Golden's first curatorial position was at the
Studio Museum in Harlem in 1987. She was then a curator at the
Whitney Museum of American Art from 1988 to 1998. She was the visual arts director at the
Jamaica Arts Center in Queens before she became director of the Whitney Museum's outpost in midtown Manhattan (since closed) in 1991. In 1993, she organized the museum's biennial along with
Elisabeth Sussman,
Lisa Phillips, and
John Hanhardt. The show was criticized by some for its social and political themes and became "one of most hotly debated Whitney shows ever". Golden later looked back at the show as a "transformative experience" that helped her see how "art and artists can exist in a museum space in a way that is radical and powerful and can create change because of the work." The following year, Golden curated a show that would become still more controversial:
Black Male: Representations of Masculinity in Contemporary American Art (1994–95). This exhibition explored negative stereotypes of black masculinity, including homelessness and criminality. It included artworks by
Jean-Michel Basquiat,
Robert Mapplethorpe,
Glenn Ligon,
Dawn DeDeaux, and
David Hammons, as well as films such as
Gordon Parks'
Shaft and
Marlon Riggs'
Tongues Untied. Some established artists described the show's exploration of stereotypes as "irresponsible" and criticized what they saw as an over-representation of non-black artists.
The New York Times noted that the show was bringing unusually large black audiences to the museum, but that the artwork left them polarized in their reactions. Despite being initially "critically pummeled", the show's reputation improved in the following years. Within a decade, the
Times was describing it as "an important show", and two decades later, both
ARTnews and the Whitney itself described it as a "landmark exhibition". While with the Whitney, Golden also organized solo shows of the works of
Bob Thompson.
Lorna Simpson, Philanthropist
Peter Norton, who had helped fund Golden's
Black Male exhibition, resigned from the Whitney's board of trustees in response to Golden's departure. ==Studio Museum in Harlem==