Washington, D.C
Three different art experiences in Washington, D.C., at the National Gallery, American University and Glenstone – Artblog
Blaise Tobia and Virginia Maksymowicz travel to Washington for a trifecta of art experiences and they write about how different each art experience was. Read on, then take a little trip to Washington, maybe do it this month! Enjoy!
Authors Introduction
The two of us recently drove down to Washington, D.C., with three primary art objectives in mind: to see the Paris 1874 Impressionist exhibition at the National Gallery; to see the exhibition Faces of the Republican Party at American University; and to make our first visit to the relatively new Glenstone Museum in Potomac, Maryland, just outside of the District. One of the great things about DC (at least for now) is that the national museums, which are top quality, offer free admission. In terms of the visual arts, a visitor can easily fill two days with visits to the National Gallery (and its contemporary-oriented East Wing), the Hirshhorn, the National Portrait Gallery and the Smithsonian American Art Museum (both sharing the amazing building that was formerly the U.S. Patent Office), the museums of African and Asian Art, and the American Indian Museum.
National Gallery

The current marquee exhibition at the National Gallery is Paris 1874: the Impressionist Moment. One-hundred fifty years ago, a show that included a style of art that would become known as “Impressionism,” was held in Paris under the name Société Anonyme des Artistes Peintres, Sculpteurs, Graveurs, etc. It featured thirty artists and was set up as a counter-exhibition to the gigantic annual Paris Salon, which hosted over 2000 artists and half a million visitors.
The Paris 1874 exhibition sets up a comparison between the Salon and the Société — in fact, the curators challenge visitors to deduce for each work on view whether it was part of the Salon or of the Société.
The Société exhibition came to be known as the First Impressionist Exhibition and was followed by seven more, through 1886. Interestingly, most of the artists in the 1874 show were not actually Impressionists. The exhibition has often been categorized as a Salon des Refuses, and it is true that some of the exhibitors, including Monet, Manet, Renoir and Cezanne, had not been selected for the Salon. But there were also artists who showed in both exhibitions, one of them, surprisingly, a woman, Berthe Morisot.
Paris 1874 includes works in the National Gallery’s collection. In addition, other works that had been in either of the two 1874 Paris exhibitions were brought from museums around the world. One of these is Monet’s “Impression, Sunrise.” (It was a negative reaction to this painting that caused the art critic Louis Leroy to coin the term “Impressionism.”)
Another featured work is Jean-Léon Gérôme’s1873 painting in grand historical style, “L’Eminence Grise,” which won the Salon’s grand prize in 1874. And the intelligence of the National Gallery installation is evident in the fact that Gerome’s “L’Eminence Grise” and Monet’s “Impressionism: Sunrise” are the first two paintings seen by visitors, displayed side-by-side.
One of the most impressive things about the National Gallery exhibition is that it presents a great deal of historical and cultural context for the two 1874 exhibitions including the fact that Paris was a city just beginning to recover from the devastations of the Franco-Prussian War (1871) and the Paris Commune that followed it.
Another component of the show that impressed us wasn’t even in the exhibition proper: two large photographic projections were on view for visitors waiting to enter the exhibition, and these were quite amazing. Digital animator Andrey Zakirzyanov, working with custom A.I. tools, created very believable 3D animations from photographs and paintings featured in the exhibition, giving viewers a convincing sense of a living Paris of 1874.
Paris 1874 is on display through January 19, 2025, (which happens to be, perhaps not coincidentally, the last day of the Biden Administration).
American University Museum

At American University we saw an exhibition that was truly as different as possible from Paris 1874. Faces of the Republican Party features 43 provocative portraits created by artist Jeff Gates, that depict prominent right-wing figures. Each portrait (digital collage, 23×16 inches) is based on a statement by the person depicted. Gates sees these statements as ugly and, accordingly, makes the portraits ugly. He starts with one or more photographs of the person and then goes through a complex process of layering, distorting, coloring and adding additional elements to create a visual representation that embodies the anger and disdain that seem to be transforming the person — literally — into a demon.
