Teen Event: Collected
Mar 10, 2016

A teen project at the Whitney
A teen project at the Whitney

Teens in the Susan and John Hess Theater, February 2016. Photograph by Andrew Kist

On Friday, February 26, Youth Insights Leaders hosted Collected, an event for New York City high school teens in conjunction with Collected by Thea Westreich Wagner and Ethan Wagner, an exhibition celebrating American and international work from the 1960s to the present day. Leaders guided interactive gallery activities, performances, and art-making projects, including a collaborative cut-up poetry collage inspired by the exhibiting artists’ use of text and appropriation. 

Youth Insights Leaders play a major role in designing and implementing teen events. Leaders visited the exhibition on several occasions to prepare for Collected. Teen Programs staff Sasha Wortzel and Dyeemah Simmons led inquiry based tours with the Leaders, focusing on works in the exhibition that addressed different forms of appropriation. Leaders chose specific objects and worked in small groups to research and brainstorm ways they could engage other teens in learning about the works. They came up with activities, practiced them with each other in the galleries, and exchanged feedback for the projects. 

Students work on an art project with wires
Students work on an art project with wires

Teens create wire profiles of their faces, February 2016. Photograph by Andrew Kist

One gallery project was based on a self-portrait by artist Alex Israel. Teens were asked to think about branding themselves and what that might look like. Then they were instructed to write down words that described their branded selves, and to create a profile of their face using sculpture wire. They traced their wire profile onto the paper with their written words and erased the words outside of the traced image to produce both a drawing and a sculpture.

A reading by a student in a gallery
A reading by a student in a gallery

A teen reads a written continuous text message, February 2016. Photograph by Andrew Kist

Another project was based on an untitled word painting by Christopher Wool. Teens first tried reading the words in the painting out loud, and then found a recent text message on their phone. They wrote down the text message as a continuous stream of words with no punctuation in the style of the painting, and then asked another teen to read their written message over a microphone. Each person read differently, occasionally mixing and scrambling the unpunctuated words. 

A group leader reads in the exhibition
A group leader reads in the exhibition

Teen Leader Auri reads from selected texts in the galleries, February 2016. Photograph by Andrew Kist

In front of Matias Faldbakken’s Untitled (Locker Sculpture #01), 2010, Teen Leader Auri read selected texts by authors such as French philosopher Michel Foucault and American writer Audre Lorde to investigate how artists can be subversive within an institution.

Here are more images of the event. All photographs by Andrew Kist. 

  • Teens working together

    Teens engaged in a gallery activity.

  • A group project

    Teens write down words that describe their branded selves.

  • A live reading by a teen

    A teen reads a written continuous text message.

  • Students sit in the museum

    Teens listen to gallery project instructions.

  • Students sit in the open gallery space

    Teens in the exhibition Open Plan: Andrea Fraser.

  • Teens working on a group project

    Cut up poetry project in the Susan and John Hess Theater.

  • Poetry artwork on the wall

    Detail, cut-up poetry project.

  • Students announce the winners

    Teens hand out prizes after a raffle.

Sasha Wortzel, Coordinator of Teen Programs commented about the event: “While many teens participated in the collage activity in the theater, they spent the most time exploring the galleries, starting with the Collected by Thea Westreich Wagner and Ethan Wagner exhibition, and then moving to other spaces in the Museum. We like to envision the Laurie M. Tisch Education Center as a “home base” for the teens, but we also encourage more exploration of the galleries.”

Learn more about teen programs here.

Dina Helal, Manager of Education Resources

On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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