| Page 2 of 2 < |
D.C. Adds Local Art to Downtown Palette
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
There is a 45-year-old abstract watercolor by a now 89-year-old painter. There is a painting of a woman with floating hair, surrounded by floating keyholes.
Although the exhibit is not focused on images of the District, the city and its residents make regular appearances, such as in the panoramic photograph of a father and daughter fishing on the C & O Canal.
Another photograph is of superimposed images of 14th Street. A garage with a pink roof in a Washington back alley is captured in a painting. Another portrays a downtown hotdog stand. A third depicts the neon lights of the Tivoli Theater sign.
Phyllis Furdell, a Falls Church painter who has spent 20 years capturing life on Metro trains on canvas, sold the commission her rendition of a moment on the Red Line that she painted in 1992.
Furdell has completed more than two dozen paintings of Metro scenes over the years, finding endless inspiration in the cross-section of humanity underground.
"It's one of those places where you get this mixture of people from all walks of life, where they're either going to work or they're homeless or they're tourists," she said. "It just seems that they're very lost in their own worlds, and yet they're all together. They're absorbed in their own destinations and destinies."
Furdell, a project manager for the National League of Cities, sold the painting for $1,440. She said she's pleased by the prospect of visitors being able to view her work for years to come.
"Most artists like to think their work will be in a permanent place," she said. "It's a good opportunity for immortality."
Brendan Hoffman, a freelance photojournalist, had his camera when he swung by the Maine Avenue fish market one afternoon last February. He snapped shots of two men working behind a counter, beneath a sign reading, "Our Crabs Have No Sand."
Eight months later, the photos are hanging at city hall.
Hoffman was drawn to the market, he said, "because it seems like a remnant from another time. It's so far removed from our common supermarket experience; it's different and unique."
He said that he got about $200 for his photographs and that the money wasn't the point.
"It's a nice thing to be part of, it's good for the résumé, and I'm pleased to see the government taking an active role to encourage the arts," he said. The arts are "an easy thing to get rid of."
The artwork is on display in the John A. Wilson Building's public areas from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekdays. A photo ID is required to enter the building.







