SITE Santa Fe is a dynamic platform for the production and presentation of artistic and curatorial innovation.

Through excellence in exhibitions and programs, including SITE's signature international exhibition, we seek to actively engage a diverse audience and serve as a nexus for contemporary art discourse.



SITE Santa Fe is a leading international venue for artistic experimentation and curatorial innovation.

SITE is relevant and engaging to a diverse local, national, and international audience.

SITE is valued by the community as a vital resource and instrumental catalyst for igniting a thriving local contemporary arts scene.




Photo: Herbert Lotz, 2005


SITE Santa Fe creates significant experiences for its visitors by presenting the most innovative visual art of our time in new and engaging ways. Its International Biennial, year-round exhibitions, and educational programs expand the creative and intellectual potential of its audience and carry forward the region's tradition of fostering avant-garde art.

SITE Santa Fe was launched in 1995 to organize the only international biennial of contemporary art in the U.S. SITE Santa Fe has since presented eight international biennial exhibitions, each of which has drawn global attention and presented important contemporary art to the Santa Fe community and beyond. Conceived to bring the global contemporary art dialogue to the art-rich Southwest, and as a major event on par with such renowned exhibitions as the Whitney Biennial and the Venice Biennale, it has become an integral event for contemporary art aficionados, attracting tens of thousands of visitors from around the world. Past biennial curators have either arrived as or have subsequently become superstars in the world of contemporary art, a testament to SITE's foresight and artistic clout. Following their SITE Santa Fe Biennial guest curatorships, Francesco Bonami (1997), Rosa Martínez (1999) and Robert Storr (2004) were chosen to organize the Venice Biennales in 2003, 2005, and 2007, respectively. Dave Hickey received the coveted MacArthur "Genius Award" after organizing SITE’s Biennial in 2001. Klaus Ottmann (2006), Lance Fung (2008) and Sarah Lewis and Daniel Belasco (2010) have all garnered significant praise for their respective biennials, and have gone on to exciting posts and projects worldwide.

The success of the first biennial influenced SITE to expand its programming to include three to four exhibitions per year, often accompanied by highly acclaimed catalogues. SITE also hosts an Art & Culture series of lectures and performances, as well as an extensive education and outreach program for local schools, all of which attract 20,000-30,000 local, national, and international visitors.

In 2010, Irene Hofmann was named the Phillips Director. Irene’s career includes prolific work as a curator in organizing and touring innovative exhibitions in collaboration with a wide range of partners. Her remarkable achievements as Executive Director of the Contemporary Museum in Baltimore, MD constitute a body of work that is consistent with SITE Santa Fe's mission and core values. She plans to continue SITE's legacy of presenting first one-person museum exhibitions of numerous emerging and now internationally recognized artists as well as significant group exhibitions, while garnering SITE an expanded profile among its national and international peer institutions as well as in our own community.



The primary mission of the SITE Santa Fe Biennial is to give independent curators the freedom to present unique international exhibitions within the context of our museum that incorporate site-specific projects that may otherwise be difficult to execute in larger institutions.



The Dissolve

SITE Santa Fe’s Eighth International Biennial
June 20, 2010 - January 2, 2011
Curated by Sarah Lewis and Daniel Belasco
Exhibition Design by Adjaye Associates

The Dissolve examined contemporary art’s tendency to combine the tradition (painting, drawings) with different forms of moving picture technology, from the archaic (shadow puppetry) to the cutting edge (3D computer renderings). The work included in the Biennial emphasizes the presence of the artists' hand, from the handmade to the high-tech. Curators Sarah Lewis and Daniel Belasco connected figures from film history to artists working today: pioneering animator Lotte Reiniger's silhouette epic The Adventures of Prince Achmed parallels the shadow play of Paul Chan and Kara Walker, while Robin Rhode's juxtaposition of live action and animation hearkens back to the Edison Manufacturing Company's early experiments with moving pictures. The OpenEnded Group collaborated with legendary choreographer Bill T. Jones to render the movements of dancers into a subtle 3D spectacle far removed from summer blockbusters boasting the same technology. The Dissolve's participating artists share a desire to push the boundaries of the medium, synthesizing historical models and techniques into a new aesthetic.

