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SPRING ARTS 2017 — galleries: The art of the matter

Paintings, sculptures, woodcuts and more part of spring exhibits

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DC galleries, gay news, Washington Blade

Yayoi Kusama with her series ‘My Eternal Soul,’ on exhibit through May at the Hirshhorn Museum. (Photo courtesy Hirshhorn)

Artists & Makers Studios (11810 Parklawn Dr., Rockville, Md.) presents “at 2(two),” a gallery featuring artwork from more than 120 resident artists, opening Friday, March 3. There will be an opening reception with champagne celebrating the organization’s second anniversary from 6-9 p.m. Also on display will be mini-solo exhibits in the New Masters Gallery from Ken Bachman, Sara Bardin, Mary Morris and Lis Zadravec. The Montgomery County Camera Club will also display its exhibit “Visualizations” at Artists & Makers Studios. All exhibits run through March 29.

Touchstone Gallery (901 New York Ave., N.W.) presents the Touchstone Gallery Member Show in Gallery A from March 3-April 2. “Common Threads” by April Rimpo, featuring acrylics and watercolors exploring repeated images from around the world, will be in Gallery B. “Scribbles: an Urban Art Series” by Lisa Tureson, a series of mixed media paintings, will be in Gallery C.

Exposed D.C. celebrates its 11th annual photography exhibit with an opening night reception at Ajax (1011 4th St., N.W.) on Thursday, March 9 from 6-10 p.m. Forty-three images exploring D.C. as a city people live, work and love will be on display and available for purchase. There will be complimentary wine, beer, soda and snacks. Tickets are $20.

The National Museum of Women’s Art (1250 New York Ave., N.W.) presents “Chromatic Scale: Prints by Polly Apfelbaum” on March 10-July 2. Apfelbaum incorporates bright colors and abstract designs on her large-scale print installations.

The Kreeger Museum presents “RE-VISION” from March 10-July 29 in honor of its 50th anniversary. The exhibit will examine the art of  architect Philip Johnson and the design of the Kreeger Museum. On Thursday, March 23 there will be “Through the Artist’s Lens,” a panel discussion, from 6-8 p.m. On Thursday, April 13 there be be another panel discussion, “State of the Art: Modern Architecture in Washington D.C.” from 6-8 p.m. Panel discussions are $15 for non-members and $12 for members. Admission to the exhibit is free.

National Gallery of Art (6th and Constitution Ave., N.W.) showcases “East of the Mississippi: Nineteenth-Century American Landscape Photography” and “The Woodner Collection: Master Drawings from Seven Centuries” from March 12-July 16. “East of the Mississippi” features 175 photographs of eastern American landscapes during the 1800s. “The Woodner Collections” includes 100 works ranging from the 14th to the 20th century from Dian and Andrea Woodner’s personal collection.

CulturalDC features “Developing an Argument” by Maryland sculptor Christian Benefiel at Flashpoint Gallery (916 G St., N.W.) from March 18-April 8. Benefiel’s sculptures focus on how a social construct works with balance and tension both physically and visually. On Sunday, March 26 at 1:30 p.m. Benefil will appear at the Luce Foundation Center Artist Talk to explain his work.

Long View Gallery (1234 9th St., N.W.) presents “ReFresh VII,” with new work from Mike Weber, Ryan McCoy, Cheryl Wassenaar, Lori Katz, Colin Winterbottom and J. Jodran Bruns. Baltimore artists Jessie and Katey will also premier their new works in the exhibit. It runs through March 19.

Gallery B (7700 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda, Md.) displays its March exhibit “Beyond That” running through March 25. The exhibit features work from eight artists including Alfredo Palmero, Nihal Kececi, Nadia Arditti, Steffen Faisst, Bryan Grose, Noel Aquino and more.

“Pathfinders” by Michael Platt is open at Honfleur Gallery (1241 Good Hope Rd., S.E.) through April 9. The D.C. native’s work highlights people Platt finds revolutionary on canvas using photography, digital imagery and printmaking. There will be an artist talk on Saturday, March 25 from 2-4 p.m.

