New York, United States of America
Official website: Whitney Museum of American Art
945 Madison Avenue at 75th Street
New York, NY 10021
General Information: (212) 570-3600
From the website: “The Whitney Museum houses one of the world’s foremost collections of twentieth-century American art. The Permanent Collection of some 12,000 works encompasses paintings, sculptures, multimedia installations, drawings, prints, and photographs — and is still growing. The Museum was founded in 1931 with a core group of 700 art objects, many of them from the personal collection of founder Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney; others were purchased by Mrs. Whitney at the time of the opening to provide a more thorough overview of American art in the early decades of the century. Mrs. Whitney favored the art of the revolutionary artists derisively called the Ashcan School, among them John Sloan, George Luks, and Everett Shinn, as well as realists such as Edward Hopper and American Scene painters John Steuart Curry and Thomas Hart Benton. Her initial gift, however, also comprised many important works by early modernists — Stuart Davis, Charles Demuth, Charles Sheeler, Max Weber, and others. Virtually all the works collected by the Museum for the next twenty years came through the generosity of Mrs. Whitney.”
“Although the Whitney’s acquisition budget was always rather modest, the Museum made the most of its resources by purchasing the work of living artists, particularly those who were young and not well known. It has been a long-standing tradition of the Whitney to purchase works from the Museum’s Annual and Biennial exhibitions, which began in 1932 as a showcase for recent American art. A number of the Whitney’s masterpieces came from these exhibitions, including works by Arshile Gorky, Stuart Davis, Reginald Marsh, Philip Guston, and Jasper Johns. Even today, the Museum continues to enrich its Permanent Collection via the Biennial; among the recent acquisitions are works by Mike Kelley, Matthew Barney, Louise Bourgeois, Zoe Leonard, Matthew Ritchie, and Shahzia Sikander.”
Discrepant Abstraction discussed Black artists’ exhibitions at the Whitney, in Kellie Jones, ‘It’s Not Enough to Say “Black is Beautiful” ‘: Abstraction at the Whitney, 1969-1974, in Discrepant Abstraction, inIVA and MIT Press, 2006.
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 1971
Book relating to a publication, 2006
Exhibition guide relating to an exhibition, 1971
Article relating to an individual, 1975
Group show at Whitney Museum of American Art. 1971
Solo show at Whitney Museum of American Art. 1971
Born, 1928 in Chicago, Illinois
Born, 1942 in Portsmouth, Virginia, USA
Born, 1932 in Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Died, 2014
Born, 1935 - 1937 (probably 1936) in British Guiana (now Guyana) Caribbean/S. America
Born, 1945
Born, 1943
Born, 1936
Born, 1940
Born, 1943
Born, 1936 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Born, 1937
Born, 1933
Born, 1938
Born, 1931 in Eatonton, Georgia. Died, 2020
Born, 1941 in Brooklyn, New York, USA
Born, 1942
Born, 1936
Born, 1943
Born, 1945 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Died, 2017
Born, 1928 in New York City, New York
Born, 1938
Born, 1939
Born, 1937
Born, 1942
Born, 1917 in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Died, 2000
Born, 1915 in Eustis, Florida, USA. Died, 1999
Born, 1927
Born, 1929. Died, 1996
Born, 1935. Died, 2005
Born, 1939
Born, 1924
Born, 1935 in Washington, D.C.
Born, 1945 in New York, USA
Born, 1928 in New Haven, Connecticut
Born, 1943 in Philadelphia, PA, USA
Born, 1944
Born, 1917
Born, 1928 - 1934 (probably 1931) in Jamaica, West Indies
Born, 1924. Died, 2000
Born, 1918
Born, 1937
Born, 1943
Born, 1937
Born, 1923 - 1929 (probably 1926) in Los Angeles, California
Born, 1934
Born, 1937 in Philadelphia
Born, 1942
Born, 1914 in Castalia, North Carolina, USA
Born, 1929
Born, 1946
Born, 1886 - 1896 (probably 1891). Died, 1978
Born, 1939
Born, 1918. Died, 1979
Born, 1943
Born, 1931
Born, 1939 in Savannah, Georgia
Born, 1918 in Kansas City, Missouri
Born, 1945