Adult and Team Art
November 23 – December 14, 2024
World Bank Work Colleagues
Nathalie Tavernier
Bethesda, MD
Unnamed Paintings
Born in 1961, Nathalie is a Belgian artist based in Bethesda, Maryland.
Nathalie’s artistic journey started in her thirties, but it is only after retirement that she found the time to fully explore the acrylic medium and research her style.
Nathalie’s art is heavily influenced by the explosion of colors, forms, and repetitive markings found in aboriginal art, graffiti, and doodles. Her process is highly intuitive, spontaneous, and never premeditated. She improvises as she goes with the flow of how she feels when she holds the paintbrush, and she starts a conversation with the canvas using the language of bright colors and shapes.
By not naming her paintings, she invites viewers to experience each of her projects through their own imaginative visual lens and develop their own interpretation of the painting.
“Art is not what you see but what you make others see.” Edgar Degas
Anjali Kumar
Chevy Chase, MD
Oils on Hardboard: "
Themes of Summer"
Painting was a schoolgirl hobby for Anjali Kumar, and in those years it was mainly watercolors. Not till many years later, after retirement in 2018, did Anjali take up her interest in painting again, beginning again with watercolors, mostly of flowers and plants. In 2023 Anjali decided this time to explore new media and themes, and she began experimenting with oils, exploring both figures and landscapes. Her favorite artists among those who paint figures include contemporary Americans such as Colin Page, who painted his daughters on Isle au Haut, Maine. And Joaquin Sorolla, a Spanish impressionist from Valencia. She explores painting from photographs as well, and is keen to take up new challenges.
Andrew Stone, Bethesda, MD
Original Poem to honor the World Bank Group staff and retirees that contributed to this exhibit
Read using an AI Voice
Read using an AI Voice
Andrew Stone has worked at the World Bank Group continuously since 1990. He currently works as Advisor to the Director of IEG’s Financial, Private Sector and Sustainable Development Department. His poetry often is crafted and read during meetings and retreats, but also marks retirements and other celebrations. We asked him a few questions about his unusual pastime.
When did you first develop an interest in poetry and pursue becoming a poet?
Hearing Mother Goose (or Dr. Seuss), singing a song,
The rhyme and the rhythm bring one along,
You’re making up your own words before you know it,
Then people tell you that you’re a poet.
My parents loved word play, teachers always encouraged,
We’re all quite creative if we’re not discouraged.
Were you inspired by other poets?
Ogden Nash tickled funny bones, Frost was a high flyer,
Shakespeare mastered sonnets, Tom Lehrer nailed satire.
But this response invites strong adversity,
For this pantheon lacks inclusive diversity.
There are Plaths, Dorothy Parkers, and Maya Angelous,
Derek Walcotts, Brooks’s and Langston Hughes,
Gahlib, Tagore, Jean de La Fontaine,
Yes, I’d better go back and start over again!
What are the challenges of writing poetry to appeal to a cultural diverse audience?
One person’s humor and satire,
May set others’ sensibilities on fire,
You’ve got to be cautious, sensitive, wary,
You walk a thin tightrope – it’s very scary.
Are there similarities between evaluation and poetry?
Both should be relevant, efficient, effective,
One induces stress, the other’s a corrective.
You often have a poem ready at the conclusion of meetings, retreats, etc. How do you produce poetry that reflects the main themes and outcomes so quickly?
Although rhyming at meetings may not be convention,
Composing helps one maintain full attention,
You hear a key point, you reach out and grab it,
The versification becomes a habit.
But be cautious of rhyming deliriously,
Or soon folks won’t take you seriously,
And never obscure with your jocularity,
The poverty challenges’ daunting severity.
Whatever fantastic poems you cook –
For serious deliveries – you’re still on the hook.
November 2 – 23, 2024
Photos from my Safari in Kenya
Joan Topalian in Tenleytown
I was born in DC and still live in my family home. I grew up in Tenleytown and went to Janney, Alice Deal, Wilson (Jackson Reed) and American University. I spent 34 years at The National Institutes of Health and retired as an Executive Officer.
I took a trip of a lifetime to Eastern Kenya for two weeks. The safari was located in three different camp sites; all in conservancies. Everyone slept in huge tents each night. I had a Maasi tracker and a Maasi driver and a Range Rover each day. I fell in love with the variety of cats and their cubs.
We were so lucky to find a mother Cheetah and her cub three days in a row. We watched them for an hour each day. I did not realize that hippos came to the river every morning and stood in the river until nighttime. They go down under the water for 5 minutes and come up for one minute.
Two families of elephants came each evening at sundown to get fresh water from a pool that the conservancy furnishes every day. They arrive in long lines, one by one, with the babies in between the large mothers and fathers.
While it was 100 degrees in DC; it was in the 70s on Safari each day. However, morning and late evening are cold! Bring layers of clothes. By 10 am it’s in the 70s,
If you get a chance to go on Safari, don’t think twice, Go!