Artists: Robert Breer, Paul Chan, Martha Colburn, Thomas Demand, Brent Green, George Griffin, Ezra Johnson, Bill T. Jones and OpenEnded Group, William Kentridge, Avish Khebrehzadeh, Laleh Khorramian, Maria Lassnig, Jennifer and Kevin McCoy, Joshua Mosley, Oscar Muñoz, Jacco Olivier, Raymond Pettibon, Robert Pruitt, Christine Rebet, Mary Reid Kelley, Robin Rhode, Hiraki Sawa, Berni Searle, Cindy Sherman, Federico Solmi, Kara Walker, with historical works by Edison Manufacturing Company, Fleischer Studios, Lotte Reiniger, and Dziga Vertov.



Installation View, 2010
Berni Searle
About to Forget, 2005
35mm cinemascope film transferred to three-channel video projection; sound; 3 minutes
Courtesy of the artist and Michael Stevenson Gallery, Cape Town




Lucky Number Seven

SITE Santa Fe’s Seventh International Biennial
June 22, 2008 - January 4, 2009
Curated by Lance Fung
Exhibition Design by Williams + Tsien

In organizing Lucky Number Seven, Fung began by selecting art institutions rather than artists. Challenging the notion of the authoritative chief curator, he assembled a curatorial team from eighteen institutions: each curator proposed several artists for inclusion in the biennial, and Fung selected a group from this pool. This process brought more than twenty participating artists to Santa Fe to create site-inspired pieces, installed in the museum and around the city. Because they were created for particular spaces, the works ceased to exist as works of art, per se, after the exhibition, highlighting the ephemeral nature of the collaborative process. This group of international artists toured the city together, gathering and sharing ideas for their installations. The show presented a challenge to the idea of biennials as glitzy spectacles showcasing an insular coterie of superstar artists. Instead, Fung hoped to harness the creative energy of a group of artists exploring their surroundings to create an exhibition that was accessible and relevant to the Santa Fe community. In this spirit of openness and collaboration, the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs teamed up with students from New Mexico Highlands University, the College of Santa Fe, and the Institute of American Indian Arts to make a web-based documentary of the biennial, Santa Fe Lucky 7. This project showcased the artists' experiences and processes, encouraging public engagement with the exhibition.

Artists: Martí Anson, Erick Beltrán, Luchezar Boyadjiev, Michal Budny, Ricarda Denzer, Hiroshi Fuji, Fabien Giraud, Piero Golia, Soun Hong, Scott Lyall, Nick Mangan, Eliza Naranjo Morse, Nora Naranjo Morse, Ahmet Ogüt, Shi Qing, Mandla Reuter, Nadine Robinson, Zbigniew Rogalski, Wael Shawky, Raphaël Siboni, Rose B. Simpson, Studio Azzurro

Institutions and Curators: Association for Cultural Integration, Warsaw, Poland - Lukasz Gorczyca; Centre D’Art Santa Monica, Barcelona, Spain - Ferran Barenblit; Contemporary Art Center, Art Tower Mito, Mito, Japan – Tsukasa Mori; Fondazione Antonion Mazzotta, Milan, Italy – Dr. Martina Mazzotta; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin, Italy – Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo; Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt, Germany – Chus Martinez; Gertrude Contemporary Art Spaces, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia – Alexie Glass; Institute of American Indian Arts Museum, Santa Fe, NM, United States – Joseph Sanchez; Institute of Contemporary Art – Sofia, Sofia, Bulgaria – Iara Boubnova; Museo Experimental El Eco, Mexico City, Mexico – Guillermo Santamarina; Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France – Marc-Olivier Wahler; Platform Garanti Contemporary Art Center, Istanbul, Turkey – Vasif Kortun; Secession, Vienna, Austria – Barbara Holub; SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, NM, United States – Laura Steward Heon; Ssamzie Space, Seoul, Korea – Hyunjin Shin; The Power Plant, Toronto, Canada – Gregory Burke; Townhouse Gallery of Contemporary Art, Cairo, Egypt – William Wells; Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China – Colin Chinnery



