Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Medicine cabinets placed on the ground and forming geometric shapes obscured by mirrors.

Narrator: Carolyn Lazard.

Carolyn Lazard: The cabinets are chrome covered and also have one fully mirrored surface. Because of the reflective surfaces, the cabinets reflect the space around them, the gallery and the other works that are sort of around the cabinets.  

I've been thinking a lot about the specific curation of my work alongside the work of Sharon Hayes and Mary Kelly, but it's kind of impossible for me to make work and not think about its context of exhibition.

And so knowing that I was going to be curated alongside a professor of mine, a teacher of mine, a mentor of mine, and alongside my mentor's teacher and mentor, I started to think about what this curation was saying and how incredible and beautiful it was, but also how challenging it was because it presents a kind of progressive idea of art history in which first comes this kind of artist, then comes this kind of artist and then comes this kind of artist. And I found that to be challenging because history is not progressive in any way.

I wanted to respond to the challenge of being framed within a kind of progressivist art historical and narrative trajectory. And so the work I think contains some of the ways that I feel about my relationship to these two artists, which is that we seem to share across our practices is an investment in time. I would also say an investment in the relationship between public and private space and thinking about what it means to display intimacy in public space. 

And so I think the work that I made is this domestic object. I’ve worked a lot with domestic objects before, I return to them. I seem to not be able to escape the bathroom as a site of inquiry, which I think is personal, but also is universal in some ways. 

And there's this material, this Vaseline, that's incredibly occlusive and actually is a kind of barrier and is impenetrable in some ways and is kind of against permeability. And so in these objects, I feel like they encapsulate something about my relationship to these artists, which is something that is reflective, in dialogue with, cannot escape the legacy of these artists and simultaneously is also boundaried. 


Carolyn Lazard, Toilette, 2024. Medicine cabinets and vaseline, dimensions variable. Collection of the artist 

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On the Hour

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