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New York Said

2022 Whitney Biennial talk with Art Critic, Ricky Amadour

Pay Attention, The Streets are Talking

April 26, 2022
in Talking to Artists

Listen to a short but in-depth conversation with Artist and Art Critic, Ricky Amadour about the 2022 Whitney Biennial.

The New York Said Podcast is Available on the Following Platforms
Apple Podcasts | Google Podcasts | Spotify | Amazon Music | RadioPublic | iHeart Radio

Show Notes

Press Preview | Writer | Supportive Mentors | Peter Frank | Art Criticism vs. Art News | Sensationalism | Representational Politics | RISD Museum | Gladys Tamez Millinery | Tiehm’s Buckwheat | Ecology | Aestheticizing | Solidify Thoughts | Critics and Writers | Barbara Kruger | Donald Judd | Agnes Martin | Aria Dean | James Little | Carmen Herrera | Rodney McMillian | Cosmology | Take the Audio Tour | Have Empathy for Yourself | Practitioner of Culture | Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam | Engage with Beauty | Peace Is Every Step: The Path of Mindfulness in Everyday Life by Thich Nhat Hanh | You Don’t Have to Know Everything | Harriet Tubman Memorial by Alison Saar

James Little, Borrowed Times, 2021. Oil on linen, 64 × 74 in. (162.6 × 188 cm). Collection of the artist. Courtesy the artist and Kavi Gupta Gallery, Chicago. Photograph by Ron Amstutz
James Little, Borrowed Times, 2021. Oil on linen, 64 × 74 in. (162.6 × 188 cm). Collection of the artist. Courtesy the artist and Kavi Gupta Gallery, Chicago. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

About The 2022 Whitney Biennial

The 2022 Whitney Biennial has opened. A constellation of the most relevant art and ideas of our time, the eightieth edition of the biennial features a roster of artists at all points in their careers, and fills the galleries of the Whitney Museum from April 6 through September 5, with portions of the exhibition and some programs continuing through October 23, 2022.

 

Plan Your Visit

 

The Whitney Biennial has surveyed the landscape of American art, reflecting and shaping the cultural conversation, since 1932. The eightieth edition of the landmark exhibition is co-curated by David Breslin, DeMartini Family Curator and Director of Curatorial Initiatives, and Adrienne Edwards, Engell Speyer Family Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs. Titled Quiet as It’s Kept, the 2022 Biennial features an intergenerational and interdisciplinary group of sixty-three artists and collectives whose dynamic works reflect the challenges, complexities, and possibilities of the American experience today.

 

Aria Dean, still from process for Little Island/Gut Punch, 2022. Digital simulation created by Maximilian Schmoetzer. Collection of the artist. Courtesy the artist
Aria Dean, still from process for Little Island/Gut Punch, 2022. Digital simulation created by Maximilian Schmoetzer. Collection of the artist. Courtesy the artist

Curatorial Statement
By David Breslin and Adrienne Edwards

Since the start of the pandemic, time has expanded, contracted, suspended, and blurred—often in dizzying succession. We began planning this Biennial in late 2019: before Covid and its reeling effects, before the uprisings demanding racial justice, before the widespread questioning of institutions and their structures, before the 2020 presidential election. Although underlying conditions are not new, their overlap, their intensity, and their sheer ubiquity created a context in which past, present, and future folded into one another. We organized this Biennial to reflect these precarious and improvised times. Many artists’ contributions are dynamic, taking different forms during the course of the exhibition. Artworks change, walls move, and performances animate the galleries and surrounding objects. The spaces of the Biennial contrast significantly, acknowledging the acute polarity of our society. One floor is a labyrinth, a dark space of containment; another is a clearing, open and light filled.

Rather than offering a unified theme, we pursue a series of hunches throughout the exhibition: that abstraction demonstrates a tremendous capacity to create, share, and sometimes withhold meaning; that research-driven conceptual art can combine the lushness of ideas and materiality; that personal narratives sifted through political, literary, and pop cultures can address larger social frameworks; that artworks can complicate the meaning of “American” by addressing the country’s physical and psychological boundaries; and that our present moment can be reimagined by engaging with under-recognized artistic models and artists we have lost. Deliberately intergenerational and interdisciplinary, this Biennial proposes that cultural, aesthetic, and political possibility begins with meaningful exchange and reciprocity.