Installation View, 2008
Piero Golia
Manifest Destiny (16 foot jump off the Tsien and Williams’ ramp onto a 2x12x12 foot red polyurethane foam landing pad)
Three stunt mattresses




Still Points of the Turning World

SITE Santa Fe Sixth International Biennial
July 9, 2006 – January 7, 2007
Curated by Klaus Ottmann, independent curator and scholar, author of numerous articles, essays, and books on art and philosophy

Intensity, experimentation, and visceral presence were the hallmarks of 13 significant one-person installations – some of them newly commissioned, all of them never-before seen in the U.S. – that constituted SITE Santa Fe’s Sixth International Biennial. Ottmann’s exhibition both concentrated and amplified these singular works, empowering them to speak for themselves without the common filter of a prescriptive curatorial theme. As Ottmann explained, “I want this Biennial to be about the artists, not about the curator.” Ottmann envisioned a bold concept for this timely, groundbreaking Biennial. Eager to steer away from the now ubiquitous mega-biennials, he dramatically reduced the quantity of artists to 13 and the exhibition to approximately 40 works. Each artist had separate rooms, designed to encourage as well as seduce their audiences with a purer, unmediated experience. The exhibition covered the full spectrum of contemporary art media and comprised photography, installation, painting, performance art, soundscapes, sculpture, and video. All the work was new, and four artists were commissioned to create works expressly for the Biennial.

Artists: Miroslaw Balka, Jennifer Bartlett, Patty Chang, Stephen Dean, Peter Doig, Robert Grosvenor, Cristina Iglesias, Wolfgang Laib, Jonathan Meese, Wangechi Mutu, Carsten Nicolai, Catherine Opie, Thorns Ltd.

Ottmann's show was easy on the senses, and on the feet, and . . . it did more justice to the art on view than almost any other biennial.Since its founding SITE has pushed itself toward the front of the crowded field of global biennials.
-Blake Gopnik, The Washington Post



Installation View, 2006
Carsten Nicolai
(Installation view from left to right)
Telefunken Anti, 2004, 2 CD players, 2 audio CDs, 2 flat-screen monitors, Dimensions variable; Spray, 2005, Video projector, DVD player, DVD, sound
Dimensions variable, Courtesy of the artist and Galerie EIGEN + ART Leipzig/Berlin




Disparities and Deformations: Our Grotesque

SITE Santa Fe’s Fifth International Biennial
July 18, 2004 – January 9, 2005
Curated by Robert Storr, Dean of the Yale School of Art, Consulting Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and curator of the 2007 Venice Biennale.

Storr's Biennial focused on the theme of the grotesque in some of today’s most cutting-edge art. The grotesque tradition in art extends back to ancient times and can be traced through the Renaissance, Baroque, and Romantic periods. In the modern era, it can be found in the expressionist and surrealist movements, among others. Disparities and Deformations: Our Grotesque examined expressions of the grotesque tradition in contemporary art. The exhibition brought together a diverse group of works that responded and gave new substance to the sense of emotional and logical uncertainty inherent in the grotesque. This Biennial tracked the incongruous combination of disparate forms and ideas in the work of internationally renowned artists of different generations, coming from various cultural contexts, and working with different processes and ideas. The exhibition revealed the many elements of paradox inherent in the artists’ work while showing that the grotesque has many sources of inspiration and a nearly infinite number of guises.

Artists: Ricci Albenda, Louise Bourgeois, Charles Burns, Francesco Clemente, Bruce Conner, R. Crumb, John Currin, Carroll Dunham, James Esber, Inka Essenhigh, Tom Friedman, Ellen Gallagher, Robert Gober, Douglas Gordon, Mark Greenwold, Lyle Ashton Harris, Jörg Immendorff, Jasper Johns, Kim Jones, Mike Kelley, Maria Lassnig, Sherrie Levine, Christian Marclay, Paul McCarthy, Jennifer and Kevin McCoy, Elizabeth Murray, Bruce Nauman, Hermann Nitsch, Jim Nutt, Tony Oursler, Gary Panter, Lamar Peterson, Raymond Pettibon, Lari Pittman, Sigmar Polke, Neo Rauch, Alexander Ross, Susan Rothenberg, Peter Saul, Jenny Saville, Thomas Schütte, Jim Shaw, Cindy Sherman, Laurie Simmons, Fred Tomaselli, Adriana Varejão, Davor Vrankic, Kara Walker, Jeff Wall, John Waters, John Wesley, Franz West, Lisa Yuskavage



