Shifting Landscapes

Through Jan 2026

Vehicles driving through a dimly lit tunnel with blurred lights creating a sense of motion.
Vehicles driving through a dimly lit tunnel with blurred lights creating a sense of motion.

Jane Dickson, Heading in—Lincoln Tunnel 3, 2003. Oil on Astroturf, 33 × 46 × 2 3/8 in. (83.8 × 116.8 × 6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Eve Ahearn and Joseph Ahearn 2017.275. © Jane Dickson

On view
Floor 6

Open: Nov 1, 2024–Jan 2026

While the landscape genre has long been associated with picturesque vistas, Shifting Landscapes considers a more expansive interpretation of the category, exploring how evolving political, ecological, and social issues motivate artists as they attempt to represent the world around them. Drawn from the Whitney’s collection, the exhibition features works from the 1960s to the present and is organized according to distinct thematic sections. Some of these coalesce around material and conceptual affinities: sculptural assemblages formed from locally sourced objects, ecofeminist approaches to land art, and the legacies of documentary landscape photography. Others are tied to specific geographies, such as the frenzied cityscape of modern New York or the experimental filmmaking scene of 1970s Los Angeles. Still others show how artists invent fantastic new worlds where humans, animals, and the land become one. Whether depicting the effects of industrialization on the environment, grappling with the impact of geopolitical borders, or proposing imagined spaces as a way of destabilizing the concept of a “natural” world, the works gathered here bring ideas of land and place into focus, foregrounding how we shape and are shaped by the spaces around us.

Shifting Landscapes is organized by Jennie Goldstein, Jennifer Rubio Associate Curator of the Collection; Marcela Guerrero, DeMartini Family Curator; Roxanne Smith, Senior Curatorial Assistant; with Angelica Arbelaez, Rubio Butterfield Family Fellow; with thanks to Araceli Bremauntz-Enriquez and J. English Cook for research support.

Generous support for Shifting Landscapes is provided by Judy Hart Angelo and the Henry Luce Foundation.

Major support for Shifting Landscapes is provided by Judy Hart Angelo, the Henry Luce Foundation, and the Whitney’s National Committee.

Significant support is provided by The Keith Haring Foundation Exhibition Fund.


Aunque la pintura paisajista se ha asociado durante mucho tiempo con vistas pintorescas, Paisajes cambiantes considera una interpretación más amplia de esta categoría, explorando cómo la evolución de los temas políticos, ecológicos y sociales motiva a artistas cuando buscan representar el mundo que les rodea. La exhibición presenta obras de la colección del Whitney que abarcan desde la década de 1960 hasta el presente y está organizada en distintas secciones temáticas. Ciertas obras giran en torno a afinidades materiales y conceptuales: ensamblajes escultóricos construidos con objetos obtenidos localmente, enfoques ecofeministas del arte ambiental, los legados de la fotografía paisajista documental. Otras están vinculadas a geografías específicas, como los frenéticos paisajes urbanos del Nueva York moderno o la escena cinematográfica experimental de Los Ángeles en los años setenta. Algunas, muestran cómo artistas inventan mundos nuevos y fantásticos donde los seres humanos, los animales y la tierra se vuelven uno. Ya sea representando los efectos de la industrialización en el medio ambiente, abordando el impacto de las fronteras geopolíticas o proponiendo espacios imaginados como una forma de desestabilizar el concepto de un mundo “natural”, las obras reunidas aquí se centran en ideas de lugar y territorio, poniendo en primer plano cómo la gente da forma y a la vez es formada por los espacios que nos rodean.


Another World

7

These works propose an alternative geography where humans, animals, and nature inhabit one another. Mundo Meza’s painting of a brawny merman reclining on a mandolin and rafa esparza’s portrait of himself embedded in the land exemplify how some artists are attempting to decenter an anthropocentric worldview by rejecting any traces of an identifiable landscape that could point to a particular nationalist agenda, cultural context, or even heteronormative conception of humanity. In other artworks, such as Dalton Gata’s painting of a blonde character with her mane ablaze, artists include shape-shifting figures that appear in fellowship with their environment. Their works gesture toward ways of resisting hierarchical structures of power that advance new forms of envisioning the future and the beings that populate it.

Mundo Meza
Merman with Mandolin, 1984

A grayscale painting of a muscular merman with a guitar, adorned with star-shaped decorations in his hair, set against a dark background.
A grayscale painting of a muscular merman with a guitar, adorned with star-shaped decorations in his hair, set against a dark background.

Mundo Meza, Merman with Mandolin, 1984. Acrylic on canvas, 71 1/2 × 108 3/8 in. (181.6 × 275.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Jef Huereque 2022.130. © Estate of Mundo Meza


Artists



Audio guides

A digital display shows plants in a modern indoor setting, mounted on a stand in front of a glass-walled room.
A digital display shows plants in a modern indoor setting, mounted on a stand in front of a glass-walled room.

Installation view of Shifting Landscapes (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, November 1, 2024–January 2026). Alan Michelson with Steven Fragale, Sapponckanikan (Tobacco Field), 2019, Sapponckanikan (Tobacco Field), 2019. Photograph by Audrey Wang

Shifting Landscapes 
Floor 1

Hear directly from artists and curators on selected works from the exhibition.

View guide
Colorful snake illustration with a geometric blue head and a vibrant body transitioning from orange to blue, coiled in an S-shape.
Colorful snake illustration with a geometric blue head and a vibrant body transitioning from orange to blue, coiled in an S-shape.

Luis Jimenez, Sidewinder, 1988. Lithograph: sheet (irregular), 23 1/4 × 34 1/2 in. (59.1 × 87.6 cm); image, 22 × 32 in. (55.9 × 81.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Susan and Scott Robertson 2002.2. © 2024 Luis Jimenez / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Shifting Landscapes 
Floor 6

Hear directly from artists and curators on selected works from the exhibition.

View guide

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.