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  • SARAH URIST GREEN (VOICEOVER): Episode

  • of "The Art Assignment" is brought to you by Squarespace.

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  • SARAH URIST GREEN (VOICEOVER): arrived to a grey,

  • rainy Washington, DC, and crawled our way through

  • terrible morning traffic.

  • It could've been bad, but our cabbie had on NPR,

  • and we could relax and enjoy the fact that we were not

  • the ones driving.

  • We arrived at our hotel starving and quickly scarfed breakfast

  • in the lobby and pulled out our various devices

  • to get ready for the day.

  • See this?

  • See me double screening?

  • This is not what I should have been doing.

  • At this very moment, there was a press preview

  • for the reopening of the Renwick Gallery,

  • where we really should have been.

  • The kind PR folks provided us with this footage.

  • And watching it is kind of like turning a knife for me.

  • The Renwick houses the Smithsonian's collection

  • of contemporary craft and decorative art

  • and was about to open after a two-year renovation.

  • They take a progressive approach to this kind of collection

  • ghettoization, presenting work by a wide range of artists

  • and makers, showing, quote, how extraordinary handmade

  • objects have shaped the American experience

  • and continue to impact our lives.

  • So these are the installations, created specifically

  • for the building opening, that we

  • should have seen instead of writing emails and researching

  • ramen places for lunch.

  • This was a pretty major snafu.

  • But we did a little better after that.

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  • After taking our sweet time deciding on lunch,

  • we headed out and took the Metro,

  • descending into the DuPont Circle Station

  • at the weirdly slow pace determined by the escalators.

  • The DC Metro first opened in 1976

  • and is a magnificent artwork, in itself, designed

  • by architect Harry Weese.

  • Throughout the trip, I basked in the strange, brutalist glory

  • of this Metro system.

  • The coffered concrete vaulted ceilings

  • lend a feeling of spaciousness and highlight

  • the remarkable geometries of this complex transit system.

  • The lighting is low, indirect, and otherworldly.

  • If you see no other public art than this in DC,

  • you're still doing OK.

  • We arrived to at Daikaya and waited patiently

  • before devouring our steaming bowls of ramen.

  • I got the shoyu and Mark the vegetable.

  • Moving a little more slowly, we got back on the Metro,

  • picked up our gear, and headed down Massachusetts Avenue,

  • aka Embassy Row.

  • We took in the parade of passing buildings,

  • each with its own distinct architecture and design,

  • on our way to American University

  • to meet up with artist Molly Springfield.

  • We stopped in to the university's museum

  • and their Katzen Art Center and saw some really delicate,

  • captivating works on paper by Beverly Ress.

  • Then we met up with Molly and did some filming there

  • before heading to her studio an shooting the rest.

  • When we were done, it was dark.

  • And guess what?

  • We were hungry.

  • So on a tip from a friend, we decided to walk to a place,

  • called Compass Rose, that specializes

  • in international street food but served inside

  • instead of on the street.

  • It was super dark, so you'll have

  • to trust me that I had a bourbon drink that was great,

  • despite its name, hashtag lol, and then

  • noshed on dishes that were delicious, despite being

  • culturally confusing.

  • We had takoyaki, or Japanese octopus fritters, bhel puri

  • chaat, an Indian puffed rice snack, and tostones,

  • or fried plantains.

  • It was Embassy Row all in one, dark, little place.

  • It was much nicer the next day.

  • And we started out at the Phillips Collection.

  • They were playing host to an exhibition,

  • "Gauguin to Picasso," drawn from private Swiss collections.

  • But that's not why I was there.

  • I was there to think about the singular

  • vision of the eponymous Duncan Phillips, who

  • gathered this astounding collection by not only being

  • the grandson of a steel magnate but also by nurturing

  • close relationships with artists.

  • Masterpieces of the 20th century appear throughout this warren

  • of buildings, which started in 1921,

  • with the Phillips' family home, and extended into a music room,

  • a modernist wing in the '60s, and another addition

  • in the '00s.

  • The Phillips Collection fuses architecture

  • from different times as well art from different times,

  • providing room after room of intimate art viewing

  • moments, interspersing works by Paul Klee and van Gogh

  • and Mondrian and Jacob Lawrence and Edward Hopper,

  • with contemporary works like Nikki S. Lee's photography

  • and "Question Bridge, Black Males" a video installation

  • that looks to represent and redefine

  • black male identity in America.