Water Colors and Collage Cards
Cynthia Lehmann in Friendship Heights
Cynthia Lehmann of Faraday Place NW submitted paper flowers to the Little Gallery two years ago. Flowers are still important in my life but my method of depicting them has changed.
I belonged to an international coffee club which sent their coffee in beautiful ethnic paper bags far too beautiful to put in the recycling bin. What to do with these beautiful bags? I made Christmas cards last year but that didn’t put a dent in my stash. Moving on to birthday cards for friends incorporating watercolor flowers and vases made from the bags and a few larger pieces using watercolor and more bags. I think this year’s Christmas cards will finally deplete the supply. Then on to something new.
It’s Halloween!!
October 12 – November 2, 2024
Kathryn Ray's collection of hand-blown glass pumpkins, Tenleytown
Spooky Art: Arachna Potter
Be wary. She is somewhere near you
Arachna Potter never dies so it’s not a problem for her come back to Little Gallery year after year after year. Her work is inspired by spooky things. She loves bats, cats and ghosts. Arachna hopes you enjoy her scary artwork. Thanks for visiting!!
Haunted Music: Dr. A. Cula, age 590 in a coffin near you
Dr. A. Cula recently arrived in AU Park. When he is not drinking blood, he studies music that instills horror, intrigue and suspense. Drip, drip, drip, squeak, creak. SCREAM!
September 21 - October 12, 2024
Photos from Antarctica
Natalia Lopez in Tenleytown
This is the vision of an amateur photographer and journalist about the southernmost and most mysterious continent on the planet.
The photographs are the result of various trips to the Marambio, Esperanza, and Carlini Station. Three places where nature and science coexist with the people who inhabit these Argentine stations each year. The goal is for the viewer to take that journey and experience their own trip to discover this wonderful and enigmatic place.
“Beyond South” offers a different perspective of a continent that, in the collective imagination, is white, barren, and sparsely populated, but in reality, is a dazzling place, full of colors and stories.
Antarctica
Antarctica is the coldest, driest, and highest continent on Earth. It was the last to be discovered by humans and is the only one without permanent residents.
It is pure nature, an open-air laboratory. The largest natural reserve on the planet. While it may seem like an enormous desert, it is actually nature in its purest form. Its geography, flora, and fauna shape one of the most pristine and unique ecosystems on the entire planet.
Antarctica is a continent of over 14 million square kilometers, covered by layers of ice tall enough to conceal a mountain range and containing subglacial lakes isolated for millions of years.
It is the only continent dedicated to peace and science. Through the Antarctic Treaty, and in the midst of the Cold War, 12 nations—now more than 40—agreed to use it solely for peaceful purposes. This international agreement, which has been in effect for over 50 years, is a landmark in International Law.
Her first contact with Antarctica came in 1996, when at the age of 12 she lived with her family at the Esperanza Base. Since then, she has been closely connected to the white continent, returning several times, producing two documentaries, and currently leading various outreach and educational projects.
July 13 - August 3, 2024
Wooden Things that were Fun to Make
Sid Edelmann on Fessenden Street
Fun with Wood
When I was 13, I built a soapbox derby car and won the race in Edmonton, Alberta. My dad had a small shop and I putzed around from time to time. When I retired, I thought woodworking could fill the hours. I started building furniture, a shed and an arbor. I never thought I would be a woodturner. It’s something old people do.
Two years ago, my wife signed me up for a woodturning course. What fun!! Furniture takes weeks or months to make. A bowl can take as little as two hours. Instant gratification!!
Here are a few of the smaller things I’ve turned. I highly recommend woodturning for anyone with a fireplace and, eventually, friends and family who can use salad bowls, Christmas ornaments, and other knickknacks.I hope you like the exhibit.
June 22 - July 13, 2024
Mushrooms
Deb Broderson and Yuri Huti in Tenleytown
Meet some of the mushrooms in your neighborhood!
These are just a few of the many fungus friends we have all around us, even here in the city
Although some of these mushrooms are edible you should never eat a wild mushroom unless an expert has confirmed its identification.
We are just mushroom lovers, not experts so we cannot guarantee that the scientific names are accurate.
Please enjoy a poem by Sylvia Plath…
June 1 - 22, 2024
Bok Choy’s Pants
Marcie Baxter Bearman from near Chicago
Your neighbor, Betsy, and I went to high school together in California. I am honored to be a guest in your neighborhood gallery!
I’ve enjoyed reading and writing poetry since I was young. A couple of years ago I spent many months living in a yurt in my son’s backyard and wrote lots of poems for my grandchildren about the creatures living on their property.
I wrote about owls, crows, slugs, and the chickens my grandsons see every day. I also wrote poems about the moon, the ocean, and a mountain lion who is sometimes spotted on security cameras.
