Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Circular ceiling screen displays floating colorful debris above a dark gallery space with central pedestal.

Michelle Lopez

Read more in the artist's words.

Michelle Lopez: I’m Michelle Lopez, a sculptor interested in pushing immersive, 3D space and experience.

The research started around the time of the 2016 presidential election. I wanted to simulate all the ways our global environment, our ideals, our communities are collapsing on many layers through the simulation of a destructive tornado within space. Over time, a brick dome collapses overhead so that the viewer can feel as if they're situated directly inside the eye of a storm. 

In order to create one of the debris scenes, we built a massive tornado machine with industrial fans that aids debris spinning into the air. A 360-camera was at the center of the tornado machine filming the movement of hurled objects we hand-picked through the rubble at a trash recycling center (on location at RAIR Philly (Recycled Artist in Residency)). I brought my own belongings, as well as finding others’ discarded histories. The most important discovery was a newspaper clipping archive that spanned 70 years. I curated all the newspaper clippings so their headlines and opinions would fly acrobatically and intersect, clash with each other by launching all of this trash from the cultural waste stream into the machine with a large team, and leaving it up to chance. The headlines are weirdly relevant to what's happening now, so that became the soul of the work. 

I’ve been wanting to construct different kinds of clouds: storm clouds, explosion clouds, particularly information clouds. Those are the most impactful right now in terms of how we are influenced by technology. Our relationship to social media and gathering all of our news information is creating its own kind of destructive storm. 

The last part of the film is a crowd holding up their cell phone lights at a concert to create an infinite night sky filled with stars. Throughout the film, I’ve been trying to create different constellations and this is one of them. Everyone together holding up their own little means of accessing information becomes a way of creating a constellation of people and of unity and of togetherness, rather than division. So it's a salve at the very end, at least I hope.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, March 8–August 23, 2026). Michelle Lopez, Pandemonium, 2025. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

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On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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