Shifting Landscapes 

2024

Sculpture of three boys stacked on each other's shoulders, wearing orange and gray shorts, against a plain background.

Narrator: Look closely at these three boys. How would you describe the looks on their faces? There’s no right answer here – it’s not like the artist set out to make them look happy, or sad, or anything so obvious. Rigoberto Torres created sculptures like this one by making plaster casts of his neighbors in The Bronx. That means that the expressions on these boys’ faces reflect how they actually looked that day. Torres celebrated the ordinary people around him by making them feel as specific and alive as possible.

Another interesting thing about this sculpture is its size. Individually, none of these boys are very big. But stack them up on each other’s shoulders, and the sculpture is over 9 feet tall! Together, the boys become monumental. 


Installation view of Shifting Landscapes (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, November 1, 2024–January 2026). Rigoberto Torres, Julio, José, and Junito, 1991/1995. Photograph by Audrey Wang

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