Sixties Surreal

2025

A young woman with dark hair stares forward; her face is partly covered with colorful abstract shapes and blended faces.

Kelly Long: My name is Kelly Long and I'm a Senior Curatorial Assistant here at the Whitney and part of the curatorial team for Sixties Surreal. This is a work called The Big Rip-Up by Anita Steckel, and it's the work that gives this gallery its title. It's a self portrait, and to make this work, Steckel took a photograph, a black and white photograph of herself when she was a teenager, and then layered on paint and colored pencil and graphite pencil drawings over the top of it. 

It's sort of an impossible space where there are bodies floating in the mist, but it feels truthful to conveying something about her experience as a woman, as a female artist.

So I feel like there are a lot of ways that we could read this image. I think one of them, certainly the fact that she's drawing attention to her eye, that she's this artist, she's expressing maybe that this is the artist's vision and this impossible world that she's created is something that could only come from sort of the artist's eye. I think she's also expressing maybe sorrow and frustration and criticism of what it's like to be a woman or a girl in the world in which she's living.

The Big Rip-Up is an interesting title because for me it evokes some sort of massive change or some sort of big transformation that maybe has a little bit of violence to it. And I think that sort of reflects the moment and the circumstances of women artists in the 1960s where women were fighting for autonomy, for representation, for all sorts of things, for recognition in the art world. It's not a coincidence that a lot of these women artists are depicting multiple versions of themselves or multiple bodies or bodies that are sort of entangled or living together in utopic or really claustrophobic spaces because what they're doing in part is imagining a new world or imagining new versions of themselves that can build a different kind of world.

Linda Lomahaftewa: My name is Linda Lomahaftewa. I'm Hopi and Choctaw and I live in Santa Fe, New Mexico. 

Narrator: Find Lomahaftewa’s large, brightly colored painting to the left of the Steckel, on the adjacent wall. The dark horizon in this work seems to go on and on in the distance. But shapes and figures in the bottom half of the canvas defy any notion that this is a straightforward landscape. 

Linda Lomahaftewa: This is a painting I did when I was going to the San Francisco Art Institute and it's in oil. I didn't want to paint the models the way they actually looked, so I painted my own version of them, and then I started turning the canvas around. You know when you are in art school? You're always taught to turn the canvas in different directions or different settings and to look at it to see if it balances out. 


Anita Steckel, The Big Rip-Up, 1964. Paint and colored pencil on photo, Sheet: 30 x 23 in. (76.2 x 58.4 cm). Courtesy the Estate of Anita Steckel, Hannah Hoffman, Los Angeles and Ortuzar, New York. © The Estate of Anita Steckel. Collection of Beth Rudin DeWoody. Photograph by Timothy Doyon

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On the Hour

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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