Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A large collage of numerous photos covering an entire gallery wall, viewed from a wooden floor.

Carmen Winant: My name is Carmen Winant. I am an artist, a mother, a professor, sometimes prison educator. I live in Columbus, Ohio.

Narrator: On the wall are almost three thousand four-by-six-inch photos.

Carmen Winant: What I think of as drugstore prints in that I'm a child of the eighties, nineteen cent prints. And they are from various archives of abortion care workers around the Midwest. 

In terms of the actual photographs themselves, I thought a lot in the making of this project about how to countermand the right wing weaponization of photography, about how effective in fact anti-abortion agitators have been in using photography to further their cause. 

And so I started to think, in researching this project and building these relationships with abortion care workers across the Midwest, starting around 2019 or 2020. I started to think about what is the visuality on the other side, which is to say of abortion care workers themselves. 

What does care work look like really in some sense is the baseline question here. It’s so unsensational. In a lot of ways it's so unphotographic. What could be more urgent and more imperative to the movement than answering the phone, answering the call. And on the other hand, what could be less dynamic in some ways or sensational to represent photographically. So that is the space that I like to occupy.

Narrator: Winant called this work The Last Safe Abortion. After doing extensive research, the artist met with abortion care workers across the Midwest and South. 

Carmen Winant: They all uttered some version of an almost verbatim sentence to me. And that sentence was, "We will provide the last safe abortion in," fill in the blank. Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Nebraska, North Dakota, Iowa, and so on. And that struck me as an incredible sentiment. At once so resolute, so resilient. We will be here to the end. And on the other hand, so elegiac, there will be an end. It's not a matter of if, but when.

I was determined to hold on to that sentiment and name it as the title of the show and of this work. It also felt really important to name abortion, to use that word.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2024: Even Better Than the Real Thing (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, March 20- August 11, 2024). Carmen Winant, The Last Safe Abortion, 2023. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

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.