PRESS
RELEASE Contact: Whitney Museum of American Art Mary Haus, Stephen
Soba (212) 570-3633 November 2001 ARTISTS SELECTED FOR WHITNEY MUSEUMÕS
2002 BIENNIAL * Largest Biennial since 1981 * Works by 113 artists
and collaborative teams to be exhibited * Largest representation
ever of sound, performance, architecture, and Internet art * First
presentation of Biennial works in Central Park, organized together
with Public Art Fund * Second Bucksbaum Award recipient to be named
New York, NY Š November 16, 2001 Š The Whitney Museum of American
Art will present the work of 113 artists and collaborative teams
in the 2002 Biennial Exhibition, the largest Biennial since 1981,
opening March 7, 2002. The MuseumÕs signature survey of contemporary
American art, the show will run through May 26, 2002. Most of the
Museum will be taken over by the Biennial: it will fill the 2nd,
3rd and 4th floors, as well as the MuseumÕs Sculpture Court, stairwell,
main elevator, and Lobby Gallery, which will be transformed into
a sound installation room. For the first time, in conjunction with
the Public Art Fund, several Biennial pieces will be presented in
Central Park. The 113 artists and collaborative teams in the exhibition
represent a wide range of ages, backgrounds, and sensibilities.
Established artists, like sculptor Kiki Smith, painter Vija Celmins,
filmmaker Ken Jacobs, and performance artist Meredith Monk, will
be shown alongside numerous artists who are less well known. The
exhibition includes the largest representation of architecture,
sound art, performance art, and Internet art ever presented in a
Biennial. The chief curator of the 2002 Biennial is Lawrence Rinder,
the Whitney's Anne & Joel Ehrenkranz Curator of Contemporary Art,
who developed the exhibition in collaboration with three of his
Whitney colleagues: Chrissie Iles, curator of film and video, chose
works to be shown in the Museum's Kaufman Astoria Studios Film and
Video Gallery; Internet-based art works were selected by Christiane
Paul, adjunct curator of new media arts; and performance and sound
art by Debra Singer, associate curator of contemporary art. The
curators traveled to 43 towns and cities in 27 states and to Puerto
Rico to view works; artists born in 23 countries, working in 20
states and Puerto Rico, and ranging in age from 24 to 71, will be
included in the show. "The 2002 Biennial pays tribute to the spirit
and variety of American artistic practice throughout the country,"
said Lawrence Rinder, the chief curator of the exhibition. "Artists
are exploring a wide range of media and new technologies that are
giving them previously unimagined freedoms. At the same time there
is a resurgent interest in traditional media and visceral, do-it-yourself
practices. Not restricted by a single theme, the Biennial will expose
multiple, sometimes conflicting currents, as well as extraordinary
works that fall outside of any conventional aesthetic definition."
The 2002 Biennial is the 71st in the series of Annuals and Biennials
inaugurated by Whitney Museum founder Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney
in 1932. From quilts and stained glass to Internet art, range of
work includes painting, installation, photography, film and video
projections, architecture, sound and performance art Contemporary
American art continues to be enlivened by the arrival of artists
from around the world and the travels of artists abroad. Among the
artists in the 2002 Biennial are AA Bronson, the last surviving
member of the influential Canadian art group General idea, now transplanted
to New York and working on his own; Chan Chao, who took photographs
on trips to his native country, the former Burma (now officially
Myanmar), of displaced Burmese refugees and pro-democracy insurgents
in border camps; and Stephen Dean, whose video work, Pulse (2001),
captures the annual Indian festival of Holi, in Uttar PradeshŃan
explosion of color shot as ecstatic celebrants toss handfuls of
multi-colored pigment into the air and onto each otherÕs bodies.