One example is Gates’s portrait of Roger Stone featuring a statement Stone made just after the November 2020 election while votes were still being counted: “Fuck the Voting. Let’s get right to the Violence.” Visually, Stone is depicted with wild glowing eyes, a gaping mouth, a pattern of lines on his face evoking Maori warrior tattoos, and a marker in his hand being wielded like a weapon about to poke someone’s eyes out. Other figures depicted include Matt Gaetz, Michael Flynn, Rupert Murdoch, Greg Abbott, Rona MacDaniel and Donald Trump himself.
These are very strong works. Made during the past three years, they have perhaps become even stronger after Trump’s election. A viewer has to admire the courage that American University has shown in exhibiting them.
Faces of the Republican Party closed December 8, 2024. A PDF of the exhibition catalog is available for download.
Glenstone Museum

Our experience at the Glenstone Museum was, yet again, very different – from both exhibitions that we had seen earlier.
Glenstone, which opened in 2006, is the project of two very wealthy art collectors, Mitchell Rales and Emily Wei Rales, who have spent more than $2 billion on it. The grounds encompass 300 acres of meadows and woodlands, traversed by walking paths and streams. Separate from the art on display, this beautiful outdoor setting is clearly a masterpiece of landscape design. A number of modern, minimalist structures have been worked into the landscape: a small museum (called the Gallery), a larger museum (with over 50,000 square feet of exhibition space, called the Pavilions), a building dedicated solely to a Richard Serra work, a restaurant, various service units, and the Rales’s own residence. All the buildings were designed by Charles Gwathmey and Thomas Phifer.
The Glenstone esthetic seems to be to give lots of breathing room to its major outdoor sculptures. There are only about a dozen works, spread around the site. They include large pieces by Richard Serra, Tony Smith, Jeff Koons, Simone Leigh, Charles Ray, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Michel Heizer and Ellsworth Kelly, an odd small piece by Robert Gober (two porcelain sinks half-buried in the woods), and — our favorite — a set of three small stone huts (Clay Houses) designed by Andy Goldsworthy, each containing a work made of naturally drying clay. And, easily holding its own as a sculptural “work,” is a crazy set of boardwalks through the woods designed by PWP Landscape Architecture (which also did the bulk of Glenstone’s landscape).
The indoor works were less impressive. The Gallery presents a sampling by contemporary artists who could be characterized as the same old suspects, and they are not always top-quality examples. (One exception is a very wry “closet” by Robert Gober, built right into the “white cube” wall.) The Pavilions are very minimalist in architectural style, austere and even foreboding, with the exhibition spaces widely separated along long dark underground hallways. Unfortunately for us, the main artist on display was Cady Noland, whose work leaves us underwhelmed. (Apparently the Rales have amassed the largest collection anywhere of Noland’s work.)
Glenstone struck us as a blend of Storm King, Dia Beacon and the New Jersey Pine Barrens. It is definitely worth a visit. And, while you’re there, take a ride around nearby Potomac, Maryland. It features two of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the U.S. Comically, some of the largest houses (mansions with twelve, sixteen or even more rooms) are crammed into relatively small lots just like typical row houses in Philly!
BTW . . . In doing research for this piece, we discovered something linking our last stop, Glenstone, with our first stop, the National Gallery: Mitchell Rales was president of the National Gallery from 2019 to 2024.
Read more articles by Blaise Tobia and Virginia Maksymowicz on Artblog.
Washington, D.C
DC police release bodycam footage of officer firing at armed carjacking suspect
WASHINGTON – The Metropolitan Police Department released new body camera footage on Friday of an officer firing his gun at an armed carjacking suspect last month.
The backstory:
The carjacking happened early in the morning of June 24.
According to MPD, two suspects held a man at gunpoint in the 700 block of 19th Street in Northeast Washington before taking his keys and driving off.
After the carjacking, officers searched the city for the suspects, before finding the car on Valley Avenue in Southeast. Officers tried to pull the car over, but the driver took off, before bailing at 2nd and Xenia Streets.
What we know:
The body camera footage released Friday picks up during officers’ search for the suspects.
In the short clip, the officer can be heard shouting out the window of his patrol car before firing out the window.
According to MPD, the officer was driving on Livingston Road SE when he saw one of the suspects. The officer asked the suspect to show their hands, but instead, MPD said the suspect pointed a rifle at the officer. That’s when the officer fired, and the suspect ran off into the woods.
