Latest news with #ScottRothkopf


New York Times
31-07-2025
- New York Times
Man Dies After Apparent Fall From Whitney Museum
A 34-year-old visitor to the Whitney Museum of American Art in Manhattan's West Village was found dead on Wednesday afternoon, apparently after a fall, the police said. The man, whom the police did not identify, was pronounced dead at the scene at Gansevoort and Washington Streets after the police responded at about 5:30 p.m. The man had injuries indicative of falling from a height, the police said. The medical examiner's office will determine an official cause of death, and the incident is being investigated, the police said. The director of the museum, Scott Rothkopf, sent an email to staff members that said the man had jumped from the museum, ArtNews reported. In a separate statement, the museum said: 'Authorities are still determining the details, but we are devastated that a visitor lost their life. Our thoughts are with their family and friends, and with our staff, visitors and neighbors who were nearby when it occurred.' The museum, which was the third-most visited art museum in New York with nearly 890,000 visitors in 2024, according to The Art Newspaper, said it would delay its opening until noon on Thursday 'as a mark of respect.' If you are having thoughts of suicide, call or text 988 to reach the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline or go to for a list of additional resources.


New York Times
02-06-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Whitney Museum Suspends Program After Dispute Over Gaza Event
After a clash between students who attempted to stage performance art in support of the Palestinian cause and administrators who said the event would have violated the institution's anti-harassment policies, the Whitney Museum of American Art said on Monday that it was suspending its Independent Study Program. The program, which will not accept students next academic year, had built a reputation over more than 50 years for cultivating some of the biggest names in contemporary art, including artists like Andrea Fraser, Felix Gonzalez-Torres and Jenny Holzer. The Whitney said it expected to bring the program back for the 2026-27 academic year. In a statement about the suspension, the director of the New York museum, Scott Rothkopf, cited a 'gap in leadership' and how 'recent developments have underscored the need to further consider the nature of the relationship between the program and the museum.' Students, alumni and some administrators of the study program had criticized the museum's decision in May to cancel a student performance about the plight of Palestinians called ''No Aesthetic Outside My Freedom': Mourning, Militancy and Performance.' Museum officials said a previous version of the event, staged in New York last year by the Poetry Project, included an artist telling audience members to leave if they supported Israel, which would have violated the Whitney's anti-harassment policies. 'There's no instance when we would find it acceptable to single out members of our community based on their belief system and ask them to leave an exhibition or performance,' Ashley Reese, the museum's director of communications, said in a statement. She added that the museum also believed that a monologue 'valorized specific acts of violence' by Hamas, pointing to a description of a Palestinian bulldozer breaking apart a fence. 'The Whitney will continue to support difficult and provocative discussion of important events and social issues,' she said. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.