The exhibition includes art in a wide array of media, including
work by the Destroy All Monsters Collective, whose eye-popping billboard-sized
paintings memorialize the unique legacy of Detroit's local music
and television culture of the 1970's; Omer Fast, whose synchronized
two-channel video installation views a range of homes in Glendive,
Montana, the country's smallest television market, while incorporating
the artist's remarkable sound effects; and Ken Feingold, whose double-headed
If/Then (2001) places side-by-side two robot heads capable of listening
and responding to each other. Another collective, Forcefield (Meerk
Puffy, Patootie Lobe, Le Geef, and Gorgon Radeo), a Providence-based
artist group, creates much of their work, including printmaking,
costume design, installation, video, film and live musical performance,
out of found materials and industrial refuse; Luis Gispert combines
the flash of inner-city hip-hop with elements of Renaissance religious
art, taking as his photographic subjects women of various ethnicities
dressed in generic cheerleader uniforms and adorned with gold jewelry;
Trenton Doyle Hancock, shown in the last Biennial as well, makes
work that explores a personal mythology of epic dimensions, with
forest-dwelling organisms, half-animal and half-plant, as key characters;
and Evan Holloway is part of a new generation of Los Angeles artists
with a rekindled interest in creating abstract sculpture. In The
Holy Artwork (2001), Christian Jankowski blurs the distinctions
between the staged and the real. Working with a Baptist televangelist,
he creates a video that is at once a work of art and an authentic,
broadcast sermon, shot and edited in full cooperation with the Harvest
Fellowship Church and televised on a local San Antonio cable access
station. At the opposite end of the spectrum, Yun-Fei Ji, who grew
up in Southern China, practices the ancient art of traditional ink
brush painting. Ji's large-scale painting Dinner at the Forbidden
City (2001) deals with the British army's occupation of Beijing's
Forbidden City at the conclusion of the Opium Wars (1839-60). Margaret
Kilgallen, who passed away from cancer earlier this year, was part
of a circle of San Francisco artists whose work is rooted in mural
painting, graffiti and tramp art, and underground comics. Much of
her work was made with discarded materials, including scraps of
wood and leftover house paint. Acclaimed in the Whitney's BitStreams
exhibition, Robert Lazzarini creates sculptures that begin as 3-D
computer files, are subjected to a series of mathematical distortions,
then fabricated from original materials into works that confound
our senses. Conor McGrady, a native of Northern Ireland, draws on
his experiences of living in that strife-torn region to create his
drawings, executed in watercolor, gouache and compressed charcoal,
which capture the tension of daily life in Belfast; Hirsch Perlman,
sequestering himself in an unused room in his home in the Echo Park
district of Los Angeles, has recorded almost daily performances,
witnessed only by his camera, in which he uses tape and cardboard
boxes to create mysterious figures that occupy the room with him;
Judith Schaechter makes artwork that is meticulously crafted from
pieces of glass that are cut, sandblasted, fired and soldered together
into a kaleidoscopic array of color and shapes; and aspects of Chemi
Rosado Seijo's multimedia project range from impromptu transformation
of daily newspapers and existing commercial street signage to the
re-mixing and re-broadcast of live radio programs, to the digital
scrambling of television signals. Gerry Snyder's multi-panel oil
painting tells the Biblical story of Lot and his daughters; Rosie
Lee Tompkins' quilt works range in size from barely a foot square
to over ten feet long and are typically made of velvet, cotton and
polyester; the watercolors by the architect Lauretta Vinciarelli
depict spaces occupied by light; the paintings of Ouattara Watts
are amalgams of abstract surfaces, found objects, photographs, painted
texts and numbers; Peter Williams' paintings are layered with interrelated
images and forms that combine to suggest the subtle experience of
human perception and identity. Among the architecture projects included
for the first time in a Biennial are the works of architect Lebbeus
Woods. Called Terrains, these pieces represent artificial landscapes,
neither buildings nor stable structures, embodying a notion of built
