As part of the 2024 #WhitneyBiennial, People Who Stutter Create mobilized the Whitney's exhibition billboard at 95 Horatio Street, across the street from the Museum and the south end of the High Line. The artists, all of whom stutter, created this public artwork that celebrates the transformational space of dysfluency, a term that can encompass stuttering and other communication differences. In this podcast minisode, we hear from all five artists about their artwork titled Stuttering Can Create Time. Listen to the full episode at the link in our profile, and catch the billboard before it goes off view at the end of this weekend: https://lnkd.in/eQ3VVJR3 Speakers: Jia Bin Delicia Daniels JJJJJerome Ellis Conor Foran Kristel Kubart
Whitney Museum of American Art
Museums, Historical Sites, and Zoos
New York, New York 96,824 followers
The Whitney Museum of American Art seeks to be the defining museum of twentieth- and twenty-first-century American art.
Über uns
The Whitney seeks to be the defining museum of 20th- and 21st-century American art. The Museum collects, exhibits, preserves, researches, and interprets art of the United States in the broadest global, historical and interdisciplinary contexts. As the preeminent advocate for American art, we foster the work of living artists at critical moments in their careers. The Whitney educates a diverse public through direct interaction with artists, often before their work has achieved general acceptance. See the latest job and internship postings on our website here: https://whitney.org/about/job-postings
- Website
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http://www.whitney.org
External link for Whitney Museum of American Art
- Industrie
- Museums, Historical Sites, and Zoos
- Größe des Unternehmens
- 201-500 Mitarbeiter
- Hauptsitz
- New York, New York
- Typ
- Nonprofit
- Gegründet
- 1930
- Spezialitäten
- Museum, Non Profit, Contemporary Art, American Art, and Twentieth and Twenty-First Century American Art
Standorte
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Primäre
99 Gansevoort Street
New York, New York 10014, US
Employees at Whitney Museum of American Art
Aktualisierungen
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Sunset with CENTO 🧡🌇 If you're heading to our outdoor terraces this Free Friday Night, be sure to visit CENTO, Nancy Baker Cahill's AR creature on view on your phone. Download Baker Cahill's 4th Wall mobile app to meet CENTO, and add your own feathers to the creature's body. Each of the 12 feathers you can choose in the app is associated with a different functionality related to the creature's evolutionary survival, such as communication, navigation, energy conversion, or memory bank. Read more about the project, hear from the artist, and see how CENTO has grown through visitor participation: https://lnkd.in/gyQudw4s
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Because we're in the dog days of summer, let's have a look at a Whitney collection favorite: Jared French's State Park (1946). Educator (and movie star!) Lauren Ridloff explains some of the symbolism in the painting in American Sign Language. Next time you visit the Museum be sure to check out French's painting in our seventh floor collection galleries.
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Because we're in the dog days of summer, let's have a look at a Whitney collection favorite: Jared French's State Park (1946). Educator (and movie star!) Lauren Ridloff explains some of the symbolism in the painting in American Sign Language. Next time you visit the Museum be sure to check out French's painting in our seventh floor collection galleries.
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Watch the progression of Eddie Rodolfo Aparicio's Paloma Blanca Deja Volar/White Dove Let us Fly (2024) as it has evolved over the course of the #WhitneyBiennial. The work is made primarily from modified amber, a petrified form of tree resin. "The amber material is something I've been working on for a while and it's the interior fluids of the pine tree," Aparicio told us, "And it's been altered to try to remove all of the things inside of it that make it fluid, that make it non-stable." There are just a few days left to see this year's Biennial in its entirety! The exhibition closes this Sunday, August 11.
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The 2024 #WhitneyBiennial is the hottest ticket in town, but don't take our word for it. Hear what visitors to this year's show are saying about the Whitney's signature exhibition. Don't say we didn't warn you! 🚨 The Biennial is on view in its entirety only through this Sunday, August 11. Get your tickets now: https://lnkd.in/en9nXp9Q
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🗞 We have a special announcement! Ahead of the closing of this year's Whitney Biennial, we're thrilled to share that the co-curators for the next Biennial will be Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer. Guerrero and Sawyer, both curators at the Whitney, will lead the development of the 82nd edition of the Museum's landmark exhibition series, set to open in spring 2026. The New York Times has the full scoop.
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"The present that we are in is upside down."—Cannupa Hanska Luger In our podcast minisode featuring Luger, the artist talks about his 2024 #WhitneyBiennial work that takes the form of a tipi inverted and hung from the ceiling of the gallery. But Luger lets us know that, "The tipi is not upside down. The tipi is actually in the right positioning, in right relationship, in a right way in the world if the world isn't as upside down as it is presently." Don't miss your chance to see Luger's Uŋziwoslal Wašičuta, on view in the Biennial only through this Sunday, August 11.
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"For us, age didn't really necessarily come into consideration as we were selecting artists." Ever wonder how the curators of the #WhitneyBiennial determine who will be featured in the show? 2024 Biennial co-curator Meg Onli gives us a peek inside this thought process. This year's Biennial is on view only through August 11! Don't miss your chance.