National Portrait Gallery and the Archives of American Art co-present "Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Always to Return"
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National Portrait Gallery and the Archives of American Art co-present "Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Always to Return"
Installation view.



WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery and Archives of American Art are co-presenting "Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Always to Return," the largest presentation of the artist’s work in Washington, D.C., in 30 years. With no formal start or end point, “Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Always to Return” unfolds at the intersection of Gonzalez-Torres’ groundbreaking engagement with portraiture, the context of two Smithsonian collections and the historically significant setting of Washington. The exhibition is co-curated by Josh T Franco, head of collecting at the Archives of American Art, and Charlotte Ickes, curator of time-based media art and special projects at the National Portrait Gallery, and it will be on view Oct. 18 through July 6, 2025.

Focusing on the artist’s deep engagement with portraiture, historiography and the construction of identity, “Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Always to Return” presents a broad array of significant works by the artist alongside other portraits at the National Portrait Gallery and Archives of American Art (also home to the Felix Gonzalez-Torres Correspondence Archive) and at other downtown locations. While considered one installation, the artist’s light-string work “Untitled” (America) (1994) is on view across three locations: the facade of the Old Patent Office Building, which houses the Portrait Gallery and Archives of American Art’s Lawrence A. Fleischman Gallery; outdoors along Eighth Street N.W., between F and E Streets, in partnership with the DowntownDC BID; and on the first floor of the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library of the District of Columbia Public Library.

Gonzalez-Torres (1957–1996) was born in Guáimaro, Cuba, and lived primarily in New York, as well as in Madrid; San Juan, Puerto Rico; Los Angeles; and Miami, where he died from AIDS-related causes. In the 1980s and 1990s, he rose to prominence to become one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Posthumously, he represented the United States at the 2007 Venice Biennale. Gonzalez-Torres broadened the horizon of portraiture beyond a genre associated with static representations of individuals. The artist created frameworks that could foster questioning about how people perceive themselves, how those understandings are fluid and how people are fundamentally entangled with a changing world.

Through forms, processes and materials not always associated with portraiture, Gonzalez-Torres’ approach to the genre highlights the complexities of identity, representation and how history is made and by whom it is told. For example, the artist’s word portraits physically manifest as a list of events and corresponding dates installed directly onto a wall at “frieze height.” To make these works, the artist asked the subjects of the portraits to share formative events and dates that shaped their lives. Gonzalez-Torres then edited this list, rewording, rearranging, deleting and incorporating additional events and dates to create the initial version of the portrait. Gonzalez-Torres intended for owners of these works to create new versions on an ongoing basis, allowing the portraits to be responsive and exist in multiple versions across time and space. In the artist’s words, “We are not what we think we are, but rather a compilation of texts. A compilation of histories, past present and future, always, always, shifting, adding, subtracting, gaining.” On view are three portraits from this remarkable body of work: “Untitled” (1989), “Untitled” (Portrait of Robert Vifian) (1993) and “Untitled” (Portrait of MOCA) (1994). Each work’s owner granted the co-curators the right to make new versions for this exhibition. Including these, “Untitled” (1989) has accumulated over 40 versions, all of which are the work.

Also on view and exemplary of the artist’s conception of portraits that evolve across time and space are “Untitled” (Portrait of Dad) (1991) and “Untitled” (Portrait of Ross in L.A.) (1991). While these two works have ideal weights of 175 pounds, each can be installed in different configurations with an endless supply of candy sourced by the museum. Visitors can choose to take and consume the sweets, shifting the relationship between portrait subject and viewer. Throughout the exhibition, these works will change if visitors choose to interact with them and as museum staff fulfill their rights and responsibilities to make decisions about maintenance, replenishment, configuration and location. Other non-figurative works by Gonzalez-Torres are in conversation with traditional likenesses of historical figures, such as Ronald Reagan, Theodore Roosevelt, Gertrude Stein, Walt Whitman and others in the Portrait Gallery’s collection.

On view in the Archives of American Art’s Lawrence A. Fleischman Gallery are artworks and correspondence that animate the artist’s relationship to appropriation, source material and the photographic medium. For the first time in the United States, and only the second time internationally, the ‘complete set of individual puzzles’ consisting of all 55 of the artist’s editioned puzzle works, created from 1987 to 1992, are on view. Alongside the puzzles are correspondence between the artist and friends and curators, including snapshots, which the artist often mailed to recipients with notes inscribed on the back.

“Felix Gonzalez-Torres: Always to Return” features loans from major institutions, including the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. The exhibition is accompanied by two publications.










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