form that is in synch with the unpredictable transformations of
the human and natural world. In a first-time effort, organized together
with the Public Art Fund, the Biennial will move outdoors to Central
Park. Five major artist's projects, including four specially commissioned
works, will be shown in the park. These projects, by Keith Edmier,
Kim Sooja, Roxy Paine, Kiki Smith, and Brian Tolle, take advantage
of the unique natural and social dimensions of the park to present
works that are intended as surprising encounters in the flow of
daily life. Roxy Paine's sculpture, for example, is a striking,
50-foot tall, shiny metal tree, while Brian Tolle's project involves
a series of uncanny and unexpected splashes in one of the park's
many ponds. Keith Edmier's work is a monument to the World War II
military service of his two grandfathers. Kiki Smith presents a
group of bronze Sirens and Harpies, creatures that are part-bird
and part-woman, at the Central Park Zoo, and Kim Sooja will present
a new performative work. Also offsite, located in a private apartment
on Spring Street in Soho, the Salon de Fleurus recreates the legendary
Paris salon of Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas. Open to the public
since 1992, during limited hours, and during the Biennial by appointment,
the salon is the work of a group of anonymous artists. The notion
of the salon as a museum of Modernism is being transported to the
Whitney in the form of a display case presenting various elements
of the Spring Street salon, in the manner of a 16th-century curiosity
cabinet. Among the better-known artists in the exhibition are the
Latvian-born artist Vija Celmins, subject of a one-artist show at
the Whitney in 1995, a visionary of the natural world whose latest
work explores the beauty of spider webs; Vera Lutter, known for
her large-scale photographs of urban and industrial scenes; Christian
Marclay, an influential figure in the experimental music scene since
the 1970s, whose sculpture, video and installation work has been
mainly concerned with the relationship of image to sound; Collier
Schorr, whose photography has been engaged for many years with landscape
and portraiture and the ways these classic genres are molded by
gender, sexuality and nationality, and here works with a young German
schoolboy to reconstruct the entirety of Andrew Wyeth's controversial
Helga series; Lorna Simpson, better known for her photography, who
has also produced a significant body of film and video work, and
here presents a video grid of 15 mouths humming the great Rodgers
and Hart tune Easy to Remember as interpreted by John Coltrane;
and Kiki Smith, whose figurative sculptures evoke an ancient world
of supernatural beings. The Biennial also includes works by Josˇ
Alvarez, Sanford Biggers and Jennifer Zackin, Jeremy Blake, Javier
Cambre, Jim Campbell, Vincent Fecteau, Janine Gordon, Rachel Harrison,
Tim Hawkinson, Arturo Herrera, Chris Johanson, John Lea–os, Ari
Marcopoulos, Julie Moos, Erwin Redl, The Rural Studio, Peter Sarkisian,
Chris Ware, Anne Wilson, and John Zurier. Largest representation
ever of film, video, Internet art, sound and performance art The
2002 Biennial Exhibition film and video selections include work
by well-known artists such as Peggy Ahwesh, Robert Beavers, Peter
Campus, Dennis Hopper, Peter Hutton, Ken Jacobs, Andrew Noren, Keith
Sanborn, and Steina (formerly Steina Vasulka), as well as work by
less-known makers such as Bosmat Alon and Tirtza Even, Irit Batsry,
Zoe Beloff, Susan Black, Tony Cokes, Robert Fenz, Glen Fogel, Brian
Frye, David Gatten, Joe Gibbons, Alfred Guzzetti, Diane Kitchen,
Mark LaPore, Bruce McClure, Leighton Pierce, Seth Price, Luis Recoder,
silt (Keith Evans, Christian Farrell, Jeff Warrin), Stom Sogo, Phil
Solomon, Scott Stark, and Fred Worden. "This year's Biennial will
reflect two strong parallel Ń and, in some cases, intertwined Ń
strands in current film and videomaking," said Chrissie Iles, curator
of film and video. "On the one hand, we see an embrace of the latest
digital forms and, on the other, an engagement with hand-made film
processes, film performance, and early forms of film projection.
This year's program will reflect a range of different themes and
genres, including non-traditional documentary, animation, narrative
and abstract cinema, works in 3-D, as well as works that involve
the maker's presence and active participation during exhibition."