The National Building Museum (401 F St., N.W.) showcases “Around the World in 80 Paper Models” on April 16-17. The paper models recreate various buildings from all over the world such as castles, cathedrals and gardens. Some of the micro-models can be seen flat while others can be experienced in 3-D. After the tour, visitors can build their own models. General adult admission is $10 and general youth admission is $7.

The Phillips Collection (1600 21st St., N.W.) presents “Toulouse-Lautrec Illustrates the Belle Époque” through April 30. Prints and posters from French artist Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s will be on display spanning his career. Tickets are $12 for adults and $10 for students and visitors over 62. Members and visitors under 18 are free.

Hirschhorn Museum (Independence Ave., S.W.) presents “Yayoi Kusama: Infinity Mirrors” through May 14. The exhibit showcases six of the Japanese artist’s work including her recent series “My Eternal Soul,” her 1960s work “Happenings” and her recent Infinity Mirror Room. Admission is free but timed passes are required. Passes are released on a weekly basis online. Same-day, walk-up timed passes are also available at the museum.

“Peacock Room REMIX: Darren Waterson’s Filthy Lucre” is on display at the Freer and Sackler Galleries (1050 Independence Ave., S.W.) through June. Out artist Waterson recreated James McNeill Whistler’s iconic piece “Peacock Room” to depict the room as a collapsed ruin.

‘M&M Therapy,’ a work by Kathy Lindert. (Photo courtesy Artists & Makers Studio)

‘M&M Therapy,’ a work by Kathy Lindert. (Photo courtesy Artists & Makers Studio)

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BMA celebrates enduring influence of Henri Matisse

Exhibit features iconic works juxtaposed with gay artist’s paintings inspired by French legend

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‘Tom’ by Louis Fratino (left) and ‘Large Reclining Nude’ by Henri Matisse (right) reveal the ways in which the legendary French visual artist influenced the young American painter, from the use of light and pattern to the choice to focus on everyday subjects.

The Baltimore Museum of Art is on a roll. 

After landing the coveted Amy Sherald “American Sublime” exhibit (through April 5) when the National Portrait Gallery attempted to censor her work, the BMA is debuting a breathtaking and thought-provoking new exhibit, “To See This Light Again” featuring master works by Henri Matisse paired with new paintings by Louis Fratino, who is inspired by the French modernist legend.

Fratino, who’s gay, was born in Annapolis and studied at Baltimore’s Maryland Institute College of Art. As an art student, he found himself spending lots of time in the BMA’s Matisse galleries, the largest collection of his works in the world, encompassing more than 1,600 paintings, drawings, and illustrations. At just 33, Fratino has enjoyed a “meteoric” rise in the art world, according to BMA Director Asma Naeem, who introduced Fratino at an event previewing the exhibit last week. This is Fratino’s first major U.S. exhibition, but he was featured in the 2024 Venice Biennale and his paintings can be found at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and elsewhere. 

The exhibit aims to explore Matisse’s lasting influence by juxtaposing his works with Fratino’s. 

“It’s the idea that art manifests a kind of attention or a vision for your life, that it can be a beautiful life despite certain circumstances that may be happening around you,” Fratino said in a statement released by the BMA. “In Matisse’s case, he lived through the First and Second World Wars. Painting can confirm that life is beautiful and that it’s worth looking at.”

The influences are apparent, from the use of light and pattern to the choice to focus on everyday objects and subjects. And the exhibit is unabashedly queer with male couples depicted in a couple of paintings. Fratino told the Blade that as an out gay man, it was important to embrace that visibility. 

He describes a “joy of looking” at the male form, just as Matisse portrayed female figures that often celebrated the tradition of painting nudes. 

In “Tom,” Fratino captured his subject in casual repose that includes a bowl and spoon in the foreground. It is presented alongside Matisse’s iconic “Large Reclining Nude.” Tom’s checkered shirt echoes the blue and white grid background of the Matisse work and both figures are holding casual, relaxed poses. 