The subtitle of this Biennial, Quiet as It’s Kept, is a colloquialism. We were inspired by the ways novelist Toni Morrison, jazz drummer Max Roach, and artist David Hammons have invoked it in their works. The phrase is typically said prior to something—often obvious—that should be kept secret. We also adorned the exhibition with a symbol, ) (, from a N. H. Pritchard poem, on view in the exhibition, as a gesture toward openness and interlude. All of the Whitney’s Biennials serve as forums for artists, and the works on view reflect their enigmas, the things that perplex them, and the important questions they are asking. But each of the Biennials also exists as an institutional statement, and every team of curators is entrusted with making an exhibition that resides within the Museum’s history, collection, and reputation. In its eightieth iteration, the Biennial continues to function as an ongoing experiment.

Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet as It’s Kept is co-organized by David Breslin, DeMartini Family Curator and Director of Curatorial Initiatives, and Adrienne Edwards, Engell Speyer Family Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, with Mia Matthias, Curatorial Assistant; Gabriel Almeida Baroja, Curatorial Project Assistant; and Margaret Kross, former Senior Curatorial Assistant.

 

Rodney McMillian, In This Land, 2019 (Installation view, New Work: Rodney McMillian, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California, 2019). Latex, acrylic, ink, and paper on canvas, 14 ft. 6 in. × 91 ft. 7/8 in. (4.4 × 26.7 m); PA speakers and stand with sound, 20 min. Image courtesy the artist and Vielmetter, Los Angeles. Photograph by Katherine Du Tiel
Rodney McMillian, In This Land, 2019 (Installation view, New Work: Rodney McMillian, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California, 2019). Latex, acrylic, ink, and paper on canvas, 14 ft. 6 in. × 91 ft. 7/8 in. (4.4 × 26.7 m); PA speakers and stand with sound, 20 min. Image courtesy the artist and Vielmetter, Los Angeles. Photograph by Katherine Du Tiel

History of The Whitney Biennial 

Initiated by founder Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney in 1932, the Whitney Biennial is the longest-running survey of American art. More than 3,600 artists have participated, including Edward Hopper, Georgia O’Keeffe, Jacob Lawrence, Alexander Calder, Louise Bourgeois, Joan Mitchell, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Koening, Robert Rauschenberg, Claes Oldenburg, Roy Lichtenstein, Agnes Martin, Cy Twombly, Andy Warhol, Ellsworth Kelly, Richard Serra, Lynda Benglis, Frank Bowling, Joan Jonas, Barbara Kruger, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jenny Holzer, David Wojnarowicz, Glenn Ligon, Yvonne Rainer, Zoe Leonard, Kara Walker, Cindy Sherman, Nan Goldin, Mike Kelley, Lorna Simpson, Renee Green, Wade Guyton, Julie Mehretu, Cecilia Vicuna, Mark Bradford, Daniel Joseph Martinez, Ellen Gallagher, Rachel Harrison, Wu Tsang, Nick Mauss, Sarah Michelson, Laura Owens, Postcommodity, Pope.L, Jeffrey Gibson, and Tiona Nekkia McClodden. 

The biennials were originally organized by medium, with painting alternating with sculpture and works on paper. Starting in 1937, the Museum shifted to yearly exhibitions called Annuals. The current format-a survey show of work in all media occurring every two years-has been in place since 1973. The 2019 Biennial was organized by two Whitney curators, Jane Panetta and Rujeko Hockley. It featured seventy-five artists and collectives working in painting, sculpture, installation, film and video, photography, performance, and sound. 

Whitney Biennial 2022: Quiet as It’s Kept is co-organized by David Breslin, DeMartini Family Curator and Director of Curatorial Initiatives, and Adrienne Edwards, Engell Speyer Family Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, with Mia Matthias, Curatorial Assistant; Gabriel Almeida Baroja, Curatorial Project Assistant; and Margaret Kross, former Senior Curatorial Assistant.

~~~

We would love to hear your thoughts on the episode.

Leave a comment on the Apple Podcast app and don’t forget to rate the show.

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