NYC Art Museum Bundle
- MoMA
- The Guggenheim
- Whitney Museum Of American Art
- American Museum of Natural History
Exhibition
1 Nov 2024 — 31 Jan 2025
Shifting Landscapes explores how evolving political, ecological, and social issues motivate artists’ representations of the world around them. While the art historical genre of landscape has long been associated with picturesque vistas and documentary accounts of place, the artworks gathered in this exhibition suggest a more expansive interpretation.
The 120 works by more than eighty...
Shifting Landscapes explores how evolving political, ecological, and social issues motivate artists’ representations of the world around them. While the art historical genre of landscape has long been associated with picturesque vistas and documentary accounts of place, the artworks gathered in this exhibition suggest a more expansive interpretation.
The 120 works by more than eighty artists—including Firelei Báez, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jane Dickson, Gordon Matta-Clark, Amalia Mesa-Bains, and Purvis Young—depict the effects of industrialization on the environment, grapple with the impact of geopolitical borders, and give shape to imagined spaces as a way of destabilizing the concept of a “natural” world.
Drawn from the Whitney’s collection, this exhibition features works from the 1960s to the present, most of which are on view at the Museum for the first time. The exhibition is organized in thematic sections that reflect the many meanings embedded in the idea of landscape. Together, these works bring concepts of land and place into focus, foregrounding how we shape and are shaped by the spaces around us.
1 option
Mark Armijo McKnight: Decreation (Until 5 January 2025)
Wanda Gág’s World (Until 31 December 2024)
What It Becomes (Until 12 January 2025)
Survival Piece #5: Portable Orchard (Until 5 January 2025)
Shifting Landscapes (Until 31 January 2025)
Combine Whitney Museum of American Art with other New York favorites. Some things are better together.
The Whitney is a beautiful museum dedicated to the works of American artists in the twentieth and twenty first century. Named after founder and socialite Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney the museum's collection of new and innovative American contemporary art is unmatched.
Its entrance is on the southern end of High Line Park, so you can combine your cultural outing with some frisbee and a picnic.