For a few years I’ve been busy illustrating these poems. Someday I am hoping to publish them. I hope you enjoy this poem, Bok Choy.
Bok Choy was named by one of my grandsons after a vegetable that grows in their garden.
It is a great example of onomatopoeia, because Bok Choy says, “ BOK BOK BOK,” as she walks around the chicken coop.
People drew their own pictures of chickens and other animals in clothes. Some of the drawings are included here.
May 11 – June 1, 2024
Fairyland
Betsy Edelmann on Fessenden Street
When I was a kid, growing up in northern California, I loved the woods, animals… and fairies—and making airy houses! I am happy to create this fairy scene and hope the neighborhood will enjoy it.
March 29 – May 12, 2024
Sakura and Maquilishuat: Two sisters in bloom
Mauricio Chavarria Iglesias (Dad), Anabell Iglesias Chavarría (Mom) and 10-year-old Andrés (Son)
The Maquilishuat Tree (Tabebuia Rosa) was declared the National Tree of El Salvador in 1939. Diplomatic relations between El Salvador and Japan had started 4 years previously, on February 15, 1935. After WWII, in 1955 El Salvador was one of the first Western countries to open its market to Japanese products, and stories such as El Salvador becoming the second importer of Toyota vehicles globally (the first being Taiwan), are still told today. Likewise, El Salvador became the first Latin American Country with direct Japanese investment when a textile factory was established due to a strong cotton industry.
Culturally, the ties in the country have continued with El Salvador again being the first Latin American country to welcome in 1968 volunteers from Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers (JOCV) and receiving cooperation in socioeconomic development.
The Sakura-Maquilishuat Project was started by the Embassy of Japan in El Salvador to raise awareness on environmental issues, and the name showcases the similarities between both national trees. Sakuras bloom in the Springtime, their pink flowers capturing Japanese whimsy in that nation and drawing both locals and tourists as well around the Tidal Basin in Washington DC. Maquilishuat trees bloom in February, a contrast as it is dry season in El Salvador. The pink blooms of Maquilishuat are striking against valleys, hills, and mountains that largely look brown.
Commemorating 70 years of diplomatic relations and friendship between nations, in 2005 the Embassy of Japan in El Salvador plants a tree for every project developed in the country as part of their assistance programs to communities.
The ties to Japan continue in our exhibiting family. Anabell (mom) fell in love with Japan when she was a young girl and later studied Asian Studies at Sophia University inTokyo, Japan in 2006. Mauricio (dad) has family in Japan, after a young Japanese student traveling the world stopped in El Salvador and fell in love with a young girl across the street from where he was staying. 30 years later, their youngest son came back to El Salvador and established one of the first surf-side hostels at surf-acclaimed El Zonte beach. Andres (son) famously requested a pizza and origami party when selected for a special party during 3rd grade. Thankfully, the amazing Mrs. Boldrick quickly learned how to create origami and saved the day.
To all exhibit visitors: Thank you! // Arigato gozaimasu! // Gracias!
Top Gallery:
- The Maquilishuat Tree is always a part the backdrop in El Salvador, as seen in this children’s book – selection from our library.
- A post from the Embassy of Japan in El Salvador, showcasing Sakura and Maquilishuat and the planting of trees in each project.
- The @cazandomaquilishuat Instagram account has pictures of Maquilishuats around El Salvador.
- Our tribute to Stumpy via a picture taken by Mauricio in 2022 and first shown at The Little Gallery later that year.
Bottom Gallery:
Children create Maquilishuat crafts since a young age. Pictures is Daniella with her Maquilishuat craft tree and a recent one made for the exhibit by Anabell and Andres.
Audio Gallery:
From Anabell’s pen:
To Maquilishuat, from Sakura- A haiku
March 9 - 29, 2024
Brothers and a Cousin
Five-year-old Kiran and two-year-old Niam with cousin Mila on the piano
My name is Kiran, and I am 5 years old. I am in kindergarten. My teachers’ names are Ms. Xavier and Mr. Chris. My brother’s name is Niam. He is 2. We like to make cool and beautiful stuff. An example is a rainbow. I went to the National Gallery and saw some clay things there, so I decided to make things I like out of clay. Our art is so beautiful. I think somebody else will like it too!! My cousin, Mila played the piano for this exhibit, and I think her music is really peaceful and pretty.
Audio Gallery
Mila - High School Freshman
Piano Composition
January 27 - March 9, 2024
Mother and Daughter
Upper Gallery
Crystal World
Seven-year-old Hazel from Friendship Heights
Hazel has lived in the neighborhood for close to 3 years and is a big craft and art enthusiast. She likes gems and treasures. For this exhibit, Hazel wanted to show some of the gems that she usually displays in her room.
Nature is a big inspiration for Hazel and she builds up stories, drawings and craft objects around it.
Enjoy some of this magic!!
