Posts about Whitney Museum of American Art
The blues encompasses more than the melancholic rhythms of Robert Johnson or the husky lyrics of John Lee Hooker.
Pop Art usually brings to mind Campbell’s Soup ads and bright, cheery depictions of American culture, but Sinister Pop uncovers a darker side of Pop, the kind they don’t show on TV.
Richard Artschwager is one of the most influential trailblazers of American contemporary art.
Wade Guyton cannily manipulates the aesthetics of digital technology.
Sharon Hayes’ current solo show at the Whitney Museum illuminates the psychological intensity of history and the political capacity of the personal.
A sampling of very short exhibition reviews from Talk Back, our newly revamped Tumblr account.
Two peas in a pod at the opening of the Whitney’s Kusama exhibition.
“This is the best moment of my life,” Yayoi Kusama told Whitney Museum Director Adam Weinberg. On the brink of a retrospective at the museum and the unveiling of a much-hyped collaboration with Louis Vuitton, the eighty-two-year-old artist is most definitely on the rise.
The top five can’t-miss mega exhibitions of the summer.
This week the Whitney unveils There’s So Much I Want to Say About You, a showcase by New York-based artist Sharon Hayes that devotes the museum’s entire third floor to her pieces about political protest in the twentieth century.
We are on a mission to expand your summer horizons, prying you away from the beach or the A/C in your bedroom and into a few of our hidden, obscure, and even secret New York City summer favorites in ARTLOG’s Summer Art Guide.
















