Summary
- The Whitney Museum of American Art in New York presents its 82nd Biennial, running through August 23
- Featuring the work of 56 artists, the showcase centers themes of relationality and connection
On March 8, the Whitney Museum of American Art will welcome to the public to the 82nd edition of its landmark Biennial, with 56 artists in tow. As critic Holland Cotter noted, the show has a reputation for dividing audiences, and as early reactions to this year’s showcase trickle in, it seems the tradition continues. Love it or hate it, however, the art world appears to unite on one front: it’s weird. And with one glimpse at the world nowadays, there’s little room to disagree.
The label suits a show that bills itself as a pulse check on the state of American art, revisiting the question: what does such a category mean for this day and age? Unlike recent editions, the 2026 Biennial doesn’t anchor itself in single political trigger, opting instead for a deliberately open framework. While themeless, the exhibition, more broadly, gravitates toward ideas of connection.
Across galleries, performances and public programs, artists explore topics ranging family structures, new tech networks, memory and mythologies. “Co-curating the Whitney Biennial offers a unique opportunity to think about the ways artists are entangled — formally and thematically — within this ecosystem we know as contemporary art,” said Marcela Guerrero, who curated the show alongside Drew Sawyer. “With this Biennial, we hope to foreground a network of kinships that gesture toward forms of coexisting in this world.”
Must-sees include “Monument (Altadena)” where Kelly Akashi responds to the fires that struck her home, Altadena, California. Built from luminous glass, the piece reconstructs the sole brick chimney that survived the devastation. In the museum lobby Zach Blas mounts “CULTUS,” a five-channel video installation that imagines ritualized tech workshop through LED architecture.
Elsewhere, Leo Castañeda’s “Camoflux Recall Grotto” converts the gallery into an ultra-high-definition, playable video game environment, inspired by lush landscapes in Brazil and Florida, while and Pat Oleszko presents a monumental, inflatable, horn-tooting jester, titled “Blowhard.” Taína H. Cruz, the Biennial’s youngest participant, debuts new graffiti work on the fifth-floor walls and extends the show across the museum on the Gansevoort Street billboard.
Since 1932, the event has served as a stage for the shifting tides in art. It has become one of the nation’s premiere exhibitions, helping launch the careers of Nan Goldin, Paul Pfeiffer, Theaster Gates and more. This year’s Biennial also marks the first since the museum launched its free-admission programs, expanding its focus on connection and participation to its audiences.
The 2026 Whitney Biennial is now on view through August 23. Head to the museum’s website to learn more.
Whitney Museum of American Art
99 Gansevoort Street,
New York, NY 10014