Performance
Upcoming performances at the Whitney.
Nov 22, 2024
Nov 23, 2024
Nov 24, 2024
Dec 13, 2024
Dec 14, 2024
Dec 15, 2024
Dec 21, 2024
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Jan 17, 2025
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Jan 26, 2025
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History of Performance at the Whitney
Early Performances
The Whitney’s vibrant, long-standing history of performing arts can be traced to museum founder Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. She played a critical role in the experimental music circles of the 1920s, actively supporting such musical pioneers as Edgard Varèse, Carl Ruggles, and Carlos Salzedo, and their International Composers’ Guild. Her influence could still be felt when the Whitney first formally began presenting music in its galleries in the 1960s. Far from viewing these events as a departure from its fields of activity in the visual arts, the Museum embraced performance in its many iterations--including music, dance, theatre, multimedia, and other cross-genre work--as an integral part of its mandate to nurture and support American artists, and to commission and present new work. This pioneering approach was evident in the Museum’s initial series, which showcased experimental jazz composers and included performances by innovators such as Gil Evans, Jimmy Giuffre, and the Modern Jazz Quartet.
By the 1970s, the Whitney regularly held a full range of performing arts events in the second floor gallery of the Breuer Building. Performers included Ornette Coleman, Sonny Rollins, Cecil Taylor, Aaron Copland, Steve Reich, John Cage, Duke Ellington, Eubie Blake, Meredith Monk, Terry Reilly, Laurie Anderson, Philip Glass, and many others. Particularly memorable were the performances by Trisha Brown, whose dance troupe walked on the gallery walls, and Duke Ellington, whose final piano recital was captured in the recording Duke Ellington Live at the Whitney.
Performances on 42nd
In the 1970s and ‘80s, the Whitney opened several branch locations in Lower Manhattan, Midtown, and Stamford, Connecticut. In the 1980s, the performing arts program migrated from the Breuer Building to the longest running of the branches, the Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria (formerly known as Philip Morris Companies) on 42nd Street, directly across from Grand Central Station.
In the hundreds of performances that took place at Whitney at Altria, artists working in music, dance, performance art, theater, and the realms in between, produced large-scale, fully staged work. Located at a dense urban intersection, the glass-enclosed public space, essentially the lobby of a corporate office building, encouraged interaction with passers-by, tourists, and commuters during both rehearsals and performances.
For the length of its existence, Performance on 42nd assumed a significant presence in the New York City performing arts landscape. Performances were free of charge and featured emerging artists, multidisciplinary programs and many new and commissioned works and works-in-progress. A short list of performers includes Joan Jonas, John Zorn, Olu Dara and the Okra Orchestra, Wendy Perron Dance Company, The Wooster Group, Christian Marclay, Savion Glover, DJ Olive, Stephen Vitiello, Dean Moss, Ethel, Cynthia Hopkins, Lisa D’Amour & Katie Pearl, Todd Reynolds, Phil Kline, Liza Jessie Peterson, nicholasleichterdance, Praxis Studio, and Judith Sanchez Ruiz.
The Altria branch closed in January 2008 after twenty-five years in operation. The final performance, on May 4, 2007, featured Electric Kompany, Margaret Lancaster, the Meehan-Perkins Percussion Duo, and Kathleen Supove as part of a three-day festival of work by Dutch composer JacobTV.
Whitney Live
Launched in October 2006, Whitney Live represented the next stage in the museum’s commitment to the performing arts: a series highlighting the intersection of performance and installation. The inaugural event, Steve Reich @ the Whitney, reprised and reinvented the presence of music in the Breuer Building. Reich arranged the instruments, equipment, and musicians as they would be in a gallery rather than a concert hall; visitors were invited to enter the space, wander around at will, and stay for some of the music, experiencing the entire installation up-close. The end result was more environmental sound sculpture than concert. The performance also underscored the museum’s extraordinary history with Reich, which stretches back to his participation, along with twenty-two other artists including Philip Glass, Carl Andre, and Richard Serra, in the 1969 exhibition Anti-Illusion: Procedures/Materials.
Past Performances
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2016
Cecil Taylor: Words and Music
Apr 23, 2016
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Concert: Chris Funkhouser, Tracie Morris and Susie Ibarra, Fred Moten, Ensemble Muntu
Apr 22, 2016
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Performance:
A Rat’s Mass (1967)Apr 21, 2016
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Poetry and Music: Steve Dalachinsky, Clark Coolidge and Michael Bisio, Henry Grimes and Nathaniel Mackey
Apr 21, 2016
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Poetry and Music: A.B. Spellman, Anne Waldman and Devin Brahja Waldman, Min Tanaka and Tony Oxley
Apr 20, 2016
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Concert: Andrew Cyrille, Enrico Rava and William Parker
Apr 16, 2016
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Performance: Min Tanaka
Apr 16, 2016
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Conversation:
Cecil Taylor and DanceApr 16, 2016
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Concert: Tristan Honsinger, Harri Sjöström, and Okkyung Lee; Thulani Davis, Cheryl Banks-Smith and Henry Grimes
Apr 15, 2016
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Cecil Taylor, Tony Oxley, and Min Tanaka in Concert
Apr 14, 2016
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The Necks and Arnold Dreyblatt
Mar 25, 2016
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The Necks and Alvin Curran
Mar 24, 2016
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Felix Bernstein:
Bieber Bathos ElegyJan 15, 2016
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2015
Matana Roberts presents:
red, white and blue(s), a sound quilt of sorts featuring her New Year’s Eve Back Room 12tetDec 31, 2015
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Seth Price:
A Reading from his New Novel followed by a Conversation with Charline von HeylNov 20, 2015
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New Theater: Apartment (Mother Courage)
Oct 17, 2015
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Takehisa Kosugi: Music Expanded, Program 2
Sept 13, 2015
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Takehisa Kosugi: Music Expanded, Program 1
Sept 12, 2015
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Matana Roberts: i call america
Aug 5, 2015
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DANCENOISE: Films
July 26, 2015
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DANCENOISE: Show
July 23, 2015
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King Tut’s Wah Wah Hut
July 22, 2015
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DANCENOISE: Don’t Look Back
July 22, 2015
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Matana Roberts: i call america
July 19, 2015
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Complete Studies for Player Piano: A Marathon Concert Event
June 28, 2015
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Alarm Will Sound: Study #36
June 27, 2015
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Nancarrow Deconstructed with Alarm Will Sound
June 27, 2015
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Alarm Will Sound
June 26, 2015
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Henry Kaiser and Lukas Ligeti, with Charles Amirkhanian
June 25, 2015
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Conlon Nancarrow: Player piano on view
June 25, 2015