“Fratino and Matisse: To See This Light Again” runs through Sept. 6 at the Baltimore Museum of Art (artbma.org.)

For Matisse lovers, the BMA has another exhibit debuting March 29 titled, “Matisse in Vence: The Stations of the Cross” featuring more than 80 drawings revealing how the artist “shaped his late‑career masterpiece, the Stations of the Cross mural, for the Chapel of the Rosary in Vence, France.”

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Blockbuster Amy Sherald exhibit opens in Baltimore

Artist has emerged as LGBTQ hero after refusing to cave to censorship

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Amy Sherald at Sunday’s BMA interview. (Blade photo)

Artist Amy Sherald has emerged as a hero in the LGBTQ community following her controversial decision to pull her blockbuster new exhibit “American Sublime” from the National Portrait Gallery in D.C. and move it to Baltimore after Smithsonian officials sought to censor her painting “Trans Forming Liberty.”

That painting depicts transgender model Arewà Basit as the Statue of Liberty, which conflicts with President Trump’s war on DEI and his efforts to erase transgender people from the American narrative. 

Sherald issued a statement over the summer that the Smithsonian had “concerns” about the painting. “These concerns led to discussions about removing the work from the exhibition,” Sherald said in the statement. “While no single person is to blame, it is clear that institutional fear shaped by a broader climate of political hostility toward trans lives played a role.”

She said the Smithsonian had proposed including a video in the exhibit that would “contextualize” the painting and likely include anti-trans views. It was then she announced her decision to pull the exhibit entirely and move it to the Baltimore Museum of Art, a major coup for the museum.

‘Trans Forming Liberty’ by Amy Sherald triggered censorship efforts at the Smithsonian. (Image courtesy Amazon)

Sherald studied at Baltimore’s Maryland Institute College of Art, which she described as “the best decision I ever made,” during a sold out Q&A on Nov. 2 moderated by the BMA’s director, Asma Naeem. Unfortunately, the subject of censorship and the last-minute decision to move the exhibit to the BMA didn’t come up during the discussion. But Naeem rightly described Sherald as “one of the most important painters of our time.”

“American Sublime,” billed as a mid-career retrospective, features 38 of Sherald’s paintings, including her portraits of former first lady Michelle Obama and Breonna Taylor, along with “Trans Forming Liberty.” 

Sherald and Naeem joked throughout the breezy hour-long conversation and reminisced about spending time at MICA and in Baltimore. The artist said she still finds inspiration and even potential portrait subjects in grocery stores and on the streets of Baltimore and New York, where she now lives. Many of the portraits in the exhibit were painted in Baltimore. 

Although Sherald and Naeem kept it light and avoided discussing censorship, the one serious and non-negotiable subject Sherald addressed was the paramount importance of integrity. Her insistence on the integrity of the work and the inclusion of trans representation in the exhibit brought her to the difficult decision to pull her work from the Smithsonian. It was a bold and inspiring move in a time when so many public figures, CEOs, and politicians have shown a disappointing and dangerous lack of integrity in the face of an administration that seeks to subvert the Constitution and erode the First Amendment. Sherald stands as a powerful symbol of resistance and, yes, integrity in these dark times. Her refusal to cave to authoritarian impulses and blatant censorship will be remembered for years to come. The nation’s top tech CEOs and congressional leaders should see this exhibit and learn from her brave example.

“American Sublime” is open now through April 5 at the Baltimore Museum of Art and requires a paid ticket for entry. (Admission is free on Thursday evenings and free on Jan. 15 and Feb. 19. The museum is closed Mondays and Tuesdays.) For more information and tickets visit artbma.org.

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New gallery opening in D.C.

Dandelion Collective exhibition features works by John Von Sauerhoff

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Dandelion Collective, a new space in Columbia Heights for LGBTQ healers and artists, will open on Saturday, Aug. 24 with an opening reception at 2 p.m. at 3417 14th St., N.W.

This first exhibition features the incredible, ethereal artwork of John Von Sauerhoff. His stunning pop surrealist paintings will transport you to another world.

More information is available at dandelioncollectivedc.com/art-gallery

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