In one of two responses that art critic Ben Davis wrote for Artnet, he closes his text with, “At this time, in this show, art doesn’t want to promise that it’s an instrument to change the world. It also doesn’t want to promise an escape from the weight of the world. What it offers is more like a longing to feel whatever can be felt when you don’t believe in either.” In this instance, art is looked at through the filter that it is a source for change or escape, but is rather an excuse to feel.
Artnet has published many voices on the subject of this year’s exhibition. In addition to Davis, writers William Van Meter, Sarah Cascone, and Eileen Kinsella shared their thoughts as well. Van Meter offers, “The heart is the point. An unabashed emotional current runs through this biennial. It is not armored in irony or buffered by theory [...] More than once, I found myself holding back tears. In a world that often feels on fire, detachment feels untenable. Connection is the point.” Indeed, connection is the invisible elastic thread that people sought in post-COVID times and still desperately crave today in the face of global and domestic political strife.
Every two years the biennial occupies several floors of the Whitney Museum—but is it a reflection of the current times, or something more? A juggernaut prepared to siphon emotion? A collection of artists whose vision is derivative? Or, a mirror that first presents itself in the guise of pleasantry and play, only to reveal something more painful? It is all of these things.
