Installation View, 2004 (L to R):
Maria Lassnig, Thomas Schütte, Jörg Immendorff, Thomas Schütte, Neo Rauch, Sigmar Polke


With a swift sleight of hand, Storr stakes out a position between the art of the Louvre and the finer fruits of contemporary mass-media culture. He’s an intellectual populist. Unlike so many lumbering theme shows without actual themes, Storr delivers his thesis clearly and persistently rather than merely wheat-pasting some catchy, faux-smart slogan over a predictable selection of overly familiar, trendy artists who make the international exhibition rounds from Venice to São Paulo to Pittsburgh to Seoul. – David Riminelli, Artforum




Beau Monde: Toward a Redeemed Cosmopolitanism

SITE Santa Fe’s Fourth International Biennial
July 14, 2001 – January 6, 2002
Curated by Dave Hickey, art critic and recipient of the 2001 MacArthur “Genius” award.

In selecting Dave Hickey to curate its fourth biennial, SITE made a bold and canny choice because Hickey had vociferously criticized both the concept and execution of biennials as “trade shows for curators in search of internationally certified installations to fill out their exhibition schedules.” While the earlier curators all scoured the globe in search of artists to weave installations around a loose theme, Hickey opted for the pragmatic, the democratic, and the historical in Beau Monde: Toward a Redeemed Cosmopolitanism. Instead of trying to make an ideological point, he organized “an exhibition that I want to see,” whose fundamental criterion was simply “Does the space look better and more interesting with or without it?” Hickey selected 27 international artists, including Jo Baer, Ed Ruscha, Jesús Rafael Soto, and Jessica Stockholder, who wove diverse cultural milieux into a "beau monde".

Artists: Kenneth Anger, Jo Baer, Jeff Burton, James Lee Byars, Pia Fries, Gajin Fujita, Graft Design, Frederick Hammersley, Marine Hugonnier, Jim Isermann, Ellsworth Kelly, Josiah McElheny, Darryl Montana, Sarah Morris, Takashi Murakami, Nic Nicosia, Kermit Oliver, Jorge Pardo, Ken Price, Stephen Prina, Bridget Riley, Ed Ruscha, Alexis Smith, Rafael Soto, Jennifer Steinkamp and Jimmy Johnson, Jessica Stockholder, Jane and Louise Wilson



Installation View, 2001
Foreground (reflected in mirror): Jessica Stockholder, Darryl Montana
Background (through doorway): Pia Fries, James Lee Byars, Bridget Riley



Façade View, (L to R)
Graft Design, Jim Isermann



Beau Monde advances one big argument—for itself as a model of what an omnibus exhibition should be like—as well as several lesser arguments for the art it displays. The main point succeeds completely. The others invite spirited debate. The importance of pleasure in aesthetic experience is so simple and self-evident. How did we reach a point where a forthright assertion of that idea by an art show can seem like a stroke of genius? - Peter Schjeldahl, The New Yorker, August 13, 2001




Looking for a Place

SITE Santa Fe’s Third International Biennial
July 10 – December 31, 1999
Curated by Rosa Martínez, art critic and independent curator, currently Chief Curator at the Istanbul Museum of Modern Art

In 1999, Rosa Martínez extended the earlier biennials’ meditations on place by bringing 29 artists from 23 countries together in Looking for a Place. Understanding her role as editor/agitator, Martínez wanted a “fluid alternative to the inviolable solidity of museums,” where white cubes display beautiful objects. Her artists both punctured SITE’s walls and reached beyond them into public, commercial, and sacred spaces like the old dancehall at Galisteo, the Los Alamos airport, and a municipal parking garage. Nobody objected to Diller + Scofidio’s multimedia installation in Room 120 of the Budget Inn, but even after permissions were granted, two installations—the cemetery for a Hispanic Catholic parish church and a lake on a nearby Indian Pueblo—were dismantled in the opening days, speeding up the Biennial’s ephemeral quality.

