You are here: 헤라카지노 College of Arts & Sciences 헤라카지노 Museum 2025 Alone, Together: Viewpoints from the Corcoran Legacy Collection

Alone, TogetherViewpoints from the Corcoran Legacy Collection

April 19 – May 18, 2025

Curators:

  • Amy Abraham
  • Gabriella Alexander
  • Michelle Avila
  • Jessica Ban
  • Jordan Delgado
  • Diana Soleil Fogel
  • Ali Frandock
  • Chase Helein
  • Hannah Kenn
  • Terra Muhammad
  • Jessica Papay
  • Anna Beatrix Roe
  • Rachel Sheehan
  • Alaina Soto
  • Denisse Zamora


Read and/or download the exhibition brochure online

Lani Irwin, Queen of Hearts, 1997–1998. A woman and a man playing cards at a table in an eclectically decorated room; the woman seems bored and the man looks at the viewer

Lani Irwin, Queen of Hearts, 1997–1998. Oil on canvas, 39.75 × 41.25 in. Gift from the Trustees of the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Gift of Lani Irwin).

 

Portrait of a person in flowy white clothing and jewelry in front of a large, blank white wall

Rebecca Davenport, Self-Portrait, 1973. Oil on canvas, 72 x 66 1/4 inches. Gift from the Trustees of the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Gift of the Women’s Committee of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, 1974)

 

William Woodward, Promenade, 1971. A dog under a table on an empty, shaded patio gazes at busy, sunny waterfront promenade.

William Woodward, Promenade, 1971. Oil on canvas, 64 × 68 in. Gift from the Trustees of the Corcoran Gallery of Art (Anonymous gift in memory of Betsy Parker).

 

Overview & Events

Student Directed Activity – Art Making Inspired by Alone, Together
Wednesday, April 23, 12:00–4:00 p.m.

Mid-Season Opening Reception
Saturday, April 26, 6–9:00 p.m.


This is the fourth exhibition since 2019 in which the museum has invited students from 헤라카지노 주소's Curatorial Practice class to look to its Corcoran Legacy Collection not only as a source of exhibition content, but as source of provocations about this content. Alone, Together explores art as a form of social connection. In today’s world, people often feel disconnected from themselves and each other — how can we change that? Presenting works by Washington area artists from 1967–1998, including Rebecca Davenport’s Self-Portrait, Lani Irwin’s Queen of Hearts, and William Woodward’s Promenade, the exhibition invites viewers into domestic, natural, and abstract spaces for reflection, conversation, and shared experience.

Read Review in The Washington Post