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Opening on Saturday, October 30! Jennifer Packer: The Eye Is Not Satisfied With Seeing is the largest survey of Packer's practice to date. Packer's paintings and drawings combine observation, memory, and improvisation.
Read more + buy tickets: https://t.co/ezUJj65Py5
Happy birthday, #DorotheaTanning! The American artist was born #onthisday in 1910. Pictured is her ethereal Aux environs de Paris (Paris and Vicinity), painted in 1962.
"My dreams are bristling with objects that relate to nothing in the dictionary," Tanning once explained.
It's #CyTwombly's birthday! The artist was born #onthisday in 1928.
Twombly is best known for his scribbles and smudges like the ones here in Untitled (1964/84). The artist began this painting in 1964, returning to complete it twenty (!) years later.
Now open! Julie Mehretu and Madeline Hollander: Flatwing are on view through August 8.
Don't forget that we're offering free admission today and tomorrow, March 25 and 26. Please note that timed-entry tickets are required and availability is limited. https://t.co/q4QqgBfcCK
#VidaAmericana reveals the transformative cultural dialogue that brought together artists from Mexico and the United States between 1925 and 1945. Join us for tomorrow's Ask a Curator for an interactive discussion about the exhibition. Register for free: https://t.co/OxIRw7FY0F
Salman Toor: How Will I Know opens today! For his first museum solo exhibition, Salman Toor presents new and recent oil paintings. His scenes depict the imagined lives of young, queer Brown men living in New York City and South Asia.
More + buy tickets: https://t.co/ASeMUuUbJd
Join Whitney teaching fellow Josh Lubin-Levy tonight at 6 pm for Art History from Home: Stories from the Collection. Taking an expansive view of what an icon of American art can be, this session look at the Whitney’s collection and how it developed. https://t.co/PUf3ReYIud
"All my work is about framing and perspective, history and context."—Hank Willis Thomas
In this stainless steel sculpture, Strike (2018), Hank Willis Thomas directly references a 1935 lithograph by Louis Lozowick. Read more on our Instagram: https://t.co/dcBOePGytV
"I found I could say things with color and shapes that I couldn't say in any other way—things that I had no words for."—Georgia O'Keeffe. Though we can't be together in person, rest assured that we're working (remotely) to bring you #WhitneyFromHome to offer inspiration & solace.