Artists: Helena Almeida, Ghada Amer, Janine Antoni, Monica Bonvicini, Louise Bourgeois, Tania Bruguera, Cai Guo-Qiang, Lygia Clark, Diller + Scofidio, Dr. Galentin Gatev, Greenpeace, Yolanda Gutiérrez, Mona Hatoum, Carl Michael von Hausswolff, Carsten Höller, Simone Aaberg Kærn, Zwelethu Mthethwa, Nikos Navridis, Shirin Neshat, Rivane Neuenschwander, Gabriel Orozco, Pipilotti Rist, Francisco Ruiz de Infante, Bülent Sangar, Arsen Savadov & Georgy Senchenko, Charlene Teters, Sergio Vega, Miwa Yanagi



Installation View, 1999
Yolanda Gutiérriez
The river whispers to us, and the snake hisses




Truce: Echoes of Art in an Age of Endless Conclusions

SITE Santa Fe’s Second International Biennial
July 18 – October 12, 1997
Curated by Francesco Bonami, former independent curator, and current Chief Curator of Contemporary Art at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago

SITE’s second Biennial, TRUCE: Echoes of Art in an Age of Endless Conclusions, benefited from the concurrent opening of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum as well as the second ART Santa Fe Contemporary Art Fair, producing a triple header that attracted the art world’s attention. Aptly named, this Biennial signaled a truce with the community by engaging in dialogues with local voices. Curator Francesco Bonami assembled 27 artists from 20 countries whose work connected isolated individuals to communal forces and contested our culture’s language of violence as “the only transmitter of meaning.” Among this Biennial’s successes count Sam Taylor-Wood’s simultaneous videos of five isolated people narrating their lives, Esko Männikkö’s bleak photographs of West Texas Hispanic communities, subREAL’s documenting of Ceaucescu’s fall, and, in his first U.S. showing, William Kentridge’s animations of post-apartheid South Africa.

Artists: Massimo Bartolini, Vanessa Beecroft, Maurizio Cattelan, Olafur Eliasson, Giuseppe Gabellone, Kevin Hanley, Noritoshi Hirakawa, Gary Hume, Lukás Jasansky & Martin Polák, KCHO, William Kentridge, Suchan Kinoshita, Udomsak Krisanamis, Sharon Lockhart, Esko Männikkö, Tracey Moffatt, Chris Moore, Elizabeth Peyton, Huang Yong Ping, Tobias Rehberger, Miguel Rio Branco, Rudolf Stingel, SubREAL, Sam Taylor-Wood, Pascale Marthine Tayou, Jaan Toomik, Eulalia Valldosera



Installation View, 1997




Longing and Belonging: From the Faraway Nearby

SITE Santa Fe’s First International Biennial
July 14 – October 8, 1995
Curated by Bruce W. Ferguson, former Executive Director and Curator, SITE Santa Fe, and current Director of Exhibitions at the Art Gallery of Ontario

Longing and Belonging was the inaugural exhibition at SITE Santa Fe. It included 31 international artists who all explore identities in global culture. This exhibition mirrored SITE’s mission of bringing the “faraway nearby” by bringing objects and images from the international community to Santa Fe. It also addressed culturally-based ideas of permanency, displacement, exile, and heritage, among others.

Artists: Marina Abramovic, Chema Alvargonzález, Francis Alÿs, Robert Ashley, Rebecca Belmore, Barbara Bloom, Imre Bukta, Carlos Capelán, Thomas Joshua Cooper, Braco Dimitrijevic, Felix Gonzáles-Torres, Ann Hamilton, Gary Hill, Jenny Holzer, Rebecca Horn, Anish Kapoor, Catherine Lord, Chie Matsui, Jakob Battner, Gerald McMaster, Bruce Nauman, Marta María Pérez Bravo, Alison Rossiter, Meridel Rubenstein, Andres Serrano, Lorna Simpson, Valeska Soares, Pierrick Sorin, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Tseng Kwong Chi, Millie Wilson



Installation View, 1995
Chema Alvagonzalez
Available