Hyperallergic (Posts tagged washington dc)

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“For decades, the Bronx-born artist Whitfield Lovell has focused on painstakingly recreating, through drawing, found photo portraits of African Americans. Through these unexpected, mixed media juxtapositions, Lovell presents the foundations for us to construct new histories for these strangers, inviting us to consider what informs our understanding of others.”

Whitfield Lovell The Phillips Collection Washington DC
In an era still dominated by men, Romaine Brooks leaned into the subculture to which she belonged and painted largely her own friends and lovers.
Detail of Romaine Brooks, “Una, Lady Troubridge” (1924), oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum,...

In an era still dominated by men, Romaine Brooks leaned into the subculture to which she belonged and painted largely her own friends and lovers.

Detail of Romaine Brooks, “Una, Lady Troubridge” (1924), oil on canvas, Smithsonian American Art Museum, gift of the artist.

The Art of Romaine Brooks continues at the Smithsonian American Art Museum (8th and F Streets NW, Washington, DC) through October 2.

Romaine Brooks SAAM Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington DC
WASHINGTON, DC — In Iran, it’s difficult to know where the artistic and the political are separated, if they can be separated at all. With the Islamic Revolution of 1979 came a wave of censorship and crackdowns that drove many artists into exile,...

WASHINGTON, DC — In Iran, it’s difficult to know where the artistic and the political are separated, if they can be separated at all. With the Islamic Revolution of 1979 came a wave of censorship and crackdowns that drove many artists into exile, while those who remained have had to weather the shifting sands of the permitted and the banned. But for those who have left, what does it mean to return? It’s a journey artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian made in 2004, when she moved back to Tehran and set up a studio in the city she and her family had fled 25 years prior. In his new documentary Monir — which screened here recently during the Iranian Film Festival — Bahman Kiarostami looks back at the artist’s incredible life and forward to what lies ahead in her newly reinvigorated career.

A Portrait of an Iranian Artist Who Went Home After 35 Years in Exile

Artist Documentaries documentary Washington DC Monir Farmanfarmaian
WASHINGTON, DC — In her ongoing series Le “NEW” Monocle, artist Shana Lutker takes a few famous fistfights instigated by Surrealists in Paris in the 1920s and, after many hours of research, creates stage sets and performances based on their...

WASHINGTON, DC — In her ongoing series Le “NEW” Monocle, artist Shana Lutker takes a few famous fistfights instigated by Surrealists in Paris in the 1920s and, after many hours of research, creates stage sets and performances based on their circumstances and philosophical undertones.

From Michelangelo to Marden, Seven Fierce Fistfights from Art History

Brice Marden Caravaggio Clement Greenberg Dora Maar fights Hirshhorn Museum Julian Schnabel Kazimir Malevich Marie-Thérèse Walter Michelangelo Pablo Picasso Pietro Torrigiano Shana Lutker surrealism Vladimir Tatlin washington DC Whistler willem de kooning
WASHINGTON, DC — The Black Box film series at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden isn’t where you’d expect to find a gaggle of teenage boys. But when I stopped in to watch Sergio Caballero’s 25-minute flm “Ancha es Castilla” or “N’importe quoi”...

WASHINGTON, DC — The Black Box film series at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden isn’t where you’d expect to find a gaggle of teenage boys. But when I stopped in to watch Sergio Caballero’s 25-minute flm “Ancha es Castilla” or “N’importe quoi” (2014), the Spanish artist’s debut at a US museum, I was greeted by 10 high school freshmen who assured me that I would “really like it, it’s seriously weird.” They weren’t wrong.

A Strange Family Drama, Starring Found Object Sculptures

video art Washington DC Hirshhorn Museum Sergio Caballero
WASHINGTON, DC — Maeve McCool vividly remembers when she first learned that the Corcoran Gallery of Art and the conjoining Corcoran College of Art and Design would be no more. “It was the second day of my freshman year at the Corcoran,” she...

WASHINGTON, DC — Maeve McCool vividly remembers when she first learned that the Corcoran Gallery of Art and the conjoining Corcoran College of Art and Design would be no more. “It was the second day of my freshman year at the Corcoran,” she says.

More Than a Year After the Dissolution of the Corcoran, Its Art School Still Struggles in a New Home

washington DC art school corcoran gallery of art George Washington University Corcoran School of the Arts & Design
WASHINGTON, DC — The everyday organisms of our natural world become mysterious and illusory in the drawings of Beverly Ress. Her most recent works are sketches based on artifacts she observed in natural history and medical museums — including the...

WASHINGTON, DC — The everyday organisms of our natural world become mysterious and illusory in the drawings of Beverly Ress. Her most recent works are sketches based on artifacts she observed in natural history and medical museums — including the Smithsonian Natural History Museum, where she was recently an artist-in-residence — then transformed through precise incisions into the paper or careful folds that restructure the original colored pencil sketches. The results reconfigure specimens usually bound to strict institutional taxonomies and lifts them from the specificities of place and time; a dozen of these newly interpreted memento mori, as Ress herself describes them, are on view at the American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center in the exhibition The World Is a Narrow Bridge. Seen together, the manipulated works kindle feelings of fragmentation and fragility that echo the impermanence of all life.

Folded and Fragmented Drawings of the Natural World

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center Beverly Ress Washington DC
WASHINGTON, DC — Upon entering the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art (NMAfA), I made my way through the lobby and down a flight of stairs. At the bottom, I found myself on a kind of mezzanine, a carpeted space with a large window and...

WASHINGTON, DC — Upon entering the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art (NMAfA), I made my way through the lobby and down a flight of stairs. At the bottom, I found myself on a kind of mezzanine, a carpeted space with a large window and waist-high glass barrier at the back. I could see a tall wall rising up from the gallery below, and as I approached the barrier, colorful quilts resolved into view. Above their strips of fabric and mostly abstract shapes, at the very top of the wall, was a quote. In large white text shining under a spotlight, it said:

“Quilts tell a story of life, of memory, of family relationships.” —Bill Cosby

The Sexist Politics of the Smithsonian’s Cosby Exhibition

Aaron Douglas bill cosby charles white Faith Ringgold Malick Sidibé National Museum of African Art Washington DC