Past Exhibitions

Exhibition Statuses
Barbara Liotta, A Gathering

Barbara Liotta

A Gathering

In this exhibition, A Gathering, Liotta explores how a number of sculptures interact; how they dance together. All of this work is entirely new. The roughly two dozen pieces are smaller than works that have been shown in previous years. Emerging, as if out of a mist, is a congregation of beings. Each column is a singular individual. They convene as a group, but have, for the moment, drifted into smaller conversations. Liotta hopes that you will wander among them, will sense the being in each, and enjoy their dances.

Esha Sadr

Absence of Us

Absence of Us is an interdisciplinary, long-term project that transforms used garments into narratives of memory, identity, and resilience. Esha Sadr reconsiders clothing not merely as a consumer product, but as a second skin—objects that carry personal histories and traces of absent bodies. The exhibition explores her experience as an immigrant, present in the U.S. while absent from her home country.

 

Adjoa Burrowes, Earth Sanctuary

Adjoa Burrowes

Earth Sanctuary

Earth Sanctuary seeks to celebrate the natural world and the legacy of African American women gardeners in Virginia. In this exhibition of abstract works Burrowes explores vibrant color, texture, and rhythm in recent mixed media paintings on paper referencing botanicals found in local gardens.

Abol Bahadori

Hybrid Baroque

We view the world through our eyes, limited by a narrow color spectrum and depth of vision. But what if we had compound eyes like insects, sonar like dolphins, and used other senses to enhance our vision? In his exhibition Hybrid Baroque, Bahadori explores new sensoria by abstracting and recomposing elements of nature, architectural structures, and human figures. 




Taina Litwak, Life in the Anthropocene

Taina Litwak

Life in the Anthropocene

Life in the Anthropocene features a room-sized graph of the volume of Global Plastic Production (1950-2040), assembled with discarded plastics collected largely from the artist’s household, her office, and her neighbors.

Calliandra Hermanson

of permutations and patterns

of permutations and patterns draws inspiration from several sources including early modern botanical illustrations; the diagrams of plant circumnutation (the autonomous, cyclical movement of plants in response to environmental stimuli) done by Charles Darwin in the 1880s; and the engravings from Nehemiah Grew’s 1682  “The Anatomy of Plants,” some of the earliest studies of plant morphology through a microscope.

By integrating these visual elements and putting them in touch with contemporary research in critical plant studies, Hermanson explores the changing ways that vegetal beings have been addressed in the development of western science through the lens of art. By integrating organic elements and organized, grid elements, she considers how the biological and the human can be entangled and how science and art can be beautifully synthesized.

Modern Movements

Curated by Adriana Ospina

Selections of Latin American and Caribbean Art from the Art Museum of the Americas

April 4-May 31, 2026

The exhibition celebrates work produced between 1940–1996 by well-known figures who pushed artistic boundaries to produce a pan-American visual language and spotlights avant-garde artists who defined foundational movements like surrealism and geometric abstraction. Featuring artists such as Roberto Matta (Chile), Sarah Grilo (Argentina), Manabu Mabe (Brazil), and Jesús Rafael Soto (Venezuela), the exhibition charts the cultural exchanges and creative tensions fostered by Latin American artists, whose experimentations with form, color, and movement created powerful dialogues within and beyond their respective countries.

Jun Lee

Unbreakable Elements

Unbreakable Elements by Jun Lee explores printmaking through materials such as wood, paper, and glass – each chosen for its ability to withstand pressure. These works consider the ways we gather strength after moments of defeat and how we rebuild both individually and collectively amidst ongoing precarity. Lee’s work utilizes animals and the cultural narratives that surround them as an accessible entry point to consider our own social dynamics: we, too, are capable of both ruthless competition and compassionate collectivity in our struggles to survive. The reduction woodcut technique Lee employs to create layered imagery further reflects the themes of resilience and transformation. Each carved decision is irreversible: once material is removed, there is no turning back. What remains is a commitment to progress, an acceptance that life requires us to face the consequences of our choices, adapt, and continue.

Natasha Sachdeva

Will this entanglement ever resolve?

In a deeply personal inquiry, Will this entanglement ever resolve? unveils Natasha Sachdeva’s layered engagement with the realities of growing up and living within a middle-class family in New Delhi, India. What begins as an inward process of self-discovery and introspection gradually expands into a broader commentary on the ways in which society defines, regulates, and confines women’s bodies—situated within a South Asian context, yet resonant on a universal scale. Her figures—often voluminous, unposed, distorted, and unapologetically raw—challenge conventional ideals of beauty and grace, dismantling ingrained expectations of restraint, decorum, and conformity. Through these forms, the artist asserts an unequivocal right to joy, sensuality, and self-expression at every stage of a woman’s life.