An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940–2017

Aug 18, 2017–Aug 27, 2018

Black and white photograph of protesters with black rectangles covering their signs.
Black and white photograph of protesters with black rectangles covering their signs.

Annette Lemieux (b. 1957), Black Mass, 1991. Latex, acrylic, and oil on canvas, 95 13/16 × 105 × 1 13/16 in. (243.4 × 266.7 × 4.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; promised gift of Emily Fisher Landau P.2010.173. © Annette Lemieux

Through the lens of the Whitney’s collection, An Incomplete History of Protest looks at how artists from the 1940s to the present have confronted the political and social issues of their day. Whether making art as a form of activism, criticism, instruction, or inspiration, the featured artists see their work as essential to challenging established thought and creating a more equitable culture. Many have sought immediate change, such as ending the war in Vietnam or combating the AIDS crisis. Others have engaged with protest more indirectly, with the long term in mind, hoping to create new ways of imagining society and citizenship.

Since its founding in the early twentieth century, the Whitney has served as a forum for the most urgent art and ideas of the day, at times attracting protest itself. An Incomplete History of Protest, however, is by name and necessity a limited account. No exhibition can approximate the activism now happening in the streets and online, and no collection can account fully for the methodological, stylistic, and political diversity of artistic address. Instead, the exhibition offers a sequence of historical case studies focused on particular moments and themes—from questions of representation to the fight for civil rights—that remain relevant today. At the root of the exhibition is the belief that artists play a profound role in transforming their time and shaping the future.

An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940–2017 is organized by David Breslin, DeMartini Family Curator and Director of the Collection; Jennie Goldstein, assistant curator; and Rujeko Hockley, assistant curator; with David Kiehl, curator emeritus; and Margaret Kross, curatorial assistant.

Major support for An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940‒2017 is provided by The American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc., Leonard A. Lauder, President.

Significant support is provided by the Ford Foundation.


Spaces and Predicaments

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Included in the exhibition are two artists who chose personal, oblique, and allusive means to question how social spaces are made, engaged, and controlled. Although working abstractly, Senga Nengudi and Melvin Edwards explore how space can be considered in relation to gender and race. 

Made from nylon hosiery, a material that strongly suggests skin, Senga Nengudi’s Internal I (1977) evokes the resilience and fragility of the female body upon entering—and being defined by— society. Its bilaterally symmetrical form calls to mind a human figure that has been brutally stretched and flayed. 

Constructed from barbed wire, Melvin Edwards’s Pyramid Up and Down Pyramid (1969) was included in his one-person exhibition at the Whitney in 1970. The work’s material connotes prisons, animal pens, and physical pain within the vocabulary of minimal sculpture. The artist David Hammons remarked of Edwards’s work in the 1970 Whitney exhibition: “That was the first abstract piece of art that I saw that had cultural value in it for Black people. I couldn’t believe that piece when I saw it because I didn’t think you could make abstract art with a message.” Edwards himself said: “All systems have proven to be inadequate. I am now assuming that there are no limits and even if there are I can give no guarantees that they will contain my spirit and its search for a way to modify the spaces and predicaments in which I find myself.”

Melvin Edwards (b. 1937), Pyramid Up and Down Pyramid, 1969

Barbed wire spread across a white gallery, creating two pyramid shapes.
Barbed wire spread across a white gallery, creating two pyramid shapes.

Melvin Edwards (b. 1937), Pyramid Up and Down Pyramid, 1969 (re-fabricated 2017) (installation view, Whitney Museum of American Art). Barbed wire, dimensions in situ. Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee. Photograph by Ron Amstutz


Artists





Audio guides

Black and white photograph of protesters with black rectangles covering their signs.
Black and white photograph of protesters with black rectangles covering their signs.

Annette Lemieux (b. 1957), Black Mass, 1991. Latex, acrylic, and oil on canvas, 95 13/16 × 105 × 1 13/16 in. (243.4 × 266.7 × 4.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; promised gift of Emily Fisher Landau P.2010.173. © Annette Lemieux

“I make revolutionary art to propel history forward. I’m a visual artist.”
—Dread Scott

Hear directly from artists including Dread Scott, and Senga Nengudi as they discuss their work in An Incomplete History of Protest: Selections from the Whitney’s Collection, 1940–2017. Listen to additional commentary from curators on selected highlights from the exhibition.

View guide


Explore works from this exhibition
in the Whitney's collection

View 213 works

In the News

"An Incomplete History of Protest examines how artists have become activists in order to help create a better future.” 
The Guardian

“Get To Know An Incomplete History Of Protest at the Whitney” 
NYLON

“The Whitney Museum’s latest exhibition takes a creative approach to political and social activism, and how the past can inform the present.”
WWD

“At the root of the exhibition is the belief that artists play a profound role in transforming their time and shaping the future.”
blouinartinfo


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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