The Wooster Group cuts the ribbon at the Whitney dedication ceremony
The Wooster Group cuts the ribbon at the Whitney dedication ceremony
Photo: Filip Wolak

Today, the new Whitney Museum of American Art opens its broad gates to the masses. If New York’s museum competition were a horse race, Renzo Piano’s appealing and thoughtful design would rocket it to the lead.

Yet art is not a horse race. And although it’s amusing to use such metaphors, it is also dangerous to do so.

It’s worth celebrating the new museum as a triumph (not every New Museum pulls off a relocation so successfully), while also taking a sober look into the future it portends for the art scene as a whole.

Running People at 2,616,216 (1978–79) by Jonathan Borofsky installed on the West Ambulatory, 5th floor
Whitney Museum of American Art. Photograph © Nic Lehoux

What makes the new Whitney so pleasing? That’s partly to do with how the design synthesizes the latest wisdom on the purpose a museum serves within a city: not a storehouse of knowledge, or a church for true believers but, first of all, an enticing leisure destination (see 10 Reasons to Be Excited About the New Whitney).

The new building makes the most of its site, with sweeping views of the skyline and water, chill-out spaces, and outdoor terraces and staircases. These last knowingly play off the presence of the High Line, the nearby tourist superhighway which it overlooks, and which the museum is counting on to deliver the massive new audiences it needs to justify the pricey move.

Mary Heilman, Rick Liss on the Whitney’s outdoor terrace
Photo: Patrick McMullan/Patrick McMullan

The New York Times’s Robin Pogrebin recently explained the pressure on the transplanted institution, which has increased its operating budget by almost half, to $49 million from $33 million. It plans to fill this gap via “an enhanced endowment, a jump in memberships and an increased number of visitors, driven in part by the museum’s location at the southern end of the heavily trafficked High Line.”

Compared to its old uptown Marcel Breuer-designed building, the Whitney has doubled its available exhibition space, from 33,000 square feet to 63,000 square feet (that includes the new outdoor space). But it hopes initially to triple attendance, which averaged 350,000 before.

The Whitney’s new location.
Photo: Courtesy the Whitney Museum of American Art.

Cities grow, and art grows, and thus a city’s art museums will likely grow as well. But believe it or not, not all growth is good for art. In fact, by general consensus, US museums overbuilt in the recent past, creating showpiece buildings that could not justify their new costs. Indeed, one way to read the relatively unflashy exterior of the Piano building is as a very clear signal that it is not just another rash trophy.

Anthropologist Matti Bunzl has written an insightful little book called In Search of a Lost Avant-Garde, based on his time embedded at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. In the preface, he explains how what seems like a sign of cultural strength—the museum building boom—actually grows out of the twisted economics of our day. I’ll quote a long passage, because I think it helps cut through some of the preciousness about contemporary museums and their mission:

Instead of causing decline, the neoliberal order forces museums into a relentless spiral of growth… With reductions in public funding, museums need to seek corporate support; to gain such support, they need to attract larger audiences; with more spectacular shows, exhibition costs are spiking; to cover these expenses, institutions need to be aggressive in seeking individual donations; to appeal to donors, museums have to become destinations that properly reflect on their benefactors and the art they lend or donate to the institution; to do this in style, old buildings have to expand, new ones erected; the bigger buildings have greater staffing needs and raise overhead costs; to cover these costs, museums have to pursue corporate support even more aggressively; to do so effectively, visitor numbers need to be increased even more, which requires more histrionic shows, with even greater appeal to individual donors, etc. etc. The cycle can commence at any point and its elements are readily interchangeable. No matter how it is drawn, however, what remains is the imperative for growth.

The Whitney is not the MCA. However, in at least one sense, Bunzl’s book is particularly relevant to the case at hand: In Search of a Lost Avant-Garde is specifically about the pressures he saw first-hand behind the scenes during its 2008 Jeff Koons retrospective. The Whitney, of course, concluded its time in the uptown Breuer space with another Koons retrospective last year.

