The Collaborative | The DMV Collects the DMV
The Kreeger Museum
On view October 26, 2024 - February 1, 2025
HEMPHILL is pleased to share The Collaborative | The DMV Collects the DMV on view at The Kreeger Museum through February 1, 2025.
This exhibition is presented under The Collaborative, a program developed by The Kreeger Museum in 2021 to support Washington-area artists.
HEMPHILL Artists Featured:
Rush Baker IV, Leon Berkowitz, William Christenberry, Steven Cushner, Gene Davis, Mary Early, Hedieh Javanshir Ilchi, Jacob Kainen, Kevin MacDonald, Renée Stout, Julie Wolfe
The curious case of Jacob Kainen
The challenge and appeal of bringing the life and legacy of an overlooked DC artist to the screen
Coley Gray for 730 DC | July 29, 2024
The studio of the late Jacob Kainen is located in a slightly run-down, light industrial area of Kensington, Maryland. It houses hundreds of his paintings, prints, and drawings, testimony to Kainen’s extraordinary career spanning from the 1930s until his death in 2001.
As accomplished a curator, scholar, champion and connector of fellow artists as he was a painter and printmaker, Kainen indelibly shaped DC’s postwar art scene through both his long-term post in the Smithsonian and his own oeuvre. Without Kainen, our art scene wouldn’t be what it is today.
But if you haven’t heard of him, you’re not alone. The director of one of DC’s leading contemporary art spaces admitted, when asked recently, she hadn’t either. No leading regional or national museums have done a major Kainen exhibit in more than a decade (though his longtime gallery Hemphill Artworks put up a show of his paintings and works on paper in late 2023), nor have prominent individual or institutional collectors made notable recent acquisitions of his works.
Now, a documentary film crew is trying to ensure he gets his due.
Click here to read the full article.
Please consider an IRS-approved tax-deductible donation to the project through our fiscal sponsor Women in Film & Video: Click on the Donate Now button at www.jacobkainen.com/donate
11 Art Shows to See in Washington, DC, This Fall
By Murat Cem Mengüç, Hyperallergic
October 10, 2023
The last retrospective of Jacob Kainen’s work took place in 1993, during which he was interviewed by the Washington Post and referred to himself as a “fatalist.” He expressed indifference towards the prospect of dying as a relatively unknown painter, despite leaving behind a substantial body of work that many knew of. In that same interview, he predicted that his work would be discovered in the 2020s. Hemphill Artworks, which represents Kainen’s estate, periodically showcases his work in solo exhibitions, contributing to the realization of that prediction...The exhibition primarily features his large abstract paintings from the 1970s and 1980s, in addition to a few smaller pieces from the 1950s.
Art and the City: New, Retrospective and 11 Go Solo
By Phil Hutinet, HillRag
October 3, 2023
The exhibition [at Hemphill] commences with a selection of paintings from 1951 and 1953, accompanied by a series of paintings on paper that illuminate the rapid evolution of Kainen’s innovative abstract style. Notably the masterpiece “Mr. Kafka” (1970) draws its creative impulse from suspended clothing, crafting a compelling representation of the human form. This composition became a recurring motif, revisited by Kainen in various sketches and etchings. Throughout the ensuing decades, particularly the 1970s and 1980s, Kainen navigated between periods of lyrical and geometric abstraction, employing meticulous layering techniques to craft compositions that evoke ethereal, floating elements.
In the galleries: Abstract works reflect artist’s years of progression
By Mark Jenkins, The Washington Post
October 13, 2023
The Jacob Kainen paintings now on view at Hemphill Artworks date from 1952 to 1988, yet altogether skip the 1960s. The Washington artist (1909-2001) is known as an abstractionist, but he devoted much of that decade to representational work. Only hints of that interest are visible in this selection, which consists principally of 1980s color-field paintings. Their forms can be either loose or precisely geometric, but their colors are always softly layered and seemingly weathered.
Click here to read the full review.
Print Viewing: Editioned Works by Jacob Kainen
October 28, 2023 | 11 am - 4 pm
Join us on Saturday, October 28th on the final day of the exhibition Jacob Kainen for a first-hand look at selections of prints spanning Kainen’s career. Prints from the 1940s to the 1990s will be presented in the gallery space in the midst of the exhibition. Enjoy the exuberance of Kainen’s etchings, lithographs, woodcuts, and silkscreens.
Jacob Kainen
In the galleries: A personal look at a maker of monuments
June 1, 2017
Mark Jenkins, The Washington Post
"Even at their most geometric, the paintings in 'Jacob Kainen' have a beguiling softness."
Jacob Kainen, Thomas Nozkowski, Sean Scully
In the galleries
August 4, 2016
Mark Jenkins, The Washington Post
"The deft juxtaposition of soft-edged color and hard-edged form links the artists in Hemphill Fine Art’s 'Kainen, Scully, Nozkowski.'"
REPRESENT
At Hemphill Fine Arts, a retrospective show that's bigger than the gallery
November 15, 2013
Mark Jenkins, The Washington Post
"Several mini-shows nestle within “Represent,” Hemphill Fine Arts’s 20th-anniversary exhibition."
Viewing Rm.
"Viewing Rm." at Hemphill Fine Arts
February 4, 2011
Louis Jacobson, Washington City Paper
"The exhibit is variegated, but like any good combine painting (and those are included too) it coheres pretty well despite itself, as giants like Robert Rauschenberg mix with such local figures as Joseph Mills, Mingering Mike and Colby Caldwell."
Viewing Rm.
Familiar favorites: Once more, with feeling
January 28, 2011
Jessica Dawson, The Washington Post
"Here hang big, striking works by Tom Downing and Jacob Kainen. Here, too, are precious works on paper by Al Jensen and Alma Thomas. That Eugene Atget picture of the taxidermist's vitrine? I'll take it."