WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonians Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden has opened Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen, a landmark exhibition by Adam Pendleton. The artist presents new and recent paintings as well as a single-channel video work in the museums second-floor inner-ring galleries April 4, 2025, through Jan. 3, 2027. Pendletons first solo exhibition in Washington, D.C., highlights his unique contribution to contemporary American painting, while making use of the architecture of the museum and history of the National Mall.
Introducing Adam Pendletons recent work in our 50th year is intentional, said Melissa Chiu, Hirshhorn director. His exhibition reflects the Hirshhorns mission as a 21st-century art museum that amplifies the voices of artists responding to history and place in real time. Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen invites our almost 1 million annual visitors to think about the complexities of abstraction within the American experience, and its potential to forge associations among our shared past, present and future.
I am delighted to exhibit my work on the occasion of the Hirshhorns 50th anniversary, Pendleton said. It presents a meaningful opportunity to engage, in subtle and poetic ways, with the museums architecture, position on the National Mall and legacy of showing significant abstract and conceptual work.
Pendleton is known for his visually distinct and conceptually rigorous paintings that he begins on paper with drips, splatters, sprays, geometric shapes, words and phrases, and inky fragments reminiscent of broken letters. These visual experiments are at times carefully controlled and at others freely improvised. He photographs these initial compositions and then layers them using a screen-printing process, purposefully blurring the distinctions between the act of painting, the act of drawing and the act of photography.
Love, Queen features Pendletons Black Dada, Days, WE ARE NOT and new Composition and Movement paintings. An encounter with any single work, typically composed of two colors on black-gessoed grounds, brings forth the immediacy of gestural abstraction, the considered execution of minimal and conceptual art, and the playfulness of concrete poetry. Painting is as much an act of performance as it is an act of translation and transformation, the artist has stated.
The artist also debuts Resurrection City Revisited (Who Owns Geometry Anyway?), a new video work that is being projected floor-to-ceiling. The work makes use of still and moving images of Resurrection City, the multi-day encampment erected on the National Mall in the summer of 1968, considered to be the culmination of Martin Luther King Jr.s Poor Peoples Campaign. Strobing in and out of darkness, the documentary material is interspersed with found footage and punctuated by flashes of geometric forms, dissolving the boundaries between abstraction and representation. The films score by the multi-instrumentalist composer Hahn Rowe integrates a reading by the late poet and cultural critic Amiri Baraka with an orchestration of brass, woodwinds and drums.
In its totality, Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen offers a powerful counterpoint to the collection surveys being presented in adjacent galleries. The exhibition is organized by Evelyn C. Hankins, the Hirshhorns head curator, with support from former curatorial assistant Alice Phan.
It is an honor to invite Adam Pendleton to respond to the Hirshhorns singular architecture and location, Hankins said. Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen speaks to the vision of our anniversarya period of simultaneous reflection and forward thinking, a space in which Pendleton has been operating for almost two decades.
Adam Pendleton: Love, Queen will be accompanied by an exhibition catalog with scholarly essays, Studio Hirshhorn and Hirshhorn Eye videos, and free public programs.