WASHINGTON, DC.- The
National Museum of Women in Arts, the worlds first major museum solely dedicated to championing women artists, reopens its extensively renovated building on October 21, 2023. The transformed museum will feature new exhibition spaces, re-envisioned public programming areas, improved amenities and increased accessibility for visitors at its historic home at 1250 New York Avenue, NW, in Washington, D.C. In addition to an expansive reinstallation of the collection, NMWA will present an inaugural exhibition, The Skys the Limit, featuring powerful monumental sculpture and immersive installations by a dozen contemporary women artists, in an innovative presentation not possible prior to the renovation.
NMWA has a distinctive role in the art world. As both a museum and a megaphone, we advocate for gender equity through excellence in the arts, said NMWA Director Susan Fisher Sterling. We have continued to do this work virtually and off-site during our closure, but we are really looking forward to reopening our building this fall. Our renewed and reimagined spaces will enhance our ability to share great works of art, engage with our visitors and reach out to new audiences.
NMWAs $67.5 million project, designed by Baltimore-based architectural firm Sandra Vicchio & Associates, is the museums first full renovation since it opened in 1987. It honors the legacy of the 1908 Classic Revival structure while improving its interior spaces, façade and infrastructure. Updates include gallery spaces enlarged by more than 20% to showcase historic and contemporary artworks and installations; a new Learning Commons, featuring an Education and Public Programs Studio for hands-on workshops as well as an improved Research Library; an updated, state-of-the-art Performance Hall; and more efficiently designed museum collections storage and conservation areas.
The grand reopening celebration will feature public programs for audiences of all ages. More details will be announced in the coming months.
The Skys the Limit
NMWA will reopen with a special exhibition focused on womens pioneering work in large-scale sculpture. On view October 21, 2023, through February 25, 2024, The Skys the Limit presents artworks by 12 artists, including Petah Coyne, Cornelia Parker, Mariah Robertson, Shinique Smith, Joana Vasconcelos and Ursula von Rydingsvard. Sculptures will be suspended from the ceiling, arc across walls and project outward from corners, inspiring close encounters with artworks.
The core of The Skys the Limit is a group of never-before-exhibited works from NMWAs collection. The renovation has created purpose-built spaces for art of all kinds, inspiring bold installations that tell a fuller story of women in artnotably encompassing powerful and monumental work. Highlights include Mariah Robertsons 164-foot-long abstract photograph Untitled (9) (2011), which cascades from the ceiling; Joana Vasconceloss Rubra (2016), an illuminated chandelier made from crocheted wool and Murano glass; Shinique Smiths Daisies Up Your Butterfly (2013), a hanging bundle crafted from reclaimed clothing, which brims with the energy of secrecy and discovery; and Cornelia Parkers ghostly Thirty Pieces of Silver (exhaled) Sugar Bowl (2003), featuring steamrolled silver teapots and musical instruments that hover above the floor as if by magic.
Additional Inaugural Exhibitions
To complement the grand scope of The Skys the Limit, NMWA presents two focus exhibitions: one that explores a contemporary artists legacy and another that offers new perspectives on a historical work. Hung Liu: Making History highlights the oeuvre of the renowned Chinese-born American artist (19482021), who transformed her canvases and prints into memorial sites for women and children. Featuring approximately ten selections from NMWAs deep collection of her work, the exhibition explores the downtrodden and often-forgotten individuals that the artist chose to honor as mythic figures through history painting.
The exhibition Antoinette Bouzonnet-Stella focuses on the 17th-century French artists series of 33 prints from 1675 depicting The Entrance of the Emperor Sigismond into Mantua. Her engravings, on view at NMWA for the first time in nearly 15 years, were commissioned by King Louis XIVs minister of finance to reproduce an Italian Renaissance stucco frieze. The exhibition provides an immersive look into Bouzonnet-Stellas technique and an exploration of her life in 17th-century Paris. With a unique wrap-around presentation, this narrative frieze is in dialogue with the installations of The Skys the Limit, linking immersive works of the past and present.
Remixed Collection Galleries & Programming
An expansive collection reinstallation offers thematic and provocative combinations of works from NMWAs holdings that span six continents and six centuries. Favorites from NMWAs collection will be presented thematically in nine groupings, such as Fiber Optics, in which a quilt by Faith Ringgold and a sculpture made from thread by Sonya Clark weave in themes of race and history; Photo Credit, featuring early works by pioneering photographers Julia Margaret Cameron and Jessie Tarbox Beals, as well as contemporary images by Lalla Essaydi and others that expand photographys boundaries; and Land Marks, with works by Rosa Bonheur, Loïs Mailou Jones and Jaune Quick-to-See Smith that illustrate how landscape images are rarely objective or neutral.
The inaugural exhibitions also include a series of commissioned videos profiling women artists, created by NMWA and the award-winning film company Smartypants. Featured artists include Ambreen Butt, Sonya Clark, Colette Fu, Guerrilla Girls, Graciela Iturbide, Delita Martin, Rania Matar and Alison Saar. Through personal reflections, the videos will explore artists inspirations, challenges and visions for the future. Visitors will be able to enjoy the museums improved new-media capacity and continued emphasis on artists voices throughout the galleries.
Renovation Highlights
NMWAs building renovation project includes:
Transforming the building to provide easier access for all visitors, with upgraded technologies and amenities as well as improved ADA accessibility
Renovating and enlarging galleries to accommodate a wider variety of historic and contemporary artworks and installations
Creating a new Learning Commons, which features an exhibition gallery, a state-of-the-art Library and Research Center with reading room, and an Education and Public Programs Studio that provides flexible space for a range of museum events including hands-on workshops, classes and curated conversations
Upgrading the 182-seat Performance Hall with new furnishings and state-of-the-art technology to enhance presentation of public programs, lectures, films and live performances
Improving wireless and interactive technology in galleries, which will enrich visitors experiences and learning opportunities with additional connectivity
Updating the Great Hall and Mezzanine to preserve these iconic spaces while improving their functionality for museum events and facility rentals
Expanding the Museum Shop to accommodate even more items by women-owned companies and women makers
Installing new lighting, climate control and security technology to support long-term conservation of the art and the comfort of visitors
Enhancing collection storage spaces to store and conserve art more efficiently and effectively
Improving signage to provide easy-to-follow pathways throughout the museum
Restoring the roof, historic cornice and the building exterior in accordance with the D.C. Historic Preservation Office