Whitney Biennial 2026

2026

On view
Floors 1, 5, 6

A woman with closed eyes and downturned mouth looking sad and reflective.

Mariah Garnett

Read more in the artist's words.

Mariah Garnett: My great, great aunt, Ruth Deyo, lived in Egypt from 1924 until her death, and she's buried there. When she arrived, she started hearing voices and began communicating with ancient spirits to write this opera that she believed would bring about a new era of world peace if it were ever performed. She started it in the 1920s and she died in 1960 and the entire time was trying to get it made, unsuccessfully. She also left behind a bunch of diaries that chronicled her spirit-communications. Excerpts from those are in my film too. 

There was stuff in both the opera and diaries that in my opinion was highly problematic and in a legacy of colonial orientalist aesthetics and politics. Like a focus on Kings and glory and her own status as a kind of chosen one. My way of responding to this, or countering it, was to bring in a broad group of artist-collaborators to reinterpret the material within an anti-colonial framework. In 2022, we performed a few sections of the opera, along with music composed by Nancy Mounir, and an experimental sequence composed by Holland Andrews, yunia edi kwon and Jessika Kenney. I ended up using a poem of Raphaël Khouri’s called On Queer Exhaustion as a libretto for some sections of this performance, and footage of the rehearsals for this performance are the backbone of the film. 

That was a big theme in the diaries; Ruth’s total exhaustion, and something we all related to in one way or another as working artists. Ruth would write in her diaries about how burnt out she was and speak to these spirits who would sort of pump her back up again and say she was an amazing artist and needed to keep going and that don't worry about the money, the money's coming. 

It was interesting working with a group of musicians who were all so different. It was such a different process working with the experimental musicians versus working with the two professional opera singers, Chris Craig and Breanna Sinclairé. They were much more controlled and both said that as opera singers, it's not that often that you get to set the precedent for what an opera is. So that felt like a really cool thing to be able to offer them.  

I love working with musicians. It's totally fascinating. It's actually the thing that makes me believe all the spirit stuff in Ruth’s diaries. I’m like how did you do that? How'd you make that sound? Where is it coming from? This is the closest thing to proof of another realm to me. 


Mariah Garnett, still from Songbook, 2024. High-definition video, color, and sound; 55 min. © Mariah Garnett. Image courtesy the artist and Commonwealth and Council, Los Angeles. Photography by Mariah Garnett

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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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