Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Modern art installation with wooden structures and draped fabrics in a white gallery space.

Narrator: The Adonis River, the site that gives this work by Dala Nasser its name, has its source in a cave on Mount Lebanon, north of Beirut. In the spring, its iron-rich water runs red. For thousands of years—since the Sumerian civilization—locals have likened it to the blood of the mortal lover of the fertility goddess. Eventually, these figures came to be known as Adonis and Aphrodite. This myth became woven together with the development of mourning practices that continue today. Dala Nasser. 

Dala Nasser: I took fabric to the cave and to the temple and I produced charcoal rubbings on site on the rocks of both of the locations. And after that I dyed them with iron oxide rich clay that's made out of the soil that surrounds the river. And the final step was I washed them in the river. 

And the interest for me in taking apart and revisiting this location and this history is the fact that it's historical or mythological importance never faded. This story resulted in mourning practices and mourning practices are far more than just tradition. You see them today. And it's not necessarily for a singular person or a life. We mourn the future we thought that we were going to have, for example. You warn of a loss of a location, the landscape, your city. There's a lot of power that you can get from this. You are not defeated. You're supposed to feel empowered when you mourn, and when you mourn as a group, you are exponentially empowered. It's all kind of tied together. When people say, "Not in my name. Not in anyone's name. My grandparents didn't do this for this..." This means something. This means something much more than just me and you. This means that we all come from a legacy that is connected and mourning is... We do it together. You don't do it alone.


Dala Nasser, Adonis River, 2023. Charcoal rubbings of Adonis Cave and Temple on fabrics, tablecloths, bedsheets, ash, iron oxide clay from Mount Lebanon, indigo dye, walnut shell dye, wooden bars, dimensions variable. Commissioned by the Renaissance Society, University of Chicago, with support from the Graham Foundation and Maria Sukkar; courtesy the artist. © Dala Nasser

0:00

0:00


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

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.