  • Then there's a Rothko room.

  • And this is exactly how Rothko wanted his work to be seen.

  • You're alone in a room, with four of his paintings,

  • in close proximity, with the lighting just so.

  • And one floor up, you encounter a recent work,

  • by Wolfgang Laib, that you smell before you see.

  • It's a small chamber, lined with beeswax

  • and lit by a single bulb, providing

  • another immersive experience.

  • Duncan Phillips called this place,

  • an intimate museum combined with an experiment station.

  • And that's just how it feels, not

  • like a history that is organized and settled,

  • but one that is still being worked out,

  • reexamined, and remixed.

  • Then we returned to my beloved Metro

  • and headed to the National Mall.

  • The mall is under construction and not looking its best.

  • But who cares?

  • It's a symbol of progress, and we're there for the art anyway.

  • We stopping in the Freer and Sackler galleries,

  • which present the Smithsonian's Asian art holdings, to see

  • the Freer's Peacock Room.

  • This is what it looks like well-lit in the photos

  • Wikipedia provides.

  • But this is more what it's like to experience it.

  • But anyway, it's the former dining room of rich guy

  • Frederick Leyland that features a painting by James McNeill

  • Whistler as well as elaborate wall decorations

  • done by Whistler, without Leyland's permission

  • or payment.

  • This resulted in one of the most epic art

  • battles of all time, which you should really go read about.

  • But what's interesting is that we

  • were lucky to visit while Darren Waterston's

  • contemporary reimagination of the room

  • was on view in the adjacent Sackler Gallery.

  • Waterston reconstructs the room as a decadent ruin,

  • making visible the room's nasty history

  • and commenting on the excesses of both that Gilded

  • Age and our own.

  • Then we made a quick detour through the National Gallery

  • of Art Sculpture Garden to say, hello,

  • to these works by Sol Lewitt, Tony Smith, Roxy Paine, Roy

  • Lichtenstein, and Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van

  • Bruggen.

  • I disregarded the secret of enjoying art,

  • and that's making sure your blood sugar isn't too low.

  • So we just kind of quickly saluted these totems

  • and hurried to Buredo, a totem of trendy eating.

  • They make burrito-sized sushi rolls.

  • Wait, do I need to say that again?

  • Burrito-sized sushi rolls.

  • Sure, it's just a differently shaped hand roll, which

  • has existed for some time.

  • But these weren't just novel and well-marketed, they were good.

  • And just the fuel we needed to continue on our art marathon

  • to the National Museum of Women in the Arts.

  • There we saw an excellent exhibition of photographs

  • by Esther Bubley, who was hired by the Office of War

  • Information and documented life in the United States

  • throughout the '40s, '50s, and '60s.

  • The museum also had on a great show called "Pathmakers."

  • It featured a really interesting mix of work

  • from the often separate spheres of art and craft and design.

  • And I especially enjoyed this installation,

  • by Polly Apfelbaum, a display of the work of designer Hella

  • Jongerius, and, of course, the work of art assignment alumna

  • Michelle Grabner.

  • Next step, quick stops at Hemphill Gallery,

  • to see a show of work by Renee Stout,

  • and Adamson Gallery, which had to show

  • of magnificent photographs by Gordon Parks.

  • I had just written about Parks for our animation

  • in the Alex Soth episode about the FSA's photography project.

  • So it was a treat to see the works

  • in person and in large-scale.

  • Then we made a way to Transformer, a nonprofit art

  • organization, to have coffee with Victoria

  • Reis, its executive and artistic director.

  • Transformer does important work on behalf of emerging artists,

  • locally, in DC, as well as nationally and internationally.

  • They do this not only through exhibitions

  • but also through educational programs, partnerships

  • with other institutions, and an annual silent auction

  • and benefit party, that they had closed their gallery

  • space to get ready for.

  • They had a lovely installation, in their storefront,

  • by Paris-based artist Helene Garcia, called

  • "Let's Drink a Dozen Roses," providing us further proof

  • that bigger isn't always better, and art and new ideas

  • can thrive in unexpected places.

  • We ended the day back on the National Mall.

  • I forgot to mention it was Veteran's Day, which,

  • I'm ashamed to admit, usually comes

  • and goes for me with little activity in honor

  • of the important day.

