Verbal Description: The River is a Circle
Mar 26, 2025
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Verbal Description: The River is a Circle
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Narrator: Outside of the Whitney galleries and on the outdoor terrace, visitors are transported underwater. The space is washed in a blue patina, imitating the soft blues of the Hudson river. An animation plays on a massive video wall, measuring 24 feet by 13 feet. The animation shows a horizontal split between the world above and below the water. Days ebb and flow and weather patterns shift from sunshine to rain to snow, depending on the actual weather in New York City. The animation shows schools of fish and divers swimming under the surface, and barges with scenes from the history of the meatpacking district and its possible futures floating down the river. The ships and barges move through the decades, carrying people from colonial times, slaughterhouses and nightclubs from the 70s, and sustainable architectures or war machinery from imagined futures.
Walking forward and moving east, an installation extends the bottom half of the animation to the terrace, beginning with the bow of a ship protruding out of the cement floor. The bow is U-shaped with a mesh railing around the curved perimeter; approximately 37 feet and 8 inches long. The bow, with a walkable deck and benches for seating, is positioned at an angle, its point reaching back up towards the sky.
If we continue east we will encounter a spattering of old decaying pilings; the cylindrical vertical supports used to anchor and support piers, docks and other waterfront materials. The pilings have a diameter of twelve inches and their height varies from 10 to 40 inches tall. As we weave around the pilings, towards the end of the terrace, we come across multi-faceted plywood shapes. Both of these three-dimensional shapes, two in total, are made of hexagonal panels that fit together, creating an almost spherical shape. One shape has been partly dismantled into hexagon panels that litter the bottom of the riverbed. These shapes are actually man made reef balls that are used to help the growth of the oyster population.