His name is Robin Gunningham – and Jeffrey Deitch is right – with $500,000 I would buy this (that’s a deal!)
Archive for July, 2008
Banksy Revealed
July 23, 2008A Night of Hip Hop
July 10, 2008at The National Portrait Gallery
Thursday, July 24, 2 p.m–7 p.m.
The National Portrait Gallery’s exhibition “RECOGNIZE! Hip Hop and Contemporary Portraiture” demonstrates the influence of hip hop in portraiture. These programs are planned to celebrate both the exhibition and the broad-reaching cultural impact of hip hop. Admission is free; no reservations required.
Live Broadcast: EZ Street, WKYS-FM 2 p.m.–6 p.m.
Robert and Arlene Kogod Courtyard
EZ Street is back at NPG! Visitors are welcome to listen in on a live broadcast with EZ Street, WKYS-FM (93.9) in the Kogod Courtyard.
Hip Hop Happy Hour, 5 p.m.–6:45 pm
Robert and Arlene Kogod Courtyard
While listening to EZ’s live broadcast, enjoy the hip hop and R&B beats with a cool drink in hand. A wine and beer cash bar will be open from 5 to 6:45 p.m.
Face-to-Face Portrait Talk, 6 p.m.–6:30 pm
Meet at F Street lobby
After the live broadcast, learn more about Kehinde Wiley’s portrait of Ice T in the exhibition with guest curator Jobyl A. Boone.
Reel Portraits – Paul D. Miller (DJ Spooky) and New York Is Now
7 p.m.; doors open 6:30 p.m.
Nan Tucker McEvoy Auditorium
Paul D. Miller is a conceptual artist, writer and musician working in New York. Using archival footage and early avant-garde cinema mixed with his own music, Miller composes New York Is Now as an exploration of memory through the interplay of images and sounds, creating a digital multimedia opera about a city made of improvisations, disjunctions, overlapping histories and multiple rhythms. A conversation with Miller follows the screening.
Hope to see you all on the 24th; this is a project I’ve been working on with the great people at the NPG and I promise a good time!!!
The Results Are In: Introductions4
July 9, 2008Did you know…
July 1, 2008that Martin Puryear was a native Washingtonian?
Lois Mailou Jones founded the art department at Howard.
Benjamin Edwards lives in Washington, DC.
Paul D. Miller (DJ Spooky) grew up here and
Romare Bearden had his first solo exhibition, Projections, in 1964 at the Corcoran. This was when he introduced to the world his “collage style”.
ROMARE BEARDEN( American, 1914-1988 )
Return of the Prodigal Son, 1967.
Mixed media and collage on canvas, 50 1/4 x 60″
(Albright-Knox Collection)












