Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A large ramp structure curls up the back wall of a dimly lit room washed with deep indigo hues. The smooth incline's open undersides glow in iridescent violet. Spread across the adjacent wall, two lines of projected text read: "fr tho, i'm asking the oracle for us. there's just this ask, just this sending and nothing more." with subtitled translation lines above.

Constantina Zavitsanos: Hi, I'm Constantina Zavitsanos, great to meet you.

Narrator: The artist often uses materials that make spaces more accessible to people with disabilities. This might include elements like ramps and captions, but Zavitsanos uses these features to “level the playing field” as they say, and explore the edges of perception for all visitors. 

Constantina Zavitsanos: Call to Post is an infrasonic sound piece, and what infrasonic means is that most of the sound waves in this piece are modulated with really low-end sound. So low that people can't hear it. The main way that you experience this infrasonic sound piece is through touch or feel. This whole piece is made by feel, for feel. I was really just working with materials I think a lot of people call immaterial, like light waves, like sound waves. I was thinking about this as a subtractive sculpture because access is so often thought of as an additive or afterthought meant to mediate, or as mediation for artworks.

And I guess for a while now, me and a bunch of other people we've been working with access materiality as a primary material for artworks and thinking about it from the point of conception. So this was just a leveling of the playing field in some way.

In this piece, where I start is asking myself that question, "What if nobody could hear this piece? So it's thinking less about the categorical segregation of capacity or what's deemed human capacity. I've been trying to think about the edge of the frame for perception.

This piece is modeled on what's called a magic fingers bed. From roadside motels back when I was growing up, you drop quarters in there and the bed shakes, and they're often found in these cheap "motels”. I spent some time in those in my youth, and I was just trying to remember the soundscapes. So it's really a soundscape I made from memory that is like those vibrating beds.

A lot of people these days say stuff like, "The vibes are off." And I'm really into vibes or good vibrations, I mean it spiritually, theoretically, philosophically. But I mainly mean it materially. I want to know the actual vibes. Not know them, but feel them, be with them. Because I like this idea that people are really paying much more attention to vibes now, but I really want more than attention. I want intention, and I really want to work with some of those vibes because they're real things.


Constantina Zavitsanos, Call to Post (Violet) and All the Time, 2019 and 2021 (installation view, Helmhaus, Zurich, 2021). Plywood, two-channel sound at 5–20 Hertz, transducers, and wire; two-channel overlapping open captions, 240 x 144 x 60 in. (609.6 x 365 x 152.4 cm). Photograph by Zoe Tempest. Image courtesy the artist and Helmhaus, Zurich

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On the Hour

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

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Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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