Whitney Biennial 2022: 
Quiet as It’s Kept

Apr 6–Oct 16, 2022


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Aria Dean

17

Floor 5

Born 1993 in Los Angeles, CA
Lives in New York, NY

Aria Dean began Little Island by putting a digital model of a monolith through a collision simulation and then rendering the impact as a physical sculptural form. She fabricated the work in chromakey green, which is the color of greenscreens—film backgrounds that allow separately filmed imagery to be added during post production. In some ways, the work recalls the anti-illusionism of 1960s minimalist sculptures—often monoliths—in which materiality was meant to be the only meaning. Resting on a pedestal in the form of an ionic column, Dean’s monolith puts this history in quotes, as the artist fundamentally shifts the terms of the question: “If reality might be illusions all the way down to the very core of it, then what would an object be that sits correctly within that conception of things?”

Little Island/Gut Punch, 2022

A crushed metal-like object with a ball attached to the midsection.
A crushed metal-like object with a ball attached to the midsection.

Aria Dean, Little Island/Gut Punch, 2022. Sculpture. Collection of the artist; courtesy the artist; Greene Naftali, New York; and Chateau Shatto, Los Angeles. Photograph by Ron Amstutz


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