Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Several translucent panels with abstract geometric paintings stand on black cube bases in a white gallery.

Johanna Unzueta: I'm Johanna Unzueta and I'm a visual artist from Chile. I was in New York for a long time, and now I'm in Berlin.

At the beginning when I start to do these drawings and at the beginning was with graphite, so no color at all. And then I feel this “call” if I can say: that this cannot be, I need to incorporate somehow a three-dimensional thing and the light was the answer. So I want the light to penetrate through these images because, I think at that time, I went through a very hard time in my life when I started to make the drawings. So I don't want to say I became more spiritual because I always feel that way, but I feel very much calm when I found these drawings inside of me, because I didn't know that I could do these kind of images.

Narrator: A sense of depth and dimension is important to Unzueta in making these drawings. 

Johanna Unzueta: Because for me and my formation, I mean I always see in three dimension. A person’s like 3D, so it's gone beyond one through three dimensions. Even for me the sense of smell or what we hear, not only the visual aspect, also the tactility, I mean to touch things. I cannot just imagine this drawing flat on the wall. 


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, March 8–August 2026). Johanna Unzueta. Photograph by Jason Lowrie/BFA.com. © BFA 2026

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