Contemporary North Korean Art:
The Evolution of Socialist Realism
The Evolution of Socialist Realism
Curated by BG Muhn
The
forms and structure of contemporary North Korean art, a central and
highly developed dimension of the national culture, are largely unknown
to the outside world. This exhibition, the first of its kind in the US,
seeks to broaden understanding of North Korean art beyond stereotypes of
propaganda and kitsch to show sophisticated and nuanced expressive
achievements. It investigates previously unrevealed evidence of North
Korean artistic experimentation and the evolution of Socialist Realism
within this culturally homogeneous context. The works in the exhibition
focus on the development of Chosonhwa, North Korea’s predominant
painting medium that is revered as the nation’s most refined. The
exhibition is curated by BG Muhn, artist and Professor at Georgetown
University.
South Korean Art:
Examining Life Through Social Realities
Examining Life Through Social Realities
Curated by GimChoe Eun-yeong
Examining Life Through Social Realities
documents and examines life and the social realities of people living
on the Korean peninsula through the Realist paintings of ten South
Korean contemporary artists. As explained by exhibition curator GimChoe
Eun-yeong, definitions of Realism have changed over time, but the
Realism of South Korea closely approximates 19th century French Realist
painter Gustave Courbet’s use of the term: to manifest artists’
perspectives of the world through expressive techniques and methods.
Art Cart:
Honoring the Legacy
Honoring the Legacy
Curated by Pamela Harris Lawton and Adjoa Burrowes
This
exhibition ties together two cities - Washington, DC and New York City -
in an inter-generational, inter-disciplinary project. Professional
visual artists aged 62 and older are matched with students of art,
healthcare, and aging to document and preserve their artistic legacy.
The exhibition includes painting, photography, printmaking, sculpture,
and installation by ART CART artists that highlight turning points in
the artists’ lives including the Civil Rights and Women’s Movements.
ART CART: SAVING THE LEGACY is a DC and New York based project that helps older professional artists and provides mentorships to students. ART CART: HONORING THE LEGACY features Alonzo Davis, Cheryl Edwards, Annette Fortt, Cianne Fragione, Pauline Jakobsberg, E.J. Montgomery, Annette Polan, and Terry Svat.
ART CART: SAVING THE LEGACY is a DC and New York based project that helps older professional artists and provides mentorships to students. ART CART: HONORING THE LEGACY features Alonzo Davis, Cheryl Edwards, Annette Fortt, Cianne Fragione, Pauline Jakobsberg, E.J. Montgomery, Annette Polan, and Terry Svat.
The Looking Glass:
Artists Immigrants of Washington
Artists Immigrants of Washington
Alper Initiative for Washington Art
This
exhibition celebrates ten artists who left Latin America for many
different reasons over the last sixty years—primarily for safety,
freedom, and opportunity—and made their homes, and their artistic
careers and contributions, in the Washington region. They include Joan
Belmar and Juan Downey from Chile, Carolina Mayorga from Colombia, Ric
Garcia, F. Lennox Campello, and Jose Ygnacio Bermudez from Cuba, Muriel
Hasbun from El Salvador, Frida Larios from Honduras, Irene Clouthier
from Mexico, and Naúl Ojeda from Uruguay. They brought with them
artistic traditions that took root and bore fruit here in the United
States.
Bandits & Heros, Poets & Saints:
Popular Art of the Northeast of Brazil
Popular Art of the Northeast of Brazil
Curated by Marion E. Jackson, Ph.D. and Barbara Cervenka, O.P., Curators
Bandits & Heroes, Poets & Saints
explores how the ancient cultures of Africa blended with indigenous and
colonial Portuguese traditions to form the vibrant and complex cultural
mosaic of modern Brazil. This eclectic collection of popular
art—photography, sculptures, paintings, religious objects and books of
poetry—depicts the vibrant culture of the Northeast of Brazil and the
Nordestinos. The exhibition explores the coming together of diverse
traditions of the region through work by historical and contemporary
artists.
SAVE THE DATE
Opening Reception
June 18, 6-9 p.m.
June 18, 6-9 p.m.