PREVIOUS COVERAGE: 13-year-old charged in DC armed carjacking, officer shoots at second suspect
What’s next:
That suspect is still on the run, according to MPD. A second suspect was arrested the night of the carjacking. The 13-year-old has been charged with armed carjacking, reckless driving, and fleeing from a law enforcement officer.
The United States Attorney’s Office for DC and MPD’s Internal Affairs Division Force Investigation Team will both review the shooting.
The Source: Information in this story is from the Metropolitan Police Department and previous FOX 5 DC reports.
Washington, D.C
What’s that noise? What you need to know about D.C. flyovers Friday and Saturday – WTOP News
Reagan National Airport will close for America 250 flyover rehearsals Friday and celebrations Saturday featuring the Thunderbirds, Blue Angels and more.
Reagan National Airport will close from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday for rehearsals ahead of this weekend’s America 250 celebrations, meaning people around D.C., Arlington and Alexandria may hear and see low-flying military aircraft.
According to Freedom 250 event organizers, Friday’s “Wings of Freedom” demonstrations over the National Mall will feature parachute teams, helicopters and military aircraft, including the U.S. Marine Corps’ MV-22 Osprey and F-35B, the Navy’s F-18F and F-35C, the Air Force’s F-22 Raptor, the Thunderbirds and a tri-bomber formation.
On Saturday, the FAA will close the airport from noon to midnight for the full celebration. All arrivals and departures at Reagan National are scheduled to end before noon.
Flyovers and demonstrations are scheduled throughout the afternoon and evening along the National Mall and Washington Monument grounds, including appearances by Air Force One, the Thunderbirds, Blue Angels, military aircraft fleet reviews, parachute demonstrations and B-2 stealth bombers.
Highlights include an Air Force One flyover scheduled for 7:03 p.m., a Thunderbirds demonstration beginning at 6:25 p.m., a tri-bomber formation at 6:02 p.m. and a stealth aircraft flyover at 7:38 p.m.
Friday’s schedule of flyovers and demonstration rehearsals along the National Mall and Washington Monument
- 10 a.m.: Golden Knights, Leap Frogs
- 10:15 a.m.: Army Helo Flyover
- 10:20 a.m.: USMC V-22 Osprey Demo
- 10:35 a.m.: USMC F-35B STOVL Demo
- 10:50 a.m.: USN F-18F Demo
- 11:10 a.m.: USN F-35C Demo Team
- 11:30 a.m.: USAF F-22 Raptor Demo
- 11:50 a.m.: NASA F-5s
- 12 p.m.: HUGE (1) Formation
- 12:05 p.m.: USAF Thunderbirds
- 12:55 p.m.: USAF Tri-Bomber
Saturday’s schedule of flyovers and demonstration along the National Mall and Washington Monument
- 1:14 p.m.: – NASA F-5 Flyover
- 1:24 p.m.: -NASA Fleet Review
- 1:44 p.m.: USCG Helo Flyover
- 1:54 p.m.: USCG Fixed Wing Flyover
- 2:09 p.m.: Golden Knights, Leap Frogs
- 2:29 p.m.: Army Helo Flyover
- 2:44 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Wave 1 – Heavies
- 2:54 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Wave 2 – AFSOC
- 3:04 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Wave 3 – Fighters
- 3:29 p.m.: Executive Rotary Wing Airlift
- 3:39 p.m.: USMC Fleet Review – Wave 1 – Rotary
- 3:49 p.m.: USMC Fleet Review – Wave 2 – Fixed Wing
- 3:59 p.m.: USN Fleet Review – Wave 1 – Rotary
- 4:09 p.m.: USN Fleet Review – Wave 2 – Fixed Wing
- 4:19 p.m.: USN Fleet Review – Wave 3 – Fighters
- 4:21 p.m.: USN F-18F Demonstration
- 4:59 p.m.: USN Blue Angels
- 5:26 p.m.: USMC MV-22 Osprey Demonstration
- 5:44 p.m.: USAF Fleet Review – Fighters
- 6:02 p.m.: USAF Tri-Bomber Formation
- 6:05 p.m.: USN F-35C Demonstration
- 6:25 p.m.: USAF Thunderbirds Demonstration
- 7:03 p.m.: Air Force One Flyover
- 7:07 p.m.: USAF Thunderbirds Delta Break
- 7:17 p.m.: HUGE 1 Flyover Led by the Newly Renovated Air Force One
- 7:38 p.m.: U.S. Stealth Airpower Flyover
- 7:39 p.m.: F-22 Raptor Demo
- 7:53 p.m.: F-22 Raptor in Afterburner
- 7:59 p.m.: B-1 Flyover
- 8:07 p.m.: B-1’s in Afterburner
- 8:11 p.m.: HUGE ONE Fly Over Review
- 8:22 p.m.: Golden Knights Twilight Jump
- 10:36 p.m.: B-1 Afterburner Night Pass
Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.