In a new video, She Puppet (2001), Peggy Ahwesh explores female
sexuality and power as she looks at the quintessential contemporary
fantasy woman, Lara Croft of Tomb Raider; Irit Batsry's first feature
film, digitally produced and edited, is set in Southern India, and
shifts between documentary, experimental narrative and personal
essay; Robert Beavers, who has been making films since the late
1960s and trained with his longtime partner Gregory Markopoulos,
will present his recent film The Ground (2001), shot on the Greek
island of Hydra, a paean to the beauty of a stonemason's body, a
ruined tower, and the landscape; in Heaven on Earth (2001), Susan
Black depicts the hyper-reality of American suburbia; Tony Cokes
pays homage to the work of Dan Graham and Richard Serra in his videotape
2@ (2000), made with the band SWIPE, of which he is a member; and
in their collaboration, Tirtza Even and Bosmat Alon address the
highly charged subject of the Arab-Israeli conflict in Kayam Al
Hurbano (Existing on Its Ruins) (1999), shot at a Palestinian refugee
camp near Beth-Lehem, and in the surroundings of Hebron. Brian Frye's
film, Oona's Veil (2000), a home-processed, handmade work, revises
Charlie Chaplin's screen test of his adolescent soon-to-be spouse,
Oona O'Neill, the daughter of playwright Eugene O'Neill; Joe Gibbons'
sardonic autobiographical super-8 film and video diaries are an
existential digest of his neuroses; using a hand-made camera-less
process in which conventional photographic techniques are replaced
by physical marking on celluloid, David Gatten's work explores the
materiality of language and the relationship between printed text
and the moving image; trained as an architect, Bruce McClure makes
works about the time-based, three-dimensional properties of light
and projection; and in Angel Beach (2001), Scott Stark uses anonymous
3-D photographs from the 1970s of bikini-clad women on the beaches
of Northern California, editing his appropriated images in the camera,
and exploring the space between the still and the moving image.
Internet art returns Internet art, which made its first Biennial
appearance in the 2000 show, will again be exhibited. Christiane
Paul, adjunct curator of new media arts, noted, "Internet-based
art has become a broad medium, comprising artistic practices that
range from narrative and time-based work to net activism/hacktivism,
tele-robotics, and work that redefines browser conventions. The
Biennial selection is intended to give an impression of the variety
of forms that net art can take and the multiple themes that have
emerged over the years, including data visualization and mapping,
database aesthetics, gaming paradigms, networked communities, agent
technology, and nomadic devices. The Internet is now used by artists
in such a variety of waysŃas a component to an installation, as
a data feed for work that exists only on a hard drive, or as a delivery
mechanism Ń that the term Ōnet art' or ŌWeb-based art' is in constant
flux. The Biennial selections will reflect that flux." Internet
artists to be shown are James Buckhouse (with Holly Brubach), Mary
Flanagan, Benjamin Fry, Lisa Jevbratt/C5, Yael Kanarek, John Klima,
Margot Lovejoy, Mark Napier, Robert Nideffer, and Josh On & Futurefarmers.
The animated characters of the project by James Buckhouse, Tap (2002),
made with Holly Brubach, take on a life of their own, taking lessons,
rehearsing and giving recitals on the Internet and on individual
users' Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) and desktops; Mary Flanagan's
work is a networked computer application that creates a visible,
virtual collective unconscious, collecting bits and pieces of data
from users' hard drives; the core of Yael Kanarek's World of Awe
(2000) is formed by a journal, found on an old laptop in the desert,
that is made up of an original narrative using the ancient genre
of the traveler's tale to explore the virtual world through connections
between storytelling, travel, memory, and technology. John Klima's
EARTH (2001) is a geo-spatial visualization system, representing
a broad range of information about our planet in multiple data layers;
Margot Lovejoy's Turns (2001), made with Hal Eagar, Jon Legere,
Marek Walczak and participants, is a community-building Web site
focused on the idea of collecting and sharing the story of a turning
point in one's life; and They Rule (2001), by Josh On & Futurefarmers,
investigates corporate power-relationships in the US, creating a
site that allows users to browse through maps that are directories
to some of the most powerful American companies. Sound art and performance
art in largest representation ever The Biennial will include performances
throughout the exhibition by the performance and sound artists,
