Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

An orange abstract sculpture suspended by strings above a white outline on the floor in a minimalist setting.

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. On view in the galleries is a selection of recent work from the artist Julia Phillips. Julia is an artist who primarily works within ceramics, is a sculptor. 

Narrator: One of her sculptures on view here is called Nourisher. 

Meg Onli: Nourisher displays a chest cast as well as a face cast. Within this are tubing coming out of the nipples, out of the mouth. And one of the things that I've been really interested in, the relationship to Phillips's work, is the long, long history of medical experimentation that has occurred, and the reason that we have the medicine that we have today through the experimentation on Black women's bodies. And so oftentimes within Julia Phillips' work not only is the Black female body, but where the personal interfaces directly with the industry of medicine. What are the ways in which we're entangled within the systems? 

I think there's ways in which this kind of recent installation that we have, which also includes the Conception drawings, it's really speaking to a moment in which Phillips herself is becoming a mother, thinking about that role, but also thinking, at least from my interpretation, about the way her body interfaces within the medical industrial complex.


Julia Phillips, Nourisher, 2022. Ceramic, medical PVC tubes, stainless steel, steel cable, 69 ½ × 32 × 24 in. (177 × 81 × 61 cm). © Julia Phillips. Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

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On the Hour

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

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