Whitley attended Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania, where she studied art history and French.[3] For her first assignment on contemporary art, Whitley recounted basing her essay on the thoughts that a Black security guard working at the Philadelphia Museum of Art gave her about Nigredo (1984), a painting by Anselm Kiefer: "Everything that ended up in my essay, which my art-history professor said was really excellent, came from what he was able to share with me."[4]
While attending Swarthmore, in 1999, Whitley completed an internship at the costume and textiles department of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.[2] There, department head Sharon Takeda and her colleague, Kaye Spilker, recommended Whitley become a curator.[2] On their advice, Whitley studied at the Royal College of Art in London after graduating from Swarthmore in 2001, and earned a master's degree in design history.[2][5] Her master's thesis examined Black representation in Vogue magazine. She earned a PhD from the University of Central Lancashire with British artist and curator Lubaina Himid.[3]
Career
Whitley started her career at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London in 2003. For two years, Whitley worked as an assistant curator in the museum's prints section. She then became a curator in 2005.[6] In 2007, she organised Uncomfortable Truths, an exhibition that commemorated the bicentenary of the abolition of the British slave trade.[7] The exhibition examined traces of the slave trade in contemporary art and design.[2] In 2013, she stepped down from her position to begin a PhD at the University of Central Lancashire. As an independent curator, she co-curated the Afrofuturism-focused exhibition The Shadows Took Shape at the Studio Museum in Harlem.[3]
Tate, 2013–2019
In 2013, Whitley joined the Tate galleries. Between 2013 and 2015, she held dual curatorial positions at Tate Britain and Tate Modern as curator in international art and curator of contemporary British art, respectively. After April 2017, the focus of her work became international art and the collection of Tate Modern.[6] With Mark Godfrey, she co-curated the 2017 exhibition Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, which examined the response of more than sixty artists in America to the Civil Rights Movement and the subsequent Black Power movement.[2][8][9] The exhibition, according to Whitley, emphasised "art and artists, rather than a social history of art and ephemera," and includes works by Frank Bowling, Betye Saar, and Barkley L. Hendricks.[9]ARTnews described Soul of a Nation as one of the most important art exhibitions of the 2010s.[10] The Association of Art Museum Curators awarded Whitley one of its 2020 Curatorial Awards for Excellence for the exhibition.[11]
With Nancy Ireson, Whitley co-curated Elijah Pierce's America, a retrospective of the works of American woodcarverElijah Pierce exhibited at the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[17] Later that year, she oversaw Possessions, a section of the virtual "Frieze Viewing Room" that focuses on spirituality in contemporary art.[18][19] In 2021, she was appointed to the Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm, a committee overseeing diversity in London's public monuments and its street and building names.[20]