Lower Gallery
Test Sample Collection
Bettina from Friendship Heights
Hazel’s mom, Bettina is a ceramic artist. She is currently working on some large pieces which often require tests for glazes, colors or materials. Bettina likes the test samples a lot. Each one is unique and has its own character as you can see in this small collection. She is thrilled to share these pieces with you and hopes you enjoy them as much as she does.
(Porcelain, fibre, color stains and glaze)!
January 3 - 27, 2024
Brothers: Max and Noah
An Interview with the Artists
Watercolor Paintings
Six-year-old Noah from Friendship Heights
Noah (5) is an enthusiastic drawer, colorer, and painter. In this painting, Tree of Life, his brother Max (8) drew the tree and cactus, and Noah painted it in the brightest colors he could find.
3D Pen Creations
Eight-year-old Max from Friendship Heights
Max (8) loves his fun 3D pen. He has experimented with following templates as well as making his own creations. His favorite piece he has made so far is the Eiffel Tower.
December 9, 2023 – January 3, 2024
Art for the Holidays
Ieva Alm in Herndon
I grew up in Riga, the capital of Latvia. I finished art school and then moved to Kiel, a German town on the Baltic coast, where I went to university and started a family. I’ve lived in this area for some years now. I’m happy to be here and to get to know your ways of life, your kindness in your experiences. I enjoy the nature and wildlife here and i love to watch it and paint. I hope you enjoy my work! Merry Christmas to you!
Email Ieva if your are interested in cards at Ievadaniel@inbox.lv
December 9, 2023 – January 3, 2024
Holiday Cheer
Betsy Edelmann on Fessenden Street
Along with painting bisqueware (unglazed pottery), I enjoy making little creatures out of terracotta clay. Here are some ornaments I made. The baskets are from Mexico. The ornaments and other things I’ve made are for sale at Coffee Nature up the street. Happy Holidays!
November 18 – December 9, 2023
Hand-painted China by Christine Ray
from her daughter, Kathryn Ray’s collection.
Lower and Audio Gallery
"A Sunset Fire", a poem by Chrissy Horansky
A Woodley Park resident, Chrissy is a writer and communications consultant working with UN agencies. A lifelong advocate for education,
creativity, and the global advancement of women and girls, her work has been featured in the Huffington Post, MTV, and international media
outlets. She is the author of Girl Power in the Age of the Millennials: Essays on Women, Youth and Global Social Change. She holds a master’s from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and a B.A. from Mount Holyoke College. Connect at cehorans@gmail.com or @MissMillennial on Twitter.
Author’s comments: There is a time in the fall when the setting sun catches the leaves of the trees and sets them afire. For me, it is one of those flashes of brilliance that reminds me of our one life here on this earth, and how the most breathtaking moments can stretch into what feels like eternity. When I am feeling down or disconnected, I can find myself in the Rock Creek Park. My head and my heart clear of the weight of this world. And I remember that my life is more than the sum of my failures and accomplishments. We are that endlessly burning sunset fire.
November 1 - November 19, 2023
"Third Culture"
A curated exhibit on how "culture travels in your luggage" when you live outside your home country
Mauricio Chavarria Iglesias (Dad), Anabell Iglesias Chavarría (Mom) and 10-year-old Andrés (Son)
Upper Gallery
Lower Gallery
Audio Gallery
Ballads North and South, No. 1 – Claudia Lars
For many years I couldn’t choose
the land of my song.
Two lands, throbbing within,
were mystery and gift.
I carried both in my blood.
I gathered both in my embrace.
A dual love held close
opposing landscapes:
on the right, proud crests
of galloping palm trees,
and on the left, gray breezes
over sleepless ships.
Here, beaches of sun…
There, rivers of ice…
From the south, bees arrived
pursuing the spikenard’s pollen.
Vague nostalgias
and the urge to weep.
From the north, crashing surf,
blossoms of lightning.
Smoke from bonfire and pipe,
sweet isles and seaweed.
Such beauty could not exist
beneath my eyelids.
I found it in my veins
and on the wide horizon:
a stag astray in the snow,
an iridescent bird,
the heart’s compass
seeking north, seeking rest.
For years I couldn’t bring myself
to choose the land of my song.
Today I know it holds
the paths of barefoot men,
blue volcano folds,
thatched roofs on plains,
a tapestry of ivy and nests
along cliff walls,
deep water rocking
childlike clouds and lizards,
a great effort in chains
and a prolonged groan.
Immersed in what was mine,
I finally chose, but slowly,
the land of absolute love
to one day shut these eyes.
And yet my northern song,
urged on me by the dead,
reels like a comet,
rocks like a ship.
