and Michel Nonó)
Established 2011
Lydela Nonó
Born 1979 in San Juan, PR
Lives in Carolina, PR
Michel Nonó
Born 1982 in San Juan, PR
Lives in Carolina, PR
Jenn Nkiru
Born 1987 in London, United Kingdom
Lives in London, United Kingdom
Laura Ortman
Born 1973 in Whiteriver, AZ
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Jennifer Packer
Born 1984 in Philadelphia, PA
Lives in New York, NY
nibia pastrana santiago
Born 1987 in Caguas, PR
Lives in San Juan, PR
Elle Pérez
Born 1989 in the Bronx, NY
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Pat Phillips
Born 1987 in Lakenheath, United Kingdom
Lives in Pineville, LA
Gala Porras-Kim
Born 1984 in Bogotá, Colombia
Lives in Los Angeles, CA
Walter Price
Born 1989 in Macon, GA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Carissa Rodriguez
Born 1970 in New York, NY
Lives in New York, NY
Paul Mpagi Sepuya
Born 1982 in San Bernardino, CA
Lives in Los Angeles, CA
Heji Shin
Born 1983 in Seoul, South Korea
Lives in New York, NY
Diane Simpson
Born 1935 in Joliet, IL
Lives in Wilmette, IL
Martine Syms
Born 1988 in Los Angeles, CA
Lives in Los Angeles, CA
Kyle Thurman
Born 1986 in West Chester, PA
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Mariana Valencia
Born 1984 in Chicago, IL
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Agustina Woodgate
Born 1981 in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Lives in Miami, FL, and Amsterdam, the Netherlands
CURATORIAL CREDIT
The 2019 Whitney Biennial is organized by Jane Panetta and Rujeko Hockley, with Ramsay Kolber.
The film program is organized by Maori Karmael Holmes, Sky Hopinka, and Matt Wolf.
The performance program is organized by Jane Panetta, Rujeko Hockley, and Greta Hartenstein.
Writing via press release provided by The Whitney Museum of American Art