Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A big audience watching an artist play the saxophone outdoors.

JJJJJerome Ellis: I am JJJJJerome Ellis, and I am an artist living in Norfolk, Virginia.

Narrator: Ellis is going to create a score of the Biennial. They needed to see the exhibition in person before getting started, and after that their compositional process requires about two months. We asked them what it meant to score an exhibition—and they said that’s something they’re still figuring out.

JJJJJerome Ellis: What I am interested in is more and more of a question, is it possible to create some kind of ... to use music to be in relation with all the artists and all the works that are going to be in the show. So it's an experiment and also it's like the score will exist both as drawings and as a performance.

And in kind of preparing, I've been learning about different…I've been studying other artists' scores, other musicians scores, other artists and taking inspiration from them. For example, the artist Carolyn Lazard, I've been studying their scores, which used text and to me and are often grounded in disability practices as is a lot of my practice.

Narrator: Lazard’s work is also in the Biennial on Floor 6.  

JJJJJJerome Ellis: I'll probably use my saxophone in some way. I'll probably use my voice in some way, both speaking, well, speaking and maybe singing too. Stuttering for me is central to how I practice creating. So I think stuttering will be involved, my voice will be involved in one way or another.

Narrator: Ellis is also part of the collective People Who Stutter Create, along with Jia Bin, Delicia Daniels, Conor Foran, and Kristel Kubart. For the Biennial they designed the billboard on Gansevoort Street, across the street from the Museum. 


JJJJJerome Ellis playing the saxophone at Performance Space, New York, 2023. Photograph by Annie Forrest

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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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