Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

Three figures made of chocolate, butter, and plastic sit poised in a refrigerated container.

Ash Arder: My name's Ash Arder. I'm a transdisciplinary artist based in Waawiyaatanong or Detroit, and I grew up in Muscatawing or Flint, Michigan.

Narrator: Arder spoke to us about her work, Consumables.

Ash Arder: The refrigerator is one of the things that people worry about when the grid fails, right? You're going to lose food or medicine. And so using the refrigerator becomes this kind of symbol of what we could be doing if values were in right relation with the earth.

Narrator: The Cadillac emblems are a reflection on Arder’s family history. 

Ash Arder: For my family, with an automotive background participating in the Great Migration—folks moving from the south in the United States up to the north in the United States on both sides of my family—sort of having access to this middle class life, even starting back in the forties and fifties, because of a sector and an industry that sort of had this secretly exploitative hold over our lives and lifestyles. And so while it looks like a status symbol in some regard, right—a Cadillac emblem demonstrates one's ability to participate in capitalism at a certain level—it's just a thing. You can't eat “Cadillac” [laughs], it goes away. It can just go away as quickly as it can be built up over generations. And so I think in that instance, the Cadillac emblem becomes this kind of symbol that I'm honoring in some instances, thanking it for what it has meant for my family's ability to supply and provide. Then also, I'm gently releasing it through ritual and through making it out of nourishing materials, gently releasing my own allegiance to that industry as someone moving and living in this particular generation. 


Ash Arder, Consumables, 2023 (detail). Display refrigerator, solar-powered battery storage system, shea butter, butter, chocolate, plastic, and light, 19 1/2 × 17 3/8 × 20 in. (49.5 × 44.1 × 50.8 cm). Collection of the artist. Image courtesy the artist. Photography by Clare Gatto

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On the Hour

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

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