in the galleries and Sculpture Court, as well as offsite. The sound
and performance pieces, including several that combine both at once,
include works by Maryanne Amacher, Archive (Chris Kubick and Anne
Walsh), Gregor Asch (DJ Olive the Audio Janitor), Karin Campbell,
Richard Chartier, Gogol Bordello, Miranda July, Meredith Monk, Tracie
Morris, William Pope.L, Praxis (Brainard Carey and Delia Bajo),
Walid Ra'ad/The Atlas Group, Marina Rosenfeld, Stephen Vitiello,
and Zhang Huan. Sound pieces will be presented in the Anne & Joel
Ehrenkranz Lobby Gallery in a specially designed "surround sound"
installation room, an environment for sound immersion. Biennial
sound pieces range from minimalist compositions to language-based
narrative works to instrumental experimentations to works based
on site-recordings, including a piece done by Stephen Vitiello that
is a soundscape (created beginning in 1999, while he was participating
in the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's artist-in-residence program),
in which he recorded sound from his 91st floor studio in the World
Trade Center. "Previous Biennials have included sound art and performance
pieces, but this year we are stepping up our commitment to these
areas with a concentrated selection from around the country that
will resonate closely with the works in other media," said Debra
Singer, associate curator of contemporary art. "Sound art in particular
is an area that has grown exponentially over the past two years,
which makes this the right moment to provide a significant place
for it in the Biennial." "A number of performance works seem to
be coming from a younger generation strongly influenced by Fluxus,"
noted Singer. "The works often involve political content, several
reflecting immigrant perspectives, and they often address issues
of vulnerability and endurance." Among the sound artists in the
Biennial is Archive, a Los Angeles-based collaboration between Chris
Kubick and Anne Walsh that gives a "voice" to deceased artists,
interviewing them through sˇances conducted by professional psychics.
Their Biennial work, Art After Death: Joseph Cornell (2001-02) will
present a CD of posthumous interviews with Cornell done in private
sˇances in the Museum's galleries and outside of the artist's former
home in Queens. In her multi-channel sound installation for the
2002 Biennial, Maryanne Amacher dynamically circulates the sound
around the room, allowing listeners to perceive the spatial dimensions
and sensorial presence of acoustic experience. A pioneering figure
in the international experimental DJ scene, Gregor Asch (DJ Olive
the Audio Janitor), mixes recordings of ordinary urban noises with
samples of existing music and creating highly distinctive audio
collages that cross musical genres. Marina Rosenfeld's new sound
installation for the Biennial is composed from recorded traces of
live performances by her sheer frost orchestra project, a group
of women who make music with nail polish bottles while kneeling
before their floor-bound stringed instruments. Miranda July will
be represented by a video interweaving four unsettling plots, and
by a sound installation using fragments of conversation, music and
sound effects, which will play in the Museum's main elevator. For
her Biennial piece, Karin Campbell explores the dynamics of social
interactions, sitting still in a chair in the middle of a gallery
with her eyes closed, cartoon-like eyes boldly painted on her eyelids,
ignored or engaged by the visitors around her; the performance group
Gogol Bordello combines eclectic sounds, ritualistic acts and circus
antics, staging theatrical music events with chaotic abandon and
creating a genre they describe as "Ukrainian gypsy punk cabaret";
and Tracie Morris, a multi-disciplinary performance poet, blends
traditional literary forms, including haiku, with popular musical
forms like hip-hop, funk, rock, jazz and ambient music. A key figure
on the scene since the early 1990s, Morris will present a new sound
poem, composed for the Biennial. Praxis (Delia Bajo and Brainard
Carey), a two-person art and performance collaborative, uses their
storefront East Village studio to stage weekly afternoon events,
offering such services as foot washes, hugs, Band-Aid applications,
and gifts of one-dollar bills. Through direct, intimate interactions
with the public, their New Economy Project (1999-2002) recalls the
activities of the Fluxus artists, who staged simple events aimed
at erasing the boundaries between art and life. Two artists who
also make extraordinary use of their own bodies will be part of
the exhibition. William Pope.L has enacted more than 40 performances
he calls Crawl pieces in such cities as Boston, Budapest, and Prague.
