National Museum Of Asian Art Presents Shifting Boundaries: Perspectives On American Landscapes Significant New Collaborative Exhibit To Open On National Mall
June 28, 2024
The Smithsonians National Museum of Asian Art has announced Shifting Boundaries: Perspectives on American Landscapes, an exhibition featuring works by American painters such as William Metcalf, Dwight Tryon, Winslow Homer and Abbott Thayer, who created profoundly beautiful views of the New England landscapes where they lived and worked. Shifting Boundaries looks at these works from a variety of viewpoints to explore what these paintings can tell the viewer about changes to the region. The landscapes become invitations to explore a century of human impact on land and water, the erasure of Indigenous histories and the environmental changes that are alteringNew England today. Shifting Boundaries will open at the museum Saturday, July 13, and remain on view until July 26, 2026. The exhibition pilots a new mode of collaborative curatorial practice. The museum partnered with a group of experts in the field of environment and landscape to develop the themes for the exhibition, select works of art and write object labels. Lauren Brandes(Smithsonian Gardens),Dennis Chestnut(Ward 7 Resilience Hub Community Coalition),Jerome Foster II(Waic Up),Elizabeth James-Perry(Aquinnah Wampanoag artist and marine scientist),Lorette Picciano(Rural Coalition),Stephanie Toothman(National Park Service) andMelinda Whicher(Smithsonian Gardens) worked with the National Museum of Asian Arts Lunder Curator of American ArtDiana Greenwold, curatorial assistantMary Mulcahy and interpretation specialistsLiz GardnerandAmy Freesun. The groups perspectives, drawn from their individual areas of professional expertise and their own personal experiences, allow people to see new details in these works of art and to document profound shifts in attitudes and practices about the environment over the past century. These paintings largely depict the New England environment as timeless and static.Shifting Boundaries reveals, however, that the views these artists created of pasturelands in Massachusetts and of seascapes in Maine were transforming even as these artists recorded them. This reshaping has only accelerated in the century since Metcalf, Tryon, Homer and Thayer depicted them. As the National Museum of Asian Art enters our next 100 years, we are reflecting on our past and shaping our future with an emphasis on collaboration, said Chase F. Robinson, the museums director. We are sharing different perspectives in our galleries, experimenting with new approaches, examining object histories and proactively engaging with communities both locally and abroad. Shifting Boundaries exemplifies all of this, showcasing what it means to be a museum in the 21st century. The National Museum of Asian Arts collection includes over 1,700 works by artists from the United States. In addition to works by Metcalf, Tryon, Homer and Thayer, the museum has significant holdings of U.S. artists such as Thomas Dewing, John Singer Sargent, Childe Hassam and the nations largest collection of works by James McNeill Whistler, more than 1,000 in total, including the famed Peacock Room. Our collaborators worked with us from the inception of the project to craft a beautiful and important exhibition, said Greenwold. During our conversations, Mary, Liz, Amy and I served as guides and moderators for important and in-depth discussions about our countrys history and the role of a national museum in addressing challenging topics head on. Our collaborators brilliant selections and thoughtful labels transformed how I understood these works of art, and I hope it will do the same for our visitors. Credits This exhibition is made possible through support from the Terra Foundation for American Art. The museum is situated on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., at 1100 Jefferson Dr. SW.
SHARE
PRINT