America Is Hard to See

May 1–Sept 27, 2015


All

23 / 23

Previous Next

Course of Empire

23

Indecipherable Asian lettering and graffiti has overtaken the industrial edifice crouched beneath an acrid sky in Ed Ruscha’s painting The Old Tool & Die Building from his series Course of Empire. This title owes to Thomas Cole’s mid-nineteenth century cycle of allegorical canvases chronicling the rise of a triumphant civilization and its decline into war and desolation. In Ruscha’s ominous 2004 retelling, an American factory has fallen into the hands of new owners and been defaced by vandals, serving as an emblem of a changed world order. 

The first decades of the twenty-first century have seen American society and politics increasingly fractured and the country’s once dominant stature challenged around the globe. Artists have registered these changes, whether responding to the tragedy of September 11, 2001; wars in the Middle East; the financial calamity of 2008; or the ravages of climate change as evidenced by Hurricane Katrina. Dystopian imagined landscapes abound in this chapter where Ruscha’s canvas joins Mark Bradford’s tempestuous panorama and Carroll Dunham’s post-apocalyptic wilderness, while other works contain more specific responses to real world events. 

Yet amid this anxiety and skepticism, hopeful glimmers emerge. The country’s first black president shares a tender moment with his wife in Elizabeth Peyton’s painting Barack and Michelle, and Glenn Ligon’s neon relief summons a country that is, in his words, at once a “shining beacon” and a “dark star.” Ligon rotated each of the black-painted letters in the word “AMERICA” to face the wall so that it simultaneously addresses us and turns away. His splintering icon poetically captures the ambivalent sense of identification and alienation that the country so often inspires. A sense of gleaming promise is shadowed by doubt.

Below is a selection of works from this chapter.

Back

11 / 12

Previous Next

ALEKSANDRA MIR (B. 1967), OSAMA, 2007

Installation view Osama, (2007), Fiber tipped pen on paper, two parts, Sheet (each): 75 × 59in. (190.5 × 149.9 cm) by Aleksandra Mir. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Purchase, with funds from the Drawing Committee  2010.170a–b. © Aleksandra Mir

Aleksandra Mir’s Osama comprises two large-scale, cartoonlike versions of New York Post and Daily Newscovers. When Mir made these works in 2007, Osama bin Laden was infamous for his role as the mastermind behind the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Originally published in 1998, these two newspaper issues feature eerily prescient headlines, as the Al Qaeda leader warned in the wake of U.S. attacks in Afghanistan and Sudan the “worst is yet to come,” and “the war has just started.”

Mir’s drawings come from a project titled Newsroom 1986–2000. After scouring ten thousand New York Postand Daily News issues, the artist selected groupings based on recurring topics. Then, for a six-week period in 2007, Mir turned a Manhattan gallery into an imitation newsroom, studio, and performance space, where she worked publicly with a group of other artists to make drawings that undercut the fleeting nature of tabloid news.


Artists


Explore works from this exhibition
in the Whitney's collection

View 648 works

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

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.