For the Biennial, he embarks on his longest crawl to date, which
will take five years, conducted in segments. Dressed in a capeless
Superman suit and with an ergonomic skateboard that allows him to
rest on his back while traveling forward, he will trek 22 miles,
starting at the Statue of Liberty and traversing the entire length
of Manhattan along Broadway, ending at the far side of the University
Heights bridge in the Bronx. Zhang Huan draws on personal experience
to stage physically arduous performances that use the naked body
as a vehicle to comment on social realities, often addressing the
repression of artistic freedom in his homeland of China. Part of
a young group of Chinese artists who responded to the Tiananmen
Square massacre in 1989 by abandoning traditional art forms in favor
of more experimental media, Zhang's radical performances, nearly
always requiring him to submit his naked body to extreme duress,
merge Western dance and theater traditions with elements borrowed
from eastern religions. Bucksbaum Award to be given for a second
time For the second time, The Bucksbaum Award, the largest award
in the world given to support the work of a living artist, will
be presented to one of those included in the exhibition. At the
last Biennial, it was conferred on Paul Pfeiffer, whose highly anticipated
new video works go on view at the Whitney in mid-December. Endowed
through the beneficence of trustee Melva Bucksbaum and her family,
The Bucksbaum Award is given by the Whitney every two years to an
artist in the Biennial. It includes a grant of $100,000, a two-year
artist-in-residency at the Museum, and an exhibition in the Whitney's
Contemporary Series. The 2002 Bucksbaum Award jury is composed of:
Agnes Gund, President and Trustee, The Museum of Modern Art; Olukemi
Ilesanmi, Curatorial Assistant, Visual Arts Department, Walker Art
Center; Linda Norden, the Barbara Lee Associate Curator of Contemporary
Art, Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University; Maxwell L. Anderson, Director
of the Whitney; and Lawrence Rinder, Anne & Joel Ehrenkranz Curator
of Contemporary Art at the Whitney. Public Programming and Catalogue
Extend Access to the Exhibition Public programming for the 2002
Biennial Exhibition is intended to extend access to the exhibition
through symposia, conversations with artists and curators, and interpretive
materials. Programs will be announced at a later date. The 2002
Biennial Exhibition catalogue features an introduction by curator
Lawrence Rinder; a comprehensive artists' plate section with accompanying
texts; artists' biographies; and a list of works in the exhibition.
The book's design is by J. Abbott Miller/Pentagram. It is being
published by the Whitney Museum of American Art and distributed
by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Advisors from across the country helped
guide the curators of the 2002 Biennial. They are: Bonnie Clearwater,
Director and Chief Curator, Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami; Steve
Dietz, Curator of New Media, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; James
Elaine, Curator, Hammer Projects, UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles;
Mark McElhatten, independent curator, New York City; Peter Taub,
Director of Performance, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; and
Hamza Walker, Education Director, The Renaissance Society, Chicago.
Following is a list of artists participating in the 2002 Biennial
Exhibition: Peggy Ahwesh Bosmat Alon Josˇ Alvarez Maryanne Amacher
Archive Gregor Asch (DJ Olive the Audio Janitor) Irit Batsry Robert
Beavers Zoe Beloff Sanford Biggers Susan Black Jeremy Blake AA Bronson
James Buckhouse Javier Cambre Jim Campbell Karin Campbell Peter
Campus Vija Celmins Chan Chao Richard Chartier Tony Cokes Stephen
Dean Destroy All Monsters Collective Keith Edmier Tirtza Even Omer
Fast Vincent Fecteau Ken Feingold Robert Fenz Mary Flanagan Glen
Fogel Forcefield Benjamin Fry Brian Frye David Gatten Joe Gibbons
Luis Gispert Gogol Bordello Janine Gordon Alfred Guzzetti Trenton
Doyle Hancock Rachel Harrison Tim Hawkinson Arturo Herrera Evan
Holloway Dennis Hopper Peter Hutton Ken Jacobs Christian Jankowski
Lisa Jevbratt/C5 Yun-Fei Ji Chris Johanson Miranda July Yael Kanarek
