Edges of Ailey, opening at the Whitney Museum of American Art on September 25, is the first large-scale museum exhibition to celebrate the life, dances, influences, and enduring legacy of visionary artist and choreographer Alvin Ailey (b. 1931, Rogers, Texas; d. 1989, New York, New York).
This dynamic
showcase—described as an “extravaganza” by curator Adrienne Edwards—brings
together visual art, live performance, music, a range of archival materials,
and a multi-screen video installation drawn from recordings of Alvin Ailey
American Dance Theater (AAADT) repertory to explore the full range of Ailey’s
personal and creative life.
Presented at the Museum in two parts, Edges of Ailey
consists of an immersive exhibition in the Museum’s 18,000 square-foot
fifth-floor galleries—featuring works by more than eighty artists and
revelatory archival material—and an ambitious suite of performances in the
Museum’s third-floor theater, including AILEY in residence for one week each
month during the exhibition.
Sweeping holdings of rarely seen archives, including
performance footage, recorded interviews, notebooks, letters, poems, short
stories, choreographic notes, drawings, and performance programs and posters
gathered from Ailey’s archives and others forge a vital throughline in the
gallery. Selections from the Alvin Ailey Archival Papers—courtesy of the Allan
Gray Family Foundation and held at the Black Archives of Mid America in Kansas
City, Missouri—and the Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation Archives Collection held at
the Library of Congress are of singular importance, specially digitized and
exhibited for this show’s occasion. A dynamic montage of Ailey’s life and
dances will play on loop across an 18-channel video installation created by
filmmakers Josh Begley and Kya Lou, with curator Adrienne Edwards.
Ailey’s presence, felt through the video surround and his
encased personal effects, envelops a scenic installation of artworks by over
eighty artists. These works are arranged by themes that shaped Ailey’s life and
dances. Sections span an expanded Black southern imaginary that enfolds
histories of the American South with those of the Caribbean, Brazil, and West
Africa; the enduring practices of Black spirituality; the profound conditions
and effects of Black migration; the resilience for and necessity of an
intersectional Black liberation; the prominence of Black women in Ailey’s life;
and the robust histories and experiments of Black music; along with the myriad
representations of Blackness in dance and meditations on dance after Ailey.
Artists exhibited among Ailey include Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden, Faith Ringgold, Alma Thomas, Jacob Lawrence, Rashid Johnson, Kevin Beasley, Kara Walker, and many others.
A recent acquisition of Eldren
Bailey and new works by Karon Davis, Jennifer Packer, Mickalene Thomas, and
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye will be presented for the first time in honor of this
landmark exhibition.
Edges of Ailey also offers a rare opportunity for visitors to watch intimate live performances by Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in the Museum’s third-floor theater. As part of the exhibition's robust live performance program, AILEY is in residence at the Whitney for one week each month, for a total of five weeks and over ninety performances.
This gives visitors the opportunity to experience the full scope of Ailey's world and legacy, including performances of classic and contemporary works by the two repertory companies—Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and Ailey II—as well as showcases by students from The Ailey School, workshops and education programs from Ailey Arts In Education, and classes from Ailey Extension.
During the weeks AILEY is
not in residence at the Museum, a series of dance commissions by leading
choreographers and their collaborators, including Ronald K. Brown, Trajal
Harrell, Bill T. Jones, Ralph Lemon, with interdisciplinary artist Kevin
Beasley, Sarah Michelson, Okwui Okpokwasili and Peter Born, Will Rawls, Matthew
Rushing, Yusha-Marie Sorzano, and Jawole Willa Jo Zollar will be
showcased.
https://whitney.org/exhibitions/edges-of-ailey
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