At the MCA, Bunzl describes how giddy the marketers were about this show, about the sheer number of Koons cross-promotion opportunities, from baby tees to cookies. By comparison, Bunzl describes the marketing team as “despondent” about the prospects of a subsequent Jenny Holzer show, with its less warm-and-fuzzy vibe: ”Jenny Holzer is not a gateway show. It will offend some viewers.” The pressure of relentless competition for attention pushes towards a certain kind of play-to-the-balconies thinking about art.

Koons was a monster success for the Whitney, helping to drum up memberships and draw attention before the big leap to the Meatpacking District (see Koons-Spurred Membership Spike Sees Whitney Seeking Extra Help). Those who were not a fan of the Koons brand of shiny populism, however—and there were many of those—were left a little queasy by the whole thing (see Jeff Koons as the Art World’s Great White Hope).

Jeff Koons at his Whitney Museum Retrospective

In some ways, given the demanding realities ensured by the expensive new hq, I think that the last show at the Breuer building is likely more of a prophecy of the future than the inaugural show here, “America Is Hard to See.” All in all, the latter does a masterful job of satisfying the art nerds (a few legitimate quibbles about the parochialism of the collection aside). But after the surge of new visitors drawn by the fresh building, the museum is going to need to find or invent Koons-esque showstoppers to keep ’em coming off the High Line at a vastly greater rate than they were on Madison Avenue.

With luck and relentlessly sensitive curators, I actually think that the Whitney might be able to pull off this high-wire act—for itself. But as Bunzl emphasizes, this is a dynamic that pits institutions against each other, which is why the horse race talk is a little foolhardy.

It is very symbolic that the new Whitney opens on the same week that another, much smaller New York institution announces that it will shutter forever, the Museum of Biblical Art (MoBiA) (see New York’s Museum of Biblical Art Will Close for Good). The offbeat little museum had a puzzling mission to make a secular case for Biblically-inspired art, but it has done interesting work (see You’ll Fall for ‘Back to Eden’ at the Museum of Biblical Art), and recently drawn the biggest crowds in its history with a breath-taking Donatello show, showing what it was capable of bringing to the city.

“I believe that MOBIA contributes a unique element to the cultural landscape of New York and the entire country, and it is with tremendous sorrow that we close our doors,” the museum’s board of trustees co-chair John Fossum in a statement about the closing.

Donatello, St. John the Evangelist (1408–15), seen at the Museum of Biblical Art’s current “Sculpture in the Age of Donatello” show 
Photo: Antonio Quattrone © Opera di Santa Maria del Fiore.

The nature of the museum biz is that no museum funds itself through its own operations; all of them depend on the largesse of the taxpayer or the wealthy (the latter also subsidized by the taxpayer, through tax breaks for cultural giving). There is fierce competition for that affection. The new Whitney is, among other things, an exercise in shock-and-awe tastefulness designed to seduce such patrons away from competitors or potential competitors. Its very wonderfulness is a chess move in the battle for museum supremacy.

“The trends in museums mirror the trends of our society,” one museum consultant told Quartz last year. “Top megabrands have great resources, and strong boards and then you have the struggling middle tier who are ambitious but don’t have the same access to resources, and then the bottom tier, who survives by virtue of its passion, volunteers and a smaller [operating budget].” Even in a Barron’s article ostensibly about how the big museum endowments are now back at their pre-recession levels, the head of the Georgia Museum of Art explained, “We have fewer sources and less-predictable sources of income, and more and more museums are reporting this.”

And so, when it comes to judging the impact of the new Whitney and the other cultural behemoths, we should at least consider the possibility that the fireworks at the top play a role in consuming the oxygen down below.

We won’t know how it all truly shakes out, for the city or for the Whitney itself, until the expanded institution settles into the landscape and lives in its new body a bit. Still, its worth ending with the parting words from MoBiA’s director. They refer to that vanishing institution’s own quirky plight, but can be used more generally to give a little pause about what the future might hold in store: “I think we had a simplistic view: Good exhibitions will equal successful fund-raising, but it just doesn’t always work out that way.”