Margaret Kilgallen Kim Sooja Diane Kitchen John Klima Mark LaPore
Robert Lazzarini John Lea–os Margot Lovejoy Vera Lutter Christian
Marclay Ari Marcopoulos Bruce McClure Conor McGrady Meredith Monk
Julie Moos Tracie Morris Mark Napier Robert Nideffer Andrew Noren
Josh On & Futurefarmers Roxy Paine Hirsch Perlman Leighton Pierce
William Pope.L Praxis Seth Price Walid Ra'ad/The Atlas Group Luis
Recoder Erwin Redl Marina Rosenfeld The Rural Studio Salon de Fleurus
Keith Sanborn Peter Sarkisian Judith Schaechter Collier Schorr Chemi
Rosado Seijo silt Lorna Simpson Kiki Smith Gerry Snyder Stom Sogo
Phil Solomon Scott Stark Steina Brian Tolle Rosie Lee Tompkins Lauretta
Vinciarelli Stephen Vitiello Chris Ware Ouattara Watts Peter Williams
Anne Wilson Lebbeus Woods Fred Worden Jennifer Zackin Zhang Huan
John Zurier Brief History of the Biennial The Biennial, now regarded
as the signature exhibition of the Whitney Museum, has evolved into
the premier showcase for the most important recent work made by
American artists, from the established to the unknown. Heralded
for its artistic innovation and inevitable controversy, the Biennial
epitomizes the Whitney's mission to foster the advancement of new
American art. The prototype for the Biennial debuted soon after
Whitney Museum founder Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, herself an artist,
opened the Whitney Studio Club in Greenwich Village in 1918. In
those early years, American artists were struggling to free themselves
from the prevailing art and culture of Europe. The Studio Club was
intended as an alternative space where these artists could gather
and display their works in annual survey exhibitions. These small,
early versions of the Biennial created the first major public forum
for contemporary American art, as well as a means for the advancement
and assimilation of modernism into the predominantly realist tradition
of American art. Many artists who would later be counted among the
most important figures in 20th-century American art had their first
exhibition opportunities at the Whitney, including Milton Avery,
Philip Guston, Edward Hopper, and Georgia O'Keeffe. In 1931 the
Whitney Museum of American Art opened to the public. Mrs. Whitney
introduced the Biennial in 1932; unlike other museum exhibitions,
it disallowed juries or awards. That same year the Museum established
an acquisition fund for purchases from each Biennial exhibition.
The early Biennials alternated painting with sculpture and works
on paper; selections were made, at first, by the artists and then
by curators. In 1937, the program was changed to Annual exhibitions
of separate media (painting displayed in the fall, and sculpture
and other media in the spring). Many artists who were already represented
in the permanent collection, such as Stuart Davis, Hopper, Reginald
Marsh and John Sloan, continued to exhibit their works in each Annual
exhibition until their deaths. In 1973 the current program of Biennials
of combined media was instated. Video art was introduced in 1975,
and film in 1979; 2000 marked the introduction of Internet art.
Visitor Information The museum is located at 945 Madison Avenue,
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WHITNEY or visit www.whitney.org. About the Whitney The Whitney
Museum of American Art is the leading advocate of 20th and 21st-century
American art. Founded in 1930, the Museum's holdings have grown
to include nearly 13,000 works of art by more than 1,900 artists.
The Permanent Collection is the preeminent collection of 20th-century
American art and includes the entire artistic estate of Edward Hopper,
as well as significant works by Marsh, Calder, Gorky, Hartley, O'Keeffe,
Rauschenberg, Reinhardt and Johns among other artists. Current and
Upcoming Exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art: Arturo
Herrera: Before We Leave Through December 9, 2001 Alex Katz: Small
Paintings Through December 2, 2001 Charles Burchfield: Works on
Paper Through February 10, 2002 Into the Light: Projected Image
1964-77 Through January 27, 2002 Burt Barr: Projections Through
January 27, 2002 Jacob Lawrence Through February 3, 2002 Paul Pfeiffer
December 13, 2001ŠFebruary 25, 2002 Dancer: 1999 Nudes by Irving
Penn January 12-May 1
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