Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

A weathered wooden bulletin board densely covered with hundreds of overlapping staples, nails, and torn paper bits.

Mo Costello: It’s occasionally unclear whether the materials, the readers, are actively read. Their circulation always involves the speculative, something that feels more akin to longing. Imagining, cultivating, believing in, a kind of robust, rich, provisional informational circuit where people are actively gathering and sharing reading materials with one another, with a kind of urgency, including materials related to local aid and materials related to our survival. 

In this sense, the production and circulation of these materials occasionally approaches something akin to incantation—a kind of conjuring or prayer. 

Narrator: In the Biennial, the readers are in a case. Costello talked about the decision to keep them behind glass.

Mo Costello: In some ways the decision to display them under glass was practical. Many of the readers are unruly, made up of both bound and unbound materials. In other ways, the decision is less practical. These materials were not and are not made for the museum. The display rather can only point to, or suggest, a practice that precedes and exceeds it in that the materials circulate elsewhere outside the museum. 


Mo Costello, Untitled (Cleveland Ave.), 2025. Gelatin silver print, 6 ½ x 4 in. (16.5 x 10.2 cm), framed. Ed. 2 of 3 + 2 AP. Collection of the artist. © Mo Costello. Courtesy the artist and april april, Pittsburgh. Photography by Mo Costello

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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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