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Haviland Atha-Simonton Washington, DC Deadline: Mar 26, 2026
WCADC Admin Washington, DC Deadline: Apr 11, 2026
Elizabeth Helm Old Lyme, CT Deadline: Feb 23, 2026

Looking Back - Look Forward: Sources of Artistic Imspiration

Organization: Washington Sculptors Group Location Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, 901 G St. NW Washington, DC 20001 Entry Fee Paid Entry Deadline February 7, 2025 Exhibition Jun 12 - Sep 1, 2025
ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
This exhibition honors the Washington Sculptors Group's forty years in the DC arts community, while highlighting the role that DC Public Library plays as the archive for much of the District's cultural history. Each selected artist will receive an honorarium for participating in the show. The amount of the honorarium will depend on the number of works in the show.

WSG members are invited to submit work made using or responding to materials in archival collections held by the Library, or responding to concepts embodied by the Library and its holdings of literature, artifacts, and primary source documents, as well as the Library?s role as community gathering space. These could be from the WSG Archives or from other archival collections held in The People's Archive.

The pieces can be three-dimensional freestanding sculptures, as well as wall-hung works. Artists are encouraged to visit the library and learn about its archives.

The People's Archive
https://www.dclibrary.org/plan-visit/martin-luther-king-jr-memorial-library/peoples-archive

DCPL Public Art & Exhibits
https://www.dclibrary.org/using-the-library/public-artexhibits

ABOUT THE JURORS
Babette Pendleton is the Program Manager for the Corcoran / National Gallery Partnership. Within this role she manages the newly established Corcoran Institute which serves as an interdisciplinary lab for art, experimentation, and research. Babette assists the Corcoran Director in managing all aspects of the National Gallery of Art/GW partnership to establish and grow the institute. Responsibilities include management of programming, exhibitions, artists-in-residence, visiting artists, student workers, and contractors related to the partnership. Pendleton creates activated environments, immersive installations, and performances through her multidisciplinary work as an artist and curator-producer. Her national and international curatorial work manifests in forms of collective and collaborative organizing, project management, visionary and strategic consulting, and exhibition/performance producing. Pendleton is also currently the director of Yellow Fish Durational Performance Art Festival. The festival brings awareness to the significance and study of Time while facilitating community involvement in historical and contemporary thought surrounding Durational Performance Art. Pendleton maintains a rigorous performance and land art practice utilizing forms of movement, sculpture, and photography. She holds a BFA from Cornish College of the Arts and an MFA in Curatorial Practice from Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA).

Dr. Michelle May-Curry is a curator, professor, writer, public humanities consultant, and photographer based in Washington, D.C. She is the Curator at the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities and core faculty in Georgetown University's Master's program in Engaged and Public Humanities. May-Curry has held fellowships at Harvard University, as well as the Carr Center in Detroit. Her scholarly and curatorial work has appeared in the New York Times and American Quarterly, and exhibitions at The DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, The Art Institute of Chicago, Harvard Art Museums, The Carr Center Gallery, and The 2019 Havana Biennial. She received her Ph.D. in American Culture from the University of Michigan.

Linnea Hegarty is the Director of Events, Exhibits and Development at the DC Public Library, where her recent initiatives have included major traveling exhibitions and locally focused exhibitions grounded in the library's collections, as well as cultural partnerships with local and national institutions. Hegarty brings more than 17 years of experience in leadership positions at nonprofit and political organizations to the DC Public Library. Prior to joining the Library, for seven years, she served as the Executive Director of the DC Public Library Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides programmatic resources to the DC Public Library to supplement local government funding. Linnea lives in Mount Pleasant, DC, with her husband and two young boys, where they are frequent visitors at their favorite neighborhood library.

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