Bucksbaum Award
Established in 2000 by longtime Whitney trustee Melva Bucksbaum and her family, the Bucksbaum Award is given in each Biennial year in recognition of an artist, chosen from those included in the Biennial, whose work demonstrates a singular combination of talent and imagination. The selected artist is considered by the jurors to have the potential to make a lasting impact on the history of American art, based on the excellence of their past work, as well as of their present work in the Biennial. The award is accompanied by a check for $100,000.
Nikita Gale is the recipient of the 2024 Bucksbaum Award. Gale was selected from the seventy-one intergenerational artists and collectives working across disciplines and mediums in Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing. Gale’s 2024 Biennial artwork, TEMPO RUBATO (STOLEN TIME), features a modified player piano that has been programmed to silently play a series of performances by various pop musicians, exploring the space between a score and its performance. In this installation, Gale underscores the uncanny absence of the body by silencing the instrument’s musical functions and leaving only the sound and image of its mechanisms, which have been amplified through a custom-built sound and lighting system. The work examines how labor, performance, authorship, legibility, and sensing are beholden to their technological contexts.
Award Recipients
2024
Nikita Gale
Born 1983, Anchorage, AK, on Dënéndeh and Dena’ina Ełnena lands
Lives in Los Angeles, CA, on Tongva and Gabrieleno lands
Jurors
Erin Christovale
David Getsy
Stamatina Gregory
Chrissie Iles
Meg Onli
Scott Rothkopf
2022
Ralph Lemon
Born 1952, Cincinnati, OH
Lives in Brooklyn, NY
Jurors
David Breslin
Huey Copeland
Adrienne Edwards
Meg Onli
Scott Rothkopf
Adam D. Weinberg
2019
Tiona Nekkia McClodden
Born 1981, Blytheville, AR
Lives and works in Philadelphia, PA
Jurors
David Breslin
Ryan N. Dennis
Rujeko Hockley
René Morales
Jane Panetta
Scott Rothkopf
Lumi Tan
2017Pope.L
Born 1955, Newark, NJ
Lives and works in Chicago, IL
Jurors
Naomi Beckwith
Johanna Burton
Mary Ceruti
Christopher Y. Lew
Mia Locks
Scott Rothkopf
Adam D. Weinberg
2014
Zoe Leonard
Born 1961, Liberty, NY
Lives and works in New York, NY
Jurors
Michelle Kuo
Stuart Comer
Donna De Salvo
Anthony Elms
Michelle Grabner
Jay Sanders
Nancy Spector
Elisabeth Sussman
Adam D. Weinberg
2012
Sarah Michelson
Born 1964, Manchester, England
Lives and works in Brooklyn, NY
Jurors
Christophe Cherix
Donna De Salvo
Lia Gangitano
Branden Joseph
Jay Sanders
Elisabeth Sussman
Adam D. Weinberg
2010
Michael Asher
Born 1943, Los Angeles, CA
Died 2012, Los Angeles, CA
Jurors
Francesco Bonami
Donna De Salvo
Hou Hanru
Gary Carrion-Murayari
Yasmil Raymond
James Rondeau
Adam D. Weinberg
2008
Omer Fast
Born 1972, Jerusalem
Lives and works in Berlin
Jurors
Donna De Salvo
Anne Ellegood
Lauri Firstenberg
Henriette Huldisch
Shamim M. Momin
Franklin Sirmans
Adam D. Weinberg
2006
Mark Bradford
Born 1961, Los Angeles, CA
Lives and works in Los Angeles, CA
Jurors
Francesco Bonami
Donna De Salvo
Russell Ferguson
Chrissie Iles
Eungie Joo
Philippe Vergne
Adam D. Weinberg
View Mark Bradford’s Bucksbaum Award exhibition, Neither New Nor Correct: New Work by Mark Bradford
2004
Raymond Pettibon
Born 1957, Tuscon, AZ
Lives and works in Hermosa Beach, CA
Jurors
Elizabeth N. Armstrong
Richard Flood
Paul Ha
Chrissie Iles
Shamim M. Momin
Debra Singer
Adam D. Weinberg
2002
Irit Batsry
Born 1957, Ramat Gan, Israel
Lives and works in New York, NY
Jurors
Maxwell L. Anderson
Olukemi Ilesanmi
Linda Norden
Ann Philbin
Lawrence R. Rinder
2000
Paul Pfeiffer
Born 1966, Honolulu, HI
Lives and works in New York, NY
Jurors
Maxwell L. Anderson
Mary L. Beebe
Linda Pace
Lawrence R. Rinder
Hamza Walker
A Decade in Conversation: A Ten-Year Celebration of the Bucksbaum Award, 2000–2010By Chrissie Iles, Christiane Paul, Carter E. Foster, and Tina Kukielski
Featuring conversations with Paul Pfeiffer, Irit Batsry, Raymond Pettibon, Mark Bradford, and Omer Fast, A Decade in Conversation presents fascinating details about the ways the first five Bucksbaum Award winners are shaping contemporary art today.
The excerpt available here includes interviews with Bradford and Fast, as well as a foreword by Adam D. Weinberg, and a statement from Melva Bucksbaum.