Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Three benches face a large screen showing an aerial city view in a dim gallery.

Ignacio Gatica

Read more in the artist's words.

Ignacio Gatica: Sanhattan resembles Manhattan, but then it's a little bit more like a doppelgänger situation, for example, like Mulholland Drive in David Lynch or Hitchcock. For me, why I wanted to show it in the Biennial, it's because I think nowadays we see this certain type of shifting in reality that makes us wonder what is real and what is not, because of many things—technology of course, and politics, I mean everything's changing quickly. 

It's also something kind of personal because my mother used to live nearby. So there is an eeriness and in the Lynchian way, like how poet Ileana Elordi is narrating the situation of this place or places makes it a little bit like a dream. And the person who wrote that text, that's like a poem almost, she is the daughter of the architects of the tallest building in Sanhattan, and she's a poet too.

There is also an element that I like in the video that's a little bit, somehow a little bit Velázquez with the Meninas, the different directions in the painting, because it's almost like who is pointing at each other all the time. And when the film starts developing more and more, you start getting a little bit more lost. But at the same time there are interviews with real people that either helped to get this done, Sanhattan, or were a big part of it, or study it in a more critical way, or they're just academics seeing it, or they're just passersby.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, March 8–August 2026). Ignacio Gatica, Sanhattan, 2025. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

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