Support

Yearlong 40th anniversary celebration at the Hirshhorn starts Oct. 16th

hirshhorn_40th
Photo by PoPville flickr user ep_jhu

From a press release:

“Forty years ago this month, the Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden opened to the public with great fanfare. As the first museum on the National Mall devoted to modern art and one of the world’s leading museums of contemporary and modern art, the striking round building is home to a highly regarded permanent collection and pioneering exhibitions that reflect the best art of our time.

Continuing in that tradition, the museum kicks off its yearlong 40th anniversary celebration with two new exhibitions Oct. 16. “At the Hub of Things: New Views of the Collection” and “Days of Endless Time” feature works by more than 60 artists. A series of free public programs is planned as part of the anniversary celebration. The museum has also made a number of new acquisitions in this anniversary year, including significant works by the Guerrilla Girls, Laurel Nakadate, Catherine Opie and Thomas Struth.

“The Hirshhorn is celebrating its 40th anniversary with exhibitions that forge new ties between artists of different eras and styles, acquisitions that make the collection deeper and more diverse and renovated gallery spaces that allow us to show a wider range of artworks than ever before,” said the museum’s new director Melissa Chiu, who joined the Hirshhorn this week. “We are presenting a completely new installation of our permanent collection, organized thematically rather than by artist or movement, and we are highlighting a new tendency in moving-image art, one that may seem counterintuitive at first but in fact presents a new way of engaging with media and culture.”

The refurbishment of the Hirshhorn’s third-floor galleries marks the first time these spaces have been completely renovated since the museum opened 40 years ago. Restored to architect Gordon Bunshaft’s original vision with the removal of drop ceilings and spur walls, the outer-ring galleries will host “At the Hub of Things,” a thematically arranged installation of works from the collection from the past 75 years. On the second floor, “Days of Endless Time” presents recent works of moving-image art that go against the tide of the accelerated media age.

Other exhibitions on view include “Speculative Forms” and “Salvatore Scarpitta: Traveler.” A key work in the Hirshhorn’s collection of contemporary sculpture, Richard Deacon’s rarely displayed “Fish Out of Water,” is newly installed in the museum’s first-floor lobby.

The 40th-anniversary fall season includes a full slate of public programs, such as Washington’s premier late-night art event, “After Hours” (Oct. 17) and the annual James T. Demetrion Lecture (Nov. 8), which welcomes pop pioneer Claes Oldenburg. The “Meet the Artist” series features sculptors and installation artists Charles Simonds (Dec. 10) and Spencer Finch (Jan. 22).

The recently inaugurated “Curators in Conversation” series continues Nov. 20 with a discussion by international curator Francesco Bonami and best-selling author Sarah Thornton. Renowned curators Germano Celant and Paul Schimmel examine the current exhibition “Salvatore Scarpitta: Traveler” Oct. 8. On Oct. 22, Lapham’s Quarterly founder and editor Lewis H. Lapham joins authors Jay Griffiths and Jim Holt to address the themes of “Days of Endless Time.”

The Hirshhorn’s celebrated film program continues with documentaries about artists Ai Weiwei (Oct. 2), Nan Goldin (Oct. 14) and Robert Wilson (Nov. 13).

Located at Independence Avenue and Seventh Street S.W., the museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (closed Dec. 25). Admission to the galleries and special programs is free.

Recent Stories

via U.S. Botanic Garden Exciting news from U.S. Botanic Garden: “Want to know more about the fabulously foul corpse flower (Amorphophallus titanum)? Drop by the back of the Tropics house…

Thanks to Mark for sending from: “in front of the National Gallery of Art.”

Photo by Clif Burns Ed. Note: If this was you, please email [email protected] so I can put you in touch with OP. “Dear PoPville, Hey – you stopped me while…

“Foxy Roxy staying warm and watching animal planet. Silver Spring” If you have any animal/pet photos you’d like to share please send an email to princeofpetworth(at)gmail(dot)com with ‘Animal Fix’ in…

Unlike our competitors, Well-Paid Maids doesn’t clean your home with harsh chemicals. Instead, we handpick cleaning products rated “safest” by the Environmental Working Group, the leading rating organization regarding product safety.

The reason is threefold.

First, using safe cleaning products ensures toxic chemicals won’t leak into waterways or harm wildlife if disposed of improperly.

Read More

Submit your own Announcement here.

Looking for something campy, ridiculous and totally fun!? Then pitch your tents and grab your pokers and come to DC’s ONLY Drag Brunch Bingo hosted by Tara Hoot at Whitlow’s! Tickets are only $10 and you can add bottomless drinks and tasty entrees. This month we’re featuring performances by the amazing Venus Valhalla and Mari Con Carne!

Get your tickets and come celebrate the fact that the rapture didn’t happen during the eclipse, darlings! We can’t wait to see you on Sunday, April 21 at 12:30!

Submit your own Announcement here.

Frank’s Favorites

Come celebrate and bid farewell to Frank Albinder in his final concert as Music Director of the Washington Men’s Camerata featuring a special program of his most cherished pieces for men’s chorus with works by Ron Jeffers, Peter Schickele, Amy

×

Subscribe to our mailing list