1. Mariah Garnett
Garnett’s inclusion signals the Biennial’s embrace of intergenerational narrative and experimental film/video art. Her 2026 works explore collaboration, spiritualism, and archival imagination, expanding the boundaries of biography and myth.
2. Akira Ikezoe
A multidisciplinary artist based in New York born in Kochi, Japan, Ikezoe blends drawing, painting, performance, and video. His practice explores the liminal space between human experience and natural forces—a great example of the Biennial’s conceptual depth.
**3. Oswaldo Maciá — Sound & Sculpture Innovator
Maciá’s work (also in the Biennial artist list) merges site‑specific sound sculpture and environmental awareness, pushing traditional mediums into immersive experiential art. Featured pieces often transform architectural space and audience perception.
**4. CFGNY (Daniel Chew, Ten Izu, Kirsten Kilponen & Tin Nguyen) — Collective Practice
This Brooklyn‑based collective breaks boundaries with collaborative practices and multimedia engagement. Their approach reflects the Biennial’s overarching theme of relationality — how identity, community, and perception intersect through art.
**5. Ami Lien — Contemporary Narrative & Materiality
Working across media, Lien — often paired with collaborator Enzo Camacho — creates richly layered works that blend botanical and cultural narratives using unconventional materials. Their presence in the Biennial adds a poetic layer to the thematic exploration of human and natural relation.
🧠 Why These Artists Matter
The 2026 Whitney Biennial doesn’t just showcase big names — it’s curated to highlight voices engaging with:
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Relationality across personal, cultural, ecological, and technological realms
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Innovation in medium and narrative
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Intersectional perspectives from across the U.S. and beyond
This mix of artists gives visitors a snapshot of where contemporary art is right now — diverse, provocative, and deeply connected to social currents and artistic evolution.
📌 Bonus Pick (Honourable Mention)
Julio Torres — While better known in cultural circles as a comedian and screenwriter, his inclusion in the Biennial list shows how the contemporary art world continues to blur boundaries between performance, narrative, and visual art.