Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A building with large columns made of earth with an upside-down American flag waving above.

Chrissie Iles: I'm Chrissie Iles, the Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Curator at the Whitney Museum. I'm one of the curators of the 2024 Whitney Biennial: Even Better Than the Real Thing.

As we walk onto the sixth floor terrace, we see the city of New York in front of us. We also see a new work commissioned especially for the Biennial by Kiyan Williams, a New York-based artist who has made an installation that has two elements to it. One is Ruins of Empire II, or the Earth Swallows the Master's House, and it's the north facade of the White House that's leaning on one side and sinking into a bed of earth.

Kiyan Williams's use of Earth has been extensive in their practice. Earth is something that contains memory, it holds history, it holds personal memory, it holds geological memory, it holds geographical memory, and it's also fragile. The climate crisis, the political shifts that are occurring, we're in a very destabilized moment in which those founding myths that countries tell about themselves are loosening and one could almost say are in the process of being undone and reconfigured. 

Over on the other side of the terrace, a sculpture of Marsha P. Johnson titled Statue of Freedom (Marsha P. Johnson) witnesses The White House's collapse. Marsha P. Johnson is a celebrated trans activist and the witnessing of this collapse evokes a sense of looking to the future, looking beyond what we see sinking into other ways of being and thinking and living and being together.


Kiyan Williams, Ruins of Empire II or The Earth Swallows the Master's House, 2024. Earth, steel, and binder

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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

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