Adrienne Edwards is the Engell Speyer Family Senior Curator and Associate Director of Curatorial Programs at the Whitney Museum of American Art, where she most recently curated the blockbuster exhibition “Edges of Ailey,” which was presented from September 2024 to February 2025. Edwards has been a curator at the Whitney since 2018. Her forthcoming exhibition is “Grace Rosario Perkins: Circles, Spokes, Zig Zags, Rivers,” the artists' first museum exhibition in New York City. She co-curated Whitney Biennial 2022: “Quiet as It’s Kept” and enhanced the strength and vitality of the Museum's performance program. From 2021-2024, she also served as the Whitney’s Director of Curatorial Affairs.
In 2022, Edwards was the President of the International Jury of the 59th Venice Biennale, as well as a jury member for the 40th anniversary edition of Videobrasil in 2023 and the selection committee for the curatorship of the Berlin Biennale in 2018. Prior to the Whitney, Edwards served as curator of Performa in New York City and as Curator at Large for the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis where she oversaw the Mellon Interdisciplinary Initiative. In addition to over fifty commissions in film, performance, and the visual arts, Edwards’s curatorial projects have also included the thematic intergenerational and interdisciplinary exhibition and catalogue “Blackness in Abstraction” presented at Pace Gallery (2016); the traveling exhibition and catalogue Jason Moran at the Walker Art Center, ICA Boston, and Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus (2018–19); “Moved by the Motion: Sudden Rise” (2020), a series of performances based on a text co-written by Wu Tsang, boychild, and Fred Moten at the Whitney; Dave McKenzie's first solo museum exhibition in New York City “The Story I Tell Myself” and its pendant performance commission “Disturbing the View” (2021) at the Whitney; and the performance collective My Barbarian's twentieth anniversary exhibition and catalogue (2021–22) at the Whitney and ICA LA.
Edwards was part of the Whitney's core team for David Hammons’s public art monument Day’s End. She has taught art history, performance, and visual studies at the CUNY Graduate Center, New York University, and the New School, and she has contributed essays to academic journals, artist monographs, group exhibition catalogues, and art magazines as well as other publications. She holds a PhD in Performance Studies from New York University.