Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A wood panel wall covered with various sketches and printed images, mostly related to automotive designs and concepts.

Pippa Garner: Here I am. I'm an artist with perhaps an interesting history because of the sequence of events in the culture that have evolved during that time that I've been amusing myself with my work.

Narrator: Pippa Garner’s body hacking, as she calls it, stemmed from an interest in manipulating consumer goods. 

Pippa Garner: It was fascinating for me to take, for example, a toaster and slice it in half and make bookends out of it. Of course there's my transition from consumer goods to flesh and blood and bones. I reached a point with this work where it started to get repetitive back in the eighties. I thought, "I've gotten good at this, I can do it, do it well. What can I do next?" And I was looking at myself in a full mirror in the apartment where I was living, and I thought, there I am, a 6'2 genetic male, middle class, these characteristics…I didn't ask for any of this. 

So I thought, "Why am I not an appliance just as the toasters and waffle irons or appliances? This is a physical thing. It's organic but it is an object. It's a thing that I can...Why can't I do the same approach to my physical entity that I own, that I would do to these other things?" So I started gender hacking, I guess you could say. 

This was very early, before “transgender” even existed. This is way back in the late eighties. So at that time too, the whole medical side had become affordable with things you could do to yourself to change your gender. It was a consumer product, something you can buy. And I got fascinated with that notion, and I shifted from the mechanical things to the organic and using myself as an object. So that's where I was in the nineties and I had various surgeries and found that all satisfying and interesting, not realizing where it was going, then suddenly this thing, thirty years later, would become an actual acknowledged and recognized element in the culture.


Pippa Garner, Inventor's Office (detail), 2021–24. Inkjet and laser prints, tape and wood paneling. Collection of the artist. Courtesy STARS Gallery, Los Angeles. © Pippa Garner

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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