Claudia Lars (1899-1974) El Salvador
Translated by Philip Pardi
September 23 – October 12, 2023
Pharmacy Artifacts
Bonnie Levin, AU Park
Bonnie Levin manages all pharmacies for MedStar Health, a 10-hospital system in Maryland and DC (that includes Georgetown University Hospital). A pharmacist herself, Bonnie got her start working in her dad’s neighborhood drug store in Baltimore, Md and later got her graduate degree from the University of Maryland School of Pharmacy.<p><p>
Known as “Doc Levin,” Bonnie’s dad owned Leeds Pharmacy, established in the 1930s. This display includes many of the “tools of the pharmacy trade.” Doc Levin was well-respected in the community and dispensed health care information, medications, and good cheer.
The mortar & pestle is the most recognized symbol of pharmacy. It was used as early as 35,000 BCE to crush and grind ingredients into a fine paste or powder and then be made into tablets, capsules, and liquids.
The ceramic inhaler, probably from the 1920’s was used to deliver medications directly into the lungs for asthma and other breathing disorders. other breathing disorders.
- Prescription from 1895 for an iron supplement
- Apothecary glass bottle from late 19th century
- Pill box from Leeds Pharmacy
- 1972 US Postage Stamp commemorating Pharmacy – value 8¢
- Pill tiles depicting 17th century pharmacists
August 18 – September 23, 2023
Home-made cards for friends and family
Aldo Benini, AU Park
Aldo is a Swiss national who has lived in AU Park since 2000. Now retired, one of his hobbies is making unique birthday cards for friends and family. His creations combine an image, a poem, and a personal message in English or German, and sometimes French. His images are often his own photos. His biggest challenge is finding an image and a poem that meaningfully relate to each other. Empathy with the individual recipient is the key driver. Aldo shared three different cards with Little Gallery.
July 21 – August 18, 2023
Salt-N-Pepa Collection
Emma Keyes from Fessenden Street
Emma grew up on Fessenden Street but she now lives in Luxembourg all the way in Europe. When she was a kid, she was an avid collector of salt and pepper shakers, starting with her first set shaped like the Capitol and Washington Monument (featured in this exhibit). She doesn’t actively collect them anymore, but she was happy to dig out a few of her favorites to put on display.
July 21 – August 18, 2023
Succulents
Sean Casey from Fessenden Street
Sean grew up in Wisconsin where he had little opportunity to experience succulents. Here is a selection from his current collection. Sean says he’s attracted to the variety of shapes succulents take while all facing the same challenges of living in a hot, arid environment. “Look to the succulents – this could be our future.”
May 27 – June 19, 2023
A one-woman exhibit!
Painting, Photography and Music
Zaira Chowdhury
Zaira Chowdhury is a photographer based in Washington D.C. Drawing from her graphic design aptitude, Zaira aims to convey intricate and multifaceted perspectives through her dynamic composition and framing. Her pieces were featured in the international 2022 Advanced Placement (AP) Art and Design Exhibition (which displayed works of a select 50 out of 64,000 applicants) and have earned over ten Scholastic Art and Writing Awards including a Gold Metal Portfolio Award in 2023. For all inquiries concerning purchasing, please contact zairachowdhuryphotography@gmail.com
Painting, Photography and Music
Painting:
This selection of watercolor paintings by Zaira Chowdhury were completed during the pandemic to address some deeper effects it had on our community. The center painting, Delusion, projects the universally disorienting and destructive experience of anxiety and depression during the COVID-19 lockdown. The watercolor on the left and the watercolor on the right is an observation of a scene in Bangladesh where the impact of the pandemic negatively affected shop owners.
Photography:
Beginning with a simple fascination with her environment, Zaira Chowdhury’s photography now focuses on her distinctive and individual perspective of basic surroundings. From focusing on how shadows can create shapes out of the jagged edges of a marble staircases to noticing the dissective reflections made by a subject and two mirrors, she is able to distill a scene to find the most striking details to amplify in her composition.
Audio:
“On my Own” is a composition that details how one reconciles with themselves after the pandemic, and how one manages self growth and progress while in the absence of others. Trained in instruments spanning from electric guitar to classical violin, Zaira Chowdhury has been creating original music since the age of eight. For her senior project, she took on the challenge of writing, recording, and producing a song by herself with little knowledge of how to mix and master a melody. This is the product of those efforts.
May 8 – 27, 2023
Snow Globes
Jane Mandelbaum in Tenleytown
I have lived in Tenleytown since 1986. I still have the first snow globe I started with. It is a Washington snow globe I bought on a school trip, and which my parents tried to sell years later at a yard sale. I had to buy it back from them for 25 cents.
I like snow globes because they are like a little view into another world. I am exhibiting some globes with animals, because May is when we see all the new baby animals around our own little world.
April 17 – May 8, 2023
Collage
Barbara Kraft on Upton Street
I’m a retired lawyer, artist and resident of Ward 3. I previously served as president of the Washington Studio School Board of Directors and have studied art at WSS and other institutions. I work in collage, acrylic, oil and sculpture and use found objects and materials including fabric, cardboard, plastic and metal. The collages on display at Little Gallery were created each day over the past 11 months for a young friend hospitalized at Children’s National Hospital. Acknowledging that I was powerless to affect her cure, I tried to express my love for her and her family by texting daily an image of the collage I’d created that day.
