Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Large inflatable green jester head and connected yellow-red spiky inflatable lie across a gallery floor.

Pat Oleszko: Well, the major piece that's gonna be in the Biennial is a massive inflatable called Blowhard (Trumpeteer). This piece, it has seen a lot of wear. So we're not coming fresh out of the studio for this bad boy. 

Narrator: Oleszko is also a performance artist, and started playing with inflatable sculptures by wearing them.

Pat Oleszko: I originally started working at home. I started sewing. Then I hung things on my then-six-foot frame. In that moment, I became the sculpture, walked out of the studio, and entered the world. It was everything for me to be able to wear my work. And so I could hold up anything. And things got to be very, very large and multiplied. 

And then I am always trying to solve this structural problem, how to make a big sculpture. It was a long process learning how to do it correctly. It wasn't that hard to figure out how to draw something, but I mean, the pieces, I don't know, 37, 40 feet long, and my studio is much smaller than that. The thing with inflatables is that you don't know what they look like until they get filled with air. I made it in this room, but I had to make it in parts and then connect it and dragged it up to my roof and then blew up the whole thing there, hoping to god that it worked. And it did. 

Narrator: For one month of the Biennial the Sculpture Center in Queens is showing more of Oleszko’s inflatables, along with costumes, films, and ephemera. 

Pat Oleszko: I encourage everybody just to go over there, see that as well.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, March 8–August 23, 2026). From left to right: Pat Oleszko, Blowhard, 1995; Pat Oleszko, Footsi, 1979. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

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