INITIAL THOUGHTS AND HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE 2019 WHITNEY BIENNIAL

Zachary Small, HYPERALLERGIC, May 15, 2019

The 2019 Whitney Biennial is about the state of American culture and how contemporary artists are responding to the conditions of living in a country with increasingly inequitable social stratifications.

Curators Jane Panetta and Rujeko Hockley have overrun the Whitney Museum with an exhibition of archaeological proportions; history has become the artist’s primary medium. The past is an anchor excavated, polished, and re-presented as something startlingly new. The triumph of Trumpianism has forced artists to reexamine their own estrangement from broader culture. And although postmodern pedagogy often demands that we displace dominant narratives or overturn them completely, artists today are finding their way back to center in a reassertion of their control over this country’s peripatetic sense of self.

Humor is an important tactic for the artist’s insurrection, allowing them to destabilize hierarchies of power without becoming as combative as the institutions they seek to dismantle.

Prominently featured on the sixth floor, Martine Syms leads the charge with an installation called “People Who Aren’t Friends or Lovers or Exes” (2019), which includes her video “Intro to Threat Modeling” (2017). Narrating through emails, screengrabs, and a digital avatar, the artist outlines the concept of “threat modeling” — a process of identifying risks to determine the utmost threat to one’s own security. The Los Angeles-based artist’s work often takes aim at Black stereotypes and how people of color relate to them, sussing out the psycho-mechanics of these interactions through a conceptual framework. Here, she approaches the topic with comedic zest, roleplaying into some of these tropes to show how ridiculous they are.

The sculptor Ilana Harris-Babou is another standout artist at the biennial, where the Brooklyn native is showing a trio of satirical films exploring the relationship between race, politics, and consumerism. “Reparation Hardware” (2018) is a delightfully smarmy sendup of the luxury furniture brand Restoration Hardware. Onscreen, a cow urinates as the artist describes searching the land for America’s most authentic histories. Harris-Babou paws a weathered piece of wood, saying that she admires how it can be a physical marker of the past. Later, she speaks about 40 acres and a mule, asking what reparations would actually look like as she smashes nails into a plank with a clay-clodded hammer.

Nicole Eisenman brings her oddball comedy to the Whitney’s terrace, where a parade of downtrodden cartoons mope across the city skyline. “Procession” (2019) includes a variety of sculptures languishing in the outdoor elements. Some are made of yarn and burlap; others consist of cotton duck, butcher’s wax, and sand. The cohort includes a lazy bald eagle lounging in a crate and a character that the wall text simply describes as a “Man at the Center of Men” (2019).

Elsewhere, Jeffrey Gibson has hung large textiles from the ceiling with text on them stating “stand your ground” and “people like us.” The Native American artist pulls from his heritage in his works, combining a variety of aesthetics and fabrics (sequins, quilts, fringes, etc.) into whimsical celebrations of solidarity. Nearby, the artist Christine Sun Kim displays a variety of charcoal drawings representing the different degrees to which she experiences “deaf rage,” the frustration of a deaf person who must navigate through a world that privileges able-bodied individuals.

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