  • We walked along the Vietnam Veterans Memorial,

  • as the last of the chairs were being broken down

  • from the earlier ceremonies, and scanned,

  • with many others, the names of the over 58,000 servicemen

  • and women who died during the war.

  • The Wall, as it's called, is a stunning work of art--

  • the best in the city in my view--

  • designed by artist and architect Maya Lin when she

  • was only a senior in college.

  • It was a moving experience, and one

  • that stayed with me even as we continued on

  • to the much less moving Lincoln Memorial

  • to fight for photo space.

  • And it definitely stayed with me as we

  • witnessed a beautiful sunset over the reflecting pool.

  • The next day, we got up early to try out GBD Donuts

  • but were devastated to find that they don't open until 11:00 on

  • most weekdays.

  • Not that early GBD.

  • And we didn't have much time, so we

  • were kind of forced to go upstairs to Jrink for a juice

  • instead.

  • It was actually really good juice, which I do recommend.

  • But when you're expecting donuts, well, it's not donuts.

  • Then off we went to DC's foremost contemporary art

  • institutions, the Hirshhorn, which, come to think of it,

  • is kind of shaped like a donut.

  • It was designed by architect Gordon Bunshaft, as a, quote,

  • large piece of functional sculpture,

  • and opened to the public in 1974.

  • Its curved galleries define and expand your experience

  • of the work it contains.

  • And its windows provide views out to the National Mall,

  • with an exhibition of works drawn

  • from their permanent collection.

  • Ditching the tired tactic of organizing by chronology

  • or geography, the curators have opted instead

  • to create thematic groupings.

  • You get to see the treasures of their collection,

  • like early sculptures by Claes Oldenburg and Robert Gober's

  • window to another time and place, along with newer

  • editions by Cai Guo-Qiang, Yinka Shonibare, and Nick Cave.

  • There's a wonderful piece by Rachel Harrison

  • on view, which may, at first glance,

  • look like another modernist-informed sculpture

  • until you register it's roughly hewn structure and bright pink

  • plaster that undercut any read of it as traditional.

  • Oh, and the toy wrestler climbing it,

  • which, for me, is a brilliantly cheeky nod at the idea

  • of heroic artistic ambition.

  • The galleries combine works, from different times

  • and sensibilities and parts of the world, that

  • talk to each other and have uniting principles.

  • Like this gallery that brings together

  • paintings from the 1960s, by Warhol and Ed Ruscha,

  • with sculptures from the '80s, by Sol Lewitt and Katharina

  • Fritsch, and a more recent painting by Ellsworth Kelly.

  • You're encouraged to think about the foundations of pop art

  • and how the strategy of repetition

  • connects it to minimalism and beyond

  • as well as how artists investigate color and form.

  • We also made sure to see the Barbara Kruger installation

  • that fills the museum's lower-level lobby

  • and surrounds you with open-ended questions.

  • And the enormous 1974 Dan Flavin installation

  • that immerses you in color and begs

  • to be viewed from many angles.

  • Before we left, we peeked in at a truly enjoyable video work

  • by Spanish artist Sergio Caballero in their Black Box

  • gallery.

  • You can watch the whole thing on Vimeo.

  • Then we headed over the Potomac to the headquarters of PBS

  • to say, hi, to Lauren Saks and Kelsey Savage.

  • We got a good look around the place

  • and ran into a few startling posters

  • before heading out for a late lunch of South Korean

  • fried chicken wings at Bonchon.

  • Remember, we were only running on juice here,

  • so it was no time for restraint I felt a little guilty ending

  • our trip with a chain, but at least it

  • was an international chain.

  • And, you know, every meal can't be sushi burritos.

  • So Mark and I really thought our parting shot of this video

  • should be a sunset at the reflecting pool.

  • And it really should be.

  • But I'm not clever enough to rework

  • the chronology of this video.

  • So we're just bring it back now to erase the visual of chicken

  • wings and draw some conclusions about our time in this city.

  • DC is a remarkable, whole-body experience,

  • a place not just for singular views or paintings on a wall,

  • but whose landmarks demand that you move through them,

  • immerse yourself in them, and see them from many angles.

  • It's an international city and a smart city,

  • one where far flung ideas and flavors and values

  • are allowed to intermix and be tested.

  • It's a city that honors the past and thinks

  • critically about the future.

  • And almost all of it, you can experience for free.

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SARAH URIST GREEN (VOICEOVER): Episode

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