Sixties Surreal

2025

A person in a blue outfit leaps in a green orchard. Text at the bottom reads, "are you a Springmaid?"

Scott Rothkopf: I'm Scott Rothkoff, the Alice Pratt Brown Director of the Whitney Museum.

Sixties Surreal is a sprawling exhibition of more than one hundred artists’ work from 1958 to 1972, made all across the United States. 

When you arrive in the exhibition, you should feel something immediately off kilter. You're surrounded by bright orange walls, which seem to have almost nothing to do with these three life-size camels. Here they are greeting you—in a museum. It's already a strange and surreal proposition. The tension between these very natural looking camels and their place in the world, as well as this orange background color, which is kind of shocking, should be something you feel in your gut. As you move through the exhibition, there's a lot to read and think about in terms of the ideas that artists who are working with, but you should also be open to the emotional and perceptual changes you have in your mind and your body brought on by this art. That's partly what Surrealism is about.

The idea of the show is really to look at how artists in the 1960s took ideas from Surrealism or even from “the surreal” more broadly, and applied them in their work. This was a time of tremendous radical change in everyday life. There was the fear of nuclear annihilation. There were sexual and cultural revolutions for women, for queer people. There were struggles over racial inequality and the Vietnam War. There were technological changes like the idea that people suddenly had TVs with moving pictures in their home. All of this felt surreal, strange, weird, disconcerting. 


Jean Conner, Are You a Springmaid?, 1960. Collage, 10 1/8 × 8 1/8 in. (25.7 × 20.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from Sheree and Jerry Friedman 2018.203. © Conner Family Trust and Artist Rights Society (ARS)

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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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