March 25 – April 17, 2023
Orchids in Bloom
Stacey Marien on Fessenden Street
Stacey is a retired librarian and living her best life in the Art District of Fessenden St NW. She’s been knitting and crocheting since she was a kid. She made knitted trees to hang from a garland for Christmas and loved them so much, she decided to try her hand at crocheting flowers. She made the daffodils first followed by the daisies and blooming flower. Her partner Sean is the orchid master in the house so she tackled crocheting some orchids and was very pleased with the outcome. No water or light needed!
March 4 – 25, 2023
Here comes spring!
Betsy Edelmann on Fessenden Street
I returned to pottery during the pandemic after a 25-year break! Our cat wakes me up early and that’s when I get to work. I am inspired by nature and the thought of spring and Easter inspired my newest creations.
January 12 – February 8, 2023
Sculpture
Elizabeth Ashe – sculptor and poet
Elizabeth Ashe is a sculptor and poet, who earned her MFA from the Mount Royal School of Art at the Maryland Institute College of Art, and an MFA in creative writing from Chatham University. Her public art projects have recently been on view at Canal Park for the National Cherry Blossom Festival and several Art All Night DC locations. Ashe’s poetry has appeared in Bourgeon, Tribes, Yellow Medicine Review, Vagabondage, and Badlands Literary Journal, among many others, and art reviews in Artscope Magazine, the Washington Diplomat, and upcoming in Art Lantern. Her work is included in Studio Visit Magazine, issue 46.
Ashe has received several grants from the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities for curatorial projects and her studio practice. She and two artists were interviewed on the Kojo Nnamdi Show in August of 2019 for “Play, Protection, or Peril,” an exhibit that addressed gun violence in our culture. Ashe is a board member of the Washington Sculptors Group, and serves on the Tenleytown Public Art Sub-Committee. Ashe lives in Washington, D.C., where she has an active studio practice. She is the Exhibit and Event Technician at the Katzen Center, American University.
“Playgrounds” series
I began playing with copper wire when I was young. I love its flexibility, visual warmth, and patina. In the “Playgrounds” series, I began using copper wire in a new way – basing organic shapes off the proportions of wrapping wire around my hands – and using the wire as a maquette view for working larger. I enjoy playing with them, setting them in new places and orientations, and how the circles, shadows and connection lines talk to one another. The conversation within each piece, reminds me of how we speak and tell stories, especially how children ask questions. While the series has taken the dimensions leap of a few inches to several feet, I still love the intimacy and wonder of these small sculptures.
December 17, 2022 – January 12, 2023
Mom, Dad, Son!
They're all here! What a talented family!
Photography
Dad – Mauricio Chavarría Iglesias – Westbrook
Mauricio started taking out his cell phone to capture scenes that caught his attention and fancy. Beyond the usual family and pet pictures, his albums were slowly populated with architectural details, snaps from nature, and simple everyday life scenes. Mauricio was encouraged to show his photographs by his wife, Anabell, who discovered his work as it started to appear on his computer and phone backgrounds. Initially thinking it was cool stock photography, Anabell applauded Mauricio’s eye for great angles once she learned it was his work. Mauricio’s passion is rooted in water projects, and shown today at the Little Gallery are two photographs with a striking contrast- the Pacific ocean on a peaceful beach day in the Central American tropics, alongside the Maryland and Virginia sides coming together at Great Falls. It is a tribute to water and to the global North and the South, places Mauricio calls home. The third picture is from a lone cherry blossom at DC’s tidal basin and taken in Spring 2022. The cherry tree, quite thin and a with a single branch, offers its blooms amongst lush trees around it. It is a reflection on how everyone has something to give in all seasons of life and they can bloom just as they are and choose to offer something to the world. Finally, the fourth pictures presents Cheasapeake Bay.
Painting and Photography
Son – 10-year-old Andrés – Westbrook
From fingerpainting as a toddler to watercolors, sketches, and photography, 10-year-old Andrés is a budding artist. Pieces today are a combination of works from his production at 5-7 years old to recent works influenced by life in DC: a night photograph at the Korean War Veterans Memorial and a sketch that he produced this Spring when the conflict in Ukraine began. Originally a large poster, it was reproduced as a postcard that was sold during a bake sale at Westbrook Elementary to raise funds for World Central Kitchen’s work supporting Ukraine refugees. This is Andrés’ second exhibit, with his first one being a collection of drawings on post-its he showcased at 3 years old in his dining room after visiting a museum with his parents, Mauricio, and Anabell.
