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Saturday, May 16, 2026 |
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| New exhibition reimagines the Lyman Allyn Art Museum's collection |
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Left to right: Kat Murphy, Desert X, 2023/2026, acrylic, chalk, charcoal; Amphora, Greek, ca. 610-565 BCE, terracotta. Gift of Mrs. Cornelius Rhoades, 1982.142.
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NEW LONDON, CONN.- The Lyman Allyn presents A Tin Can on a String: Conversations from the Collection, a collaborative exhibition by artists and lifelong friends Kat Murphy and Heidi Johnson. On view from May 16 through Aug. 9, the exhibition reimagines the Museums collection through a contemporary lens, inviting visitors into an intimate exchange between past and present.
Working both onsite and within the Museums digital archives, Murphy and Johnson engage in a dynamic creative dialogue with historical objects. Drawing inspiration from forms, textures, and narratives found in the collection, the artists translate their discoveries into new works spanning painting, collage, and sculpture. The result is a vibrant body of work that reflects an ongoing conversation, one that bridges time, material, and artistic perspective.
A Tin Can on a String captures the unfolding relationship between artist and artifact, transforming research into connection and reflection into response. Visitors are offered a rare glimpse into the creative process, tracing how inspiration travels from the quiet depths of the collection to the expressive surface of contemporary art.
This project has been about reinterpreting the objects into new forms and reviving the past through my own contemporary vision, said Kat Murphy. The best part has been collaborating with a fellow artist and longtime friend, turning the archival revival into a lively conversation.
Left to right: John Audubon and Robert Havell, Zenaida Dove Pl. CLXII, 1833, hand-colored engraving on paper. Gift of Henry Schnakenberg, Newtown, CT, 1952.67A; Heidi Johnson, Audubondance, 2026, oil on canvas.
Heidi Johnson added, The natural world, with all its patterns and involved temporality, has been an infinite inspiration for my paintings. My work has become a constant inquiry into how we incorporate the natural world into our lives.
By placing Murphy and Johnsons contemporary works in dialogue with the Museums collection, the exhibition highlights the enduring relevance of historical objects while celebrating the evolving nature of artistic interpretation.
Related programming includes a Gallery Talk with Kat Murphy and Heidi Johnson on Tuesday, Jun. 23 at 5:30 pm. Members are $10, and non-members are $15. More information will be available on lymanallyn.org.
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