Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Person in a puffy green suit with voluminous orange braids against a sky with clouds.

Meg Onli: My name is Meg Onli, I'm the Curator-at-Large, and I'm the co-curator of the 2024 Whitney Biennial: Even Better Than the Real Thing. I first came across Holly's work, I think, in 2012 with her album Movement.

One of the things that I was really interested in bringing them into this Biennial and having a conversation with them is both Holly and Mat are thinking a lot about where are we at today in relationship to representation on the internet. The internet when it first was created was a space in which anyone could subsume any identity. I think we understood there was a lot of identity play, and as a queer person understood that I'm now in my early forties, but the internet was an early locus for me to find queer community, to think through gender play.

And over time, we have found that we have... I'd say Holly and Mat say this, that we have opted into a system in which we no longer have the flexibility to change who we are online. There are images of ourselves we might not love circulating. There are things that maybe you have said at some point that you have grown beyond or maybe at some point regret. And what are the ways that those things stay really static? And so within the project for the Biennial, they're really thinking about how much agency do we have? What's the sovereignty we have over our own representation online?


Holly Herndon and Mathew Dryhurst, xhairymutantx Embedding Study 1, 2024. Thermal dye diffusion transfer prints, 47 × 71 in. (119 × 180 cm). Collection of the artists

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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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