The Whitney Museum of American Art has cast a curatorial eye on its food and beverage offerings and commissioned artworks by Rashid Johnson and Dyani White Hawk to help revamp its culinary amenities.
Frenchette Bakery, which opened in TriBeca in 2020, will launch its first-ever café in the museum's redesigned ground-floor restaurant space later this month. The bakery outpost, from the minds behind high-end restaurants Frenchette and Le Rock, will initially feature take-away options, followed by sit-down fare later in its tenure.
Johnson's installation, New Poetry (2023), a 15ft-tall structure of black steel shelves holding an array of plants, monitors, vessels and books, straddles the Whitney's glass façade, stretching between the new café's interior and the outdoor pedestrian plaza beyond. White Hawk's work, Nourish (2023), will be installed in December in the museum's new eighth-floor café space, set to open in 2024.
"We didn't design these spaces and then ask artists to fill a spot," Scott Rothkopf, the new director of the Whitney, told The New York Times "We asked the artists first, and found out what they wanted to do. It's a very Whitney way of doing it."
White Hawk’s installation will honour legacies of Indigenous art through alternative traditions of abstraction in ceramic tile, a simultaneous nod to Lakota symbolism and the New York subway system. “When cared for intentionally, the spaces in which we share meals together, and/or find respite, can be the most sacred of spaces—where we take part in nourishing mind, body and spirit, gathered together, or individually among the company of others,” White Hawk—one of the stars of the 2022 Whitney Biennial—said in a statement.
...
Read full article at theartnewspaper.com.