The 82nd Whitney Biennial features 56 artists, duos, and collectives, examining American art through imperial aftershocks, hybrid identities, and subtle forms of resistance. As the longest-running platform for American art, the Biennial situates these practices within the cultural and political realities of the present.
While the Biennial has long functioned as a politically charged platform, curators Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer adopt a more subdued, less confrontational approach for this edition, reflected in both tone and artist selection.
Opening March 8, 2026, the Whitney Biennial presents a “vivid atmospheric survey” of contemporary American art centered on forms of relationality. The exhibition examines human, hybrid, and non-human relationships, shared narratives, mythologies, and social infrastructures, emphasizing how art can generate connection, community, and belonging.
Rather than proposing definitive arguments, Guerrero and Sawyer foreground mood and texture. The exhibition prioritizes tension, tenderness, humor, and unease, while gesturing toward possibilities for coexistence among humans, nature, and technology.
The Biennial brings together 56 artists, duos, and collectives, with roughly 60 percent belonging to a millennial generation. The youngest participant is Taína H. Cruz, born in 1998, and the oldest is Carmen de Monteflores. The exhibition also includes works by two deceased artists, José Maceda and Kimowan Metchewais.
Building on Guerrero’s sustained engagement with Latinx and Caribbean artists, the 2026 Biennial expands its scope to address U.S. imperialism and its long-term consequences. Artists hail from 25 U.S. states as well as Afghanistan, Chile, Iraq, Okinawa, the Philippines, Vietnam, and other regions shaped by U.S. influence, framing American art within a broader geopolitical context.
Following more than 300 studio visits conducted over a year, Guerrero and Sawyer selected an intergenerational and internationally connected group of artists. The exhibition highlights artistic networks that extend across geography, offering both new discoveries and a wider view of contemporary practice.
Notable presentations include a new performance by Julio Torres in collaboration with Martine Gutierrez, abstract digital works by Samia Halaby, large-scale Indigenous sculpture by Raven Halfmoon, photography by Okinawa-based Mao Ishikawa, and critical reflections on global capitalism by ichigo Gatica. While many participants are based in New York, others work internationally, including in Berlin, Athens, and Palestine.
Several artists in the Biennial, such as Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme, Akira Ikezoe, and Ali Eyal, have participated in major international biennials, reflecting the global engagement now expected of U.S. institutions. Their diverse origins and working contexts point to a fluid and plural understanding of American art, alongside established figures including Kelly Akashi, Teresa Baker, Andrea Fraser, Erin Jane Nelson, and David L. Johnson.






