Full Circle
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Location
Hirshhorn Museum Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, D.C.Duration
May 25 – September 11, 2022
Curators
Evelyn C. Hankins, Head Curator, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden

In the 60 years since moving to Washington, DC, Sam Gilliam has produced a prolific body of abstraction across media through which he has continually pursued new avenues of artistic expression. He initially rose to prominence in the late 1960s making large, color-stained manipulated, unstretched canvases. Gilliam continues to experiment with staining, soaking and pouring pigments, elaborating on the process-oriented tradition of Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland and other Washington Color School artists. In 1972, Gilliam represented the United States at the 36th Venice Biennale, and returned in 2017 with “Yves Klein Blue,” a draped work that welcomed visitors to the Venice Giardini. Gilliam’s approach focuses keenly on the cornerstones of abstraction—form, color and material—from which he creates artworks that reflect his career-long engagement with art history and the improvisatory ethos of jazz.
Full Circle shows Gilliam’s most recent works in recognition of his indefatigable vision, presented in his chosen hometown on the National Mall at the national museum of modern art.
This exhibition reflects Gilliam’s tireless propulsion of the through lines of abstraction. His new round paintings (or tondos) expand the body of beveled-edge abstract paintings that Gilliam first pioneered in the 1960s. Ranging in size from 3 to 5 feet in diameter, each tondo begins with a beveled wood panel, which the artist loads with layers of dense, vibrant pigments, their aggregate effect heightened through the addition of thickening agents, sawdust, shimmering metal fragments, wood scraps and other studio debris. Using a stiff metal rake along with more traditional tools, Gilliam then abrades, smears and scrapes the coarse surfaces to reveal a constellation of textures and colors below.
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“In his final tondos, and throughout his career, Gilliam explored and expanded the possibilities of painting wherever he could find it.”
Brooklyn Rail
Maddie Klett
“Here, it’s the details that create the drama. Up close, contrasting colors flood your field of vision. Paint cascades down the panels. Their surfaces appear so textured that you have to fight the urge to touch them.”
The Washington Post
Kelsey Ables