© 2026 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.
Washington, D.C
Air Force officer arrested at Capitol after calling for Trump’s impeachment
An Air Force major was arrested in uniform on the steps of the Capitol after he called for the impeachment of President Donald Trump.
U.S. Capitol Police arrested Jason Watson, an active-duty service member, on Wednesday afternoon following remarks at a news conference where he said Trump and Vice President JD Vance should be removed from office.
The event was organized by the Removal Coalition, a group that lobbies members of Congress to impeach Trump, and attended by Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, who has repeatedly introduced articles of impeachment against Trump.
“I’m here with him because Rep. Green is the only member of Congress that has demonstrated the courage and conviction to … force a vote on articles of impeachment,” Watson said at the event. “If Congress followed his example, we could remove the entire Trump administration, but Congress remains unconvinced of the urgency and necessity for them to honor their oaths, so we must persuade them with our unrelenting, uncompromising civil resistance.”
Watson said he is not a Democrat and does not share policy positions with Green, who lost his re-election bid this year. Green’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Watson’s arrest.
Capitol Police said in a statement that it “is generally against the law for the public to demonstrate on the House Steps unless they are with a Member of Congress.”
“Yesterday afternoon, a man was escorted to the House Steps by a Member of Congress,” the statement said. “When the Member of Congress left the area, our officers gave the man lawful orders to stop the illegal demonstration or he would be arrested. The man refused our lawful orders.”
Capitol Police identified the man as Watson, adding that he was arrested on charges of “Crowding, Obstructing, and Incommoding” and that it is legal to protest in other spots on the Capitol grounds.
Service members are subject to stricter laws than the average citizen when it comes to protesting. The Uniform Code of Military Justice prohibits officers from “using contemptuous language towards the President, Vice president, the Secretaries of War and of a military department, Congress, and certain other officials,” according to an Air Force memo last year.
An Air Force spokesperson said in a statement Thursday: “Service members must comply with all laws, regulations and policies governing conduct and the wear of the uniform. All Department of the Air Force personnel are expected to uphold the highest standards of discipline and professionalism, both on and off duty.”
All service members, not just members of the Air Force, are prohibited from participating in “political activities” in uniform.
Watson’s criticism of Trump and Vance focused on the administration’s actions in Venezuela and Iran, calling them “an unconstitutional usurpation of Congress’ authority and a violation of the War Powers Clause.”
“These violations resulted in the deaths of 13 service members and injuries of hundreds more,” he said, referring to the number of U.S. military deaths tied to the Iran war. “For this, the president and vice president must be impeached, convicted and removed.”
Watson also called the administration’s immigration policies and tactics unconstitutional.
The Removal Coalition did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and Watson could not be reached.
President Donald Trump responded to criticism of a financial disclosure that listed $1.4 billion in crypto earnings largely driven by meme coins.
-
Lifestyle1 minute agoHow to have the best Sunday in L.A., according to Ken Marino
-
Politics6 minutes ago
Trump administration sues California over ‘Glock ban’ law targeting machine gun pistols
-
Sports16 minutes agoFolarin Balogun urges U.S. to focus on beating Belgium despite red card he calls unjust
-
World28 minutes agoBelgian diamond group that won tariff relief gifts Trump ring
-
News51 minutes agoFamily-owned company prepares to put on the largest fireworks display in history: “It is the biggest show that we’ve ever done”
-
Los Angeles, Ca2 hours agoWildfire burning on hillside near Cal State San Bernardino
-
Detroit, MI3 hours agoPistons sign premier shot-blocker to two-way contract
-
San Francisco, CA3 hours ago1 dead, 1 injured in Bay Point shooting; suspect sought



