3/15-3/29
This week (and next): Celebrate a video art project traversing DC on a billboard truck, see Miró's influence on American modernism, and more.
This Week
artconnexDC Tour of Making Their Mark [Museum Tour] March 20, 1-2 PM | National Museum of Women in the Arts | FREE
Making Their Mark: Works from the Shah Garg Collection illustrates women artists’ vital role in abstraction over the last eight decades. Drawn wholly from the contemporary art collection of Komal Shah and Gaurav Garg, the exhibition considers historical contributions, formal and material breakthroughs, and intergenerational relationships among women artists. The exhibit features some of the most important artists of the 20th and 21st centuries. More Info
Opening Event: I’ll Meet You There [Public Art Opening] March 21 | City-State Public House | FREE
The Nicholson Project and Hamiltonian Artists are launching a four-part public art exhibition using a twenty-foot billboard truck showcasing video work by Stephanie J. Williams, Jermaine “jET” Carter, Edgar Reyes, and A.J. McClenon. The truck will traverse all quadrants of the city, with the first installation (March 16 through April 11) featuring Williams’ video work The Expectation of the Observed. Join the opening celebration to view the work on the truck and hear Williams in conversation with artist Luis Vasquez La Roche. The project also includes outdoor exhibitions anchored at Hamiltonian and The Nicholson Project. Register
Miró and the United States [Exhibition Opening] March 21-July 5 | The Phillips Collection | $20
Co-organized with the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona, this exhibition explores the exchanges between Catalan artist Joan Miró and the American art scene in a pivotal moment of 20th-century art. For Miró, the United States represented new audiences and creative freedom. Featuring 75 works by more than 30 artists (including Helen Frankenthaler, Alexander Calder, and Jackson Pollock), the exhibition reframes Miró's legacy, revealing how his dream-like pictures evolved through artistic dialogue and experimentation with his American counterparts. Visit
Looking Ahead
Hyunsuk Erickson: After Flesh, Synthetic [Installation Opening] March 22, 4-6 PM | Freight Gallery | FREE
Hyunsuk Erickson combines natural and artificial elements into entangled forms, exploring where organic and constructed worlds coexist. Growing up on a family farm in Korea, Erickson developed an intimate relationship with soil, plants, and seasonal cycles. The installation envisions a world both familiar and otherworldly, where human and nonhuman forms navigate tension and interdependence. More Info
Artist Talk and Tea Reception with Alison Saar [Artist Talk] March 26, 4 PM | The David C. Driskell Center | FREE
The Driskell Center hosts an artist talk, “Hither and Yon,” by Alison Saar, followed by a tea reception and the presentation of the 2026 Porter/Driskell Book Award. The program also features the David C. Driskell Distinguished Lecture, delivered this year by Dr. Cherise Smith: “Affect and Repair: Carrie Mae Weems’ From Here I Saw What Happened and I Cried.” Register
Spring Open Studios [Open Studios] March 29, 12-4 PM | 52 O Street Studios | FREE
Meet artists, explore their spaces, and purchase works at DC’s largest art studio building. Register







