Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

A row of small colorful digital artworks mounted evenly along a dark gallery wall.

Samia Halaby: My name is Samia Halaby. I'm a Palestinian artist and female and I'm 89 and I'm a painter.

My education taught me that you understand the medium you're going to use. You don't let others tell you how to use it. So I decided I needed to understand the computer. I therefore rejected all software. And so that necessitated I learned how to program. And in terms of the kinetic paintings, the motion is not the motion of animation. Animation is a motion that moves things in space within a specific point of view and with a lens programmed into it. 

Narrator: Halaby describes what she was doing with programming as removing the viewpoint of the stationary lens entirely. By creating programming functions, or rules, she was able to expand the realm of formal possibilities.

Samia Halaby: It became more the motion of things growing, gestating, expanding and changing. 

Narrator: The artist compares the movement in some works, like Flower, to the growth of plants. When making Land, she was thinking about the movement of borders between countries.

Samia Halaby: Everybody says it looks like maps of Palestine, but that was not in my original intention. My original intention was to imitate how land masses and ownership of land is always a dialogue between one part and the other, whether it's in nature and landmasses and rivers and earthquakes divide them and move them back together, or whether it is people dividing land among themselves or whether it's states fighting among themselves. But when I was done, I thought, I'm a Palestinian and I remember all the issues of land, so I dedicated it to Palestine.


Installation view of Whitney Biennial 2026 (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, March 8–August 23, 2026). From left to right: Samia Halaby, Lines 3, 1986; Samia Halaby, Central Park 8, 1986; Samia Halaby, Weavings, 1986; Samia Halaby, Land, 1988; Samia Halaby, Bread, 1988; Samia Halaby, Ebb Tide, 1987; Samia Halaby, Fold 2, 1988; Samia Halaby, For Olga Rozanova, 1988; Samia Halaby, Dark Weaver, 1989; Samia Halaby, Flower, 1988. 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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