The Day

New Hirshhorn exhibit remixes museum’s best B-sides and rarities

-

FROM D1

est-hits exhibition, “Revolution­s” remixes the museum’s best B-sides and rarities, while still making a case about the long 20th century in art.

“Revolution­s” spans a ludicrous range of painters. From the start, the show dials up the contrasts: The first works to greet viewers are a stately 1884 portrait by society painter John Singer Sargent hanging next to an electric 2020 portrait by Ghanaian star Amoako Boafo. Roughly speaking, these works could serve as chronologi­cal capstones for the Hirshhorn’s collection. But there’s something else to this pairing: It’s an unlikely diptych that tees up the push-and-pull between figuration and abstractio­n that defines the collection — and the century.

Curated by the Hirshhorn’s Marina Isgro and Betsy Johnson, “Revolution­s” is chockabloc­k with artworks. More than 200 paintings, sculptures and drawings — with the odd photograph thrown in, and a plan to rotate some artworks — trace the flow of ideas from early modernism to the postwar era. That’s a ton of work: For comparison, when the museum mounted a collection show in 2016, it included some 75 pieces.

The first gallery alone showcases a couple dozen works, including a salon-style hang of portraits by the likes of Édouard Vuillard, Thomas Eakins and Mary Cassatt. The show is chronologi­cal-ish, with contempora­ry works (like Boafo’s “Cobalt Blue Dress”) sprinkled throughout to break the very light logic of the show’s organizati­on. The rooms have themes, but these are subordinat­e to the show’s overall flow, which focuses on pairings and dialogues. Artworks wink at one another from across decades and continents, like the geometric Lakota beadwork painting by Dyani White Hawk from 2022 hanging amid constructi­vist compositio­ns by László Moholy-Nagy and Nadia Léger made a century earlier.

Contempora­ry selections such as Boafo and White Hawk emphasize and sometimes upend ideas in the collection. They’re just infrequent enough in “Revolution­s” that they pop like exclamatio­n points. Loie Hollowell’s three-dimensiona­l painting “Boob Wheel” (2019) is an abstractio­n of the figure rooted in the artist’s own pregnancy, adding a maternal element (and a shade of sex) to the gallery. Nathaniel Mary Quinn’s “Literacy Lab” (2019), a multimedia piece that looks like three different drawings for an “exquisite corpse” — in fact, it’s just a single compositio­n — holds its own alongside two cubist paintings by Picasso.

While it’s a busy painting show, sculpture takes center stage in “Revolution­s,” part of a concerted effort to put more shine on the museum’s sculptural holdings, including the magnificen­t bronzes in the sculpture garden (currently undergoing a renovation). For the exhibit, the Hirshhorn has revived the light well, a vintage solution for displaying sculpture by placing works on an elevated podium under even, suspended lighting. These retro displays put a spotlight on works by Barbara Hepworth, Jean Arp, Max Ernst and more — smaller sculptures that are easy to overlook in any setting. One of the most magical groupings in the show is a wall-size vitrine that features delicate suprematis­t marionette­s by Aleksandra Exster, futurist flower sculptures by Giacomo Balla and a peerless dada painting by Sonia Delaunay.

Isgro and Johnson find a few chances within the permanent collection to rattle long-standing dogma in art history: for example, by hanging a 1945 painting by the mercurial and long-overlooked artist Janet Sobel that predates the remarkably similar 1949 piece by Jackson Pollock nearby. Throughout the show, the curators elevate marginaliz­ed voices without being pedantic about it. Mid-century works by Haitian artists Rigaud Benoit, Hector Hyppolite and Castera Bazile occupy the same kind of space as Willem de Kooning.

In some ways, the Hirshhorn of “Revolution­s” is the one I want to visit over and over. There is far too much great work from the 20th century locked away in the vaults of collection­s like this one. Fernand Léger’s “Nude on a Red Background” (1927) should never be put out of sight. And why condemn Balla’s futurist flowers to wither in the dark? Yet dynamic new artworks such as Torkwase Dyson’s “Bird and Lava #4” (2021) and Flora Yukhnovich’s “Lipstick, Lip Gloss, Hickeys Too” (2022), shown in context with the entire collection, make the case that the central ideas animating the 20th century still have juice. History never ends and all that, but Isgro and Johnson are pressing a more specific point, that the Hirshhorn museum continues to trace the loops and echoes of the many modernisms Joseph Hirshhorn followed from the start.

 ?? JOSEPH H. HIRSHHORN BEQUEST/ESTATE OF PABLO PICASSO/ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY, NEW YORK ?? Pablo Picasso, “Woman in a Hat (Marie-Thérèse Walter),” 1934. Oil on canvas.
JOSEPH H. HIRSHHORN BEQUEST/ESTATE OF PABLO PICASSO/ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY, NEW YORK Pablo Picasso, “Woman in a Hat (Marie-Thérèse Walter),” 1934. Oil on canvas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States