The eighty-first edition of the Whitney Biennial—the longest-running survey of contemporary art in the United States—features seventy-one artists and two collectives grappling with many of today’s most pressing issues. This Biennial is like being inside a “dissonant chorus,’ as participating artist Ligia Lewis described it, a provocative yet intimate experience of distinct and disparate voices that collectively probe the cracks and fissures of the unfolding moment.
The exhibition’s subtitle, Even Better Than the Real Thing, acknowledges that Artificial Intelligence (AI) is complicating our understanding of what is real, and rhetoric around gender and authenticity is being used politically and legally to perpetuate transphobia and restrict bodily autonomy. These developments are part of a long history of deeming people of marginalized race, gender, and ability as subhuman—less than real. In making this exhibition, we committed to amplifying the voices of artists who are confronting these legacies, and to providing a space where difficult ideas can be engaged and considered.
This Biennial is a gathering of artists who explore the permeability of the relationships between mind and body, the fluidity of identity, and the growing precariousness of the natural and constructed worlds around us. Whether through subversive humor, expressive abstraction, or non-Western forms of cosmological thinking, to name but a few of their methods, these artists demonstrate that there are pathways to be found, strategies of coping and healing to be discovered, and ways to come together even in a fractured time.
The 2024 Whitney Biennial is organized by Chrissie Iles, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Curator and Meg Onli, Curator at Large, with Min Sun Jeon and Beatriz Cifuentes. The performance program is organized by Iles and Onli, with guest curator Taja Cheek. The film program is organized by Iles and Onli, with guest curators Korakrit Arunanondchai, asinnajaq, Greg de Cuir Jr, and Zackary Drucker.
Whitney Biennial Picks a ‘Dissonant Chorus’ of Artists to Probe Turbulent Times
The New York Times
Jan 25, 2024
Jan 25, 2024
A Look at the 2024 Whitney Biennial Through the Lens of the 1993 Edition
Observer
Aug 6, 2024
Aug 6, 2024
81st Whitney Biennial, “Even Better Than the Real Thing”
e-flux
Mar 30, 2024
Mar 30, 2024
Was the Vision for the 2024 Whitney Biennial ‘Better Than the Real Thing’?
Cultured
Mar 13, 2024
Mar 13, 2024
First Impressions From the 2024 Whitney Biennial
Hyperallergic
Mar 14, 2024
Mar 14, 2024
A Blazing, Brilliant Whitney Biennial Heralds a New Kind of Body Art
ARTNews
Mar 13, 2024
Mar 13, 2024
Dozens of Artists, 3 Critics: Who’s Afraid of the Whitney Biennial 2024?
The New York Times
Mar 13, 2024
Mar 13, 2024
The 2024 Whitney Biennial in five key themes
The Art Newspaper
Mar 21, 2024
Mar 21, 2024
Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing
The Brooklyn Rail
Apr 4, 2024
Apr 4, 2024
Not all is quiet on the American-art front
4Columns
Apr 5, 2024
Apr 5, 2024
Carmen Winant’s Powerful Homage to Abortion Care Workers
aperture
Jul 11, 2024
Jul 11, 2024
Picturing Abortion: A Conversation With Carmen Winant
Whitney Museum of American Art
Jul 19, 2024
Jul 19, 2024
Interview: Charisse Pearlina Weston by Zoë Hopkins
BOMB
Jul 29, 2024
Jul 29, 2024