Audio
“Andrés” by Mom – Anabell Iglesias Chavarría in Westbrook
Anabell started writing poetry in high school at the Escuela Americana de El Salvador. She first shared her work at its Arts Festival when she was a junior in 1993 and then it went back to living only in her journals- until Salvadoran poet Maura Echeverría accepted reading them and took her on as a mentee in 2006. The poem here, “Andrés”, was one of two pieces that Anabell showed Maura on their first encounter and which thankfully Maura liked enough to agree to work with her. She is grateful to Maura as a mentor and to Prof. Philip Pardi at Bard College for providing helpful pointers that allowed for the poem to be presented today in both English and its original Spanish. ¨Andrés¨ was written in 2002, 10 years before the birth of her son. It is presented at The Little Gallery in 2022, the year Andrés turns 10 years old. Anabell says she always knew she would have a son that would be named Andrés, and discovering his creative, curious, and resilient spirit has been her favorite adventure to date. ¨Andrés¨ is a piece on becoming a mother and of motherhood- even if that moment is still a dot in the distance.
November 27 – December 17, 2022
Pencil Drawings
Robert Burchard – Faraday Place
Robert Burchard lives on Faraday Place with his wife. He has 2 grown daughters that have flown the coop (at least for now!). The drawings in this exhibit were made when Robert took art classes as an undergrad at the University of Wisconsin. The person in the drawings is Glenn Gould, Robert’s favorite classical pianist. The other is a copy of Van Gogh’s Bedroom At Arles.
Though he has a life-long love of art (and art museums), this hobby has taken a back seat to work and family. With retirement on the horizon, Robert hopes to start drawing again, either in a class or on his own. Robert’s only medium is pencil drawings, and he prefers to draw people.
Art runs in the family on both sides. His mom is a terrific artist, and on his Dad’s side was a rather well known commercial artist named Gerd Grimm. Gerd’s work can be found on the Grimm Foundation website.
November 27 – December 17, 2022
Collage
Carolyn Morrow Long, Tenleytown
Carolyn Morrow Long has always been a practicing artist. After graduate school she moved to New York City and then to rural Middlebury, Vermont, where she made collages in her tiny apartment and made and taught pottery at the Frog Hollow Craft Center. After moving to DC in 1980, she worked for eighteen years as a conservator of paper artifacts and photographs at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History. It was only after retiring in 2001 that she had time to pursue her own interests. Inspired by many visits to New Orleans, she has written three books about the history of the city, and has also returned to making collages. Many of the collages are inspired by New Orleans and its iconic characters. Since 2013 Carolyn has each year created a holiday card that always includes an image of her beloved cat Jacques. Her display at the Little Gallery features these holiday cards, which are for sale. If you are interested, connect with Carolyn by clicking the button below.
November 5 – 27, 2022
Childhood Memories in Embroidery
Ana Patiño – Faraday Pl.
My name is Ana Patiño and I’m from Mexico. I’m in a cultural exchange program as an Au Pair. I’ve been here for 2 years. I have an excellent relationship with my Host Family; they all are so warm and they have a special place in my heart. I chose embroidery because I love this kind of art expression. The process brings me peace and I feel passionate about it. These are some of my childhood memories of the cartoons that I used to watch with my family when I was a little girl. We had a lot of fun and good moments watching them
November 5 – 27, 2022
Original Art Inspired by Mary Oliver’s Poetry
Martina Sestakova, Kensington MD
Martina Sestakova is a Kensington artist who is fascinated by words and their powerful imagery. For this exhibit, Martina enjoyed Mary Oliver’s poem – “Wild Geese” – as inspiration for her visual explorations in acrylic inks on Yupo. Each artwork is a meditation on the perceived meaning of the title (a word taken out of the poem).
Press the audio button below to listen to Martina reading the poem for its overall message and then imagine how you would capture each selected word.
To learn more about Martina, click below to visit her website.
Audio
Wild Geese by Mary Oliver read by Martina Seskatova
October 15 – November 5, 2022
Water/Flower Arrangements: Sean Casey on Fessenden Street
Sean first saw this type of water/flower arrangements on a trip to Chanticleer Garden in Pennsylvania. He started doing his own during the pandemic as a treat for the people coming by the house for the weekly CSA pickup. He’d do a new arrangement each week, and when he wasn’t inspired, neighbors Mandy, Coco and Max would fill in with their own designs. The Halloween display with boiling carbon dioxide is a little more lighthearted than what you’d see at Chanticleer.
September 24 – October 15, 2022
Oil on Canvas: Marge Koblinsky on Fessenden Street
In the 1970s I traveled to Afghanistan to see the 6th Century AD Bamiyan Buddhas. The Buddha statue depicted here was about 180 ft high—about 18 stories high. A staircase up the side of the Buddha allowed you to climb to the top of the statue. And then you could be immersed in some of the earliest drying oil murals in the world. Here I depict two of the paintings on the ceiling above the statue. This magnificent statue and murals lay on the Silk Road. One can hardly imagine how they were constructed way back when—now sadly, the original statues and murals no longer exist.
September 3 – 24, 2022
Bird Houses by Nancy Malan on Butterworth
I use the high-end table saw my father bought in 1952 to cut scrap wood into components of a birdhouse. My designs are based on samples found on Google, E-Bay, Craigslist, with variations to make each house unique. I have yet to buy any lumber. The scraps I use are throwaways from construction sites, curbs, alleys, and neighbors emptying basements and garages. Most are oak, barn wood, cedar, ash, or a rare bit of chestnut. Such gifts of nature deserve a fate better than landfill.
I know little about birds; I just love making houses for them. Figuring out how each birdhouse will look–dimensions, shape, kind of wood, finish–and how to put it together with glue, screws, nails, latches, and hinges, is a rewarding pastime on days when it is too hot or too cold for outdoor adventures. I find the combined use of brain and hands to be challenging and satisfying.
I have no website, no Facebook account, and no Tweets–just a cellphone number, 202-306-2300. Text me if your homeless birds need accommodations. Prices range from forty to sixty-five dollars.
August 12 - September 3, 2022
Father and Daughter
Daniel and 7-year old Elise Abramoff in Friendship Heights
Elise and Daniel Abramoff are a father/daughter artist duo in Friendship Heights and have been making art together for over 5 years. Daniel has been painting for 15 years and is a self-taught abstract artist. When his daughter, Elise, was only 2-years-old she started becoming interested in painting and started creating an excellent selection of paintings and mix media art.
What motivates them to keep making art is the joy they receive when painting and using colors to express their imagination and overall feelings.
Elise
Daniel
July 24 - August 12, 2022
Blossoms, Buildings and Surroundings
Maria Morga on Ellicott Street
Maria can be seen walking her dogs Ella & Felix while checking out the wonderful architecture & gardens in our neighborhood. As a professional artist with studios here and in Aldi VA., Maria loves to create wonderful scenes in watercolor and acrylic. She welcomes painting commissions of homes, creating interior décor or teaching art. Many of her paintings become greeting cards that are available for sale. Contact Maria by clicking here:
July 2 – July 24, 2022
Mugs, Mushrooms and More: Betsy Edelmann on Fessenden
Mugs, Mushrooms and More: Betsy Edelmann on Fessenden Street
I returned to pottery during the pandemic after a 25-year break! Our cat wakes me up early and that’s when I get to work. I am inspired by nature and thought a “Walk in the Woods” sounded like a nice theme for steamy July in Washington, DC.
June 12 – July 2, 2022
Printed Patterns of Nature: Meg Greene from Tenleytown
Meg is a global health and gender equality researcher and casual potato and linoleum block printer. She takes delight in visual patterns that can be transformed by alternating colors, pigment density, image size, and so on. As Thelma the chicken illustrated so beautifully in her exhibit, with every iteration, something fresh can be created.
Meg loves writing letters, so most of her prints are done on card stock, so they can be shared and sent to others.
She is happy to be commissioned to carve or print new prints reflecting interest in specific images or colors. She can be contacted by clicking below.
May 21 – June 12, 2022
Thelma from Tenleytown
Fowl Art: Thelma from Tenleytown
Thelma is a 3-year old golden comet chicken who lives in Tenleytown. In addition to her creative work, she enjoys laying eggs, visits from neighborhood children, and chasing crows.
Thelma’s Art
Drawings of Thelma
Thelma Inspired Limericks and Comments
April 9 – 30, 2022
Grandson and Grandmother
Graham Sczudlo and Deborah Sams on Burlington Pl.
Graham
Graham, who turned two years old on April 18, 2022, paints mostly in watercolor. He recently experimented with gouache at his satellite studio space, which his grandparents, Jaja (Ray) and Jinki (Deborah), set up for him at their house. Graham’s abstract paintings have fresh color, shapes, and patterns.
Deborah
Deborah paints mostly from life. Her plein air work is inspired by the mountains of North Carolina, her home state, and pockets of city living in Washington and American University Park, where she and her husband Ray Sczudlo have lived since 2000.
Deborah works in oil with a painterly impressionistic style. She mixes most of her colors with a limited palette, which includes a cool and a warm red, yellow, and blue.
For more information, visit DeborahSams.com, or send her an email at deborahsamsart@gmail.com.
March 20 - April 9, '22
Stamp Art: David Wong on Harrison Street
David Wong is Chief Designer at ChinaWongArt.com which specializes in creating art pieces with stamps to highlight nature, history, and everyday life, including world events. David started stamp collecting at the age of nine. His craft uses discarded items and repurposes them to illustrate joy that can come out of pain and sorrow.
David’s next art exhibit will be at the Gaithersburg International Christian Fellowship Spring Festival (Gaithersburg, MD) on April 23.
February 26 - March 20, 2022
power. beauty. social justice.
Shakti is a social venture with global reach that was founded by Mohini Malhotra on Ellicott Street. Shakti:
- Curates art