"DC area museum curators would rather take a cab to Dulles to fly to Berlin, or London, or Madrid to visit the studio of an emerging artist, than take a cab to Alexandria, or Adams Morgan, to visit the studio of an emerging local artist..."- F. Lennox Campello, Kojo Nmadi show about a decade ago...
Breaking news! In a radical departure from the norm, a DMV area art museum is doing a museum show about the works of a "local" artist! In my head I have this dream of curating a city wide show about Women Artists of the DMV - with loads of variations to follow!
This selection of fifteen classic stripe paintings by Gene Davis from the 1960s reveals the ambitious vision and accomplishment of one of Washington, D.C.’s outstanding visual artists.
Gene Davis: Hot Beat is organized by the Smithsonian American Art Museum with generous support from the Joanne and Richard Brodie Exhibitions Endowment, Gene Davis Memorial Fund, James F. Dicke Family Endowment, Tania and Tom Evans Curatorial Endowment, and YARES ART, New York, Palm Springs, Santa Fe.




And
Iver
Olson is another talented discovery for me. He gets the award for the
best porn in the show, although his display is also peppered with some
otherwise just plain sensual photo-collages. It is almost as if there
were two Olsons in the show: a really torrid, sensual photographer, and a
brilliantly inventive pornographer.
Matt Dunn
In these rooms I also liked
Staying
within two dimensions, and doing a magnificent job of it are three
enviably talented painters: Margaret Dowell, Michal Hunter and Jeffry
Cudlin. All of these artists have that spectacular technical mastery of
the brush that it is so easily dismissed by people who have never tried
to mix cerulean blue with Payne’s gray and ended up with mud. Dowell’s
paintings show not only extraordinary technical skills, but also a
hungry sense of desire and intelligent understanding of her subjects –
who are often transgender and cross dressing personages around our area.
Located on the main hallway of the fourth floor,
I
also enjoyed Bridget Vath’s very inventive use of Kevlar to design and
construct dresses and other clothing apparel; I suspect that Vath could
start a very successful line of Kevlar clothing with good markets in
Baghdad, Beirut, Bogotá, Atlanta and most of the Balkans.

Of these,