Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Glass brick tower sculpture stands on a rooftop terrace with city buildings in the background.

Kelly Akashi: I'm Kelly Akashi. I live—lived—in Altadena, California 

Narrator: Akashi talked with us about her sculpture, Witness

Kelly Akashi: When I was thinking about how I was going to show this chimney, I didn't want to present it as a relic of this natural disaster. I wanted to rebuild and recreate this body that I see as a kind of a witness. And as I was thinking about how to recreate it, I thought that I would really like to translate the material from clay into another kind of material. And I landed on glass because of its translucency, but also because I love this idea that it would be very illuminated outdoors on the terrace. So, while it obviously will have a lot of presence and weight to it, my notion is that as it is out there during all the different times of day, it'll have this sense of holding light and somehow be ethereal at the same time that it's very solid and present. 

I've just gotten very interested in the idea that if this recreation of my chimney is a kind of monument for what's happened, that it shouldn't be made of a singular mass material, that it should be reconstructed with the same labor that the original chimney was constructed in with brick laying. Because I really love this idea that not only is that labor going back into the reconstruction of the chimney, but that it's also a monument made of many parts, many bricks, and many pieces.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, March 8–August 2026). Hyundai Terrace Commission Kelly Akashi 2026. Monument (Altadena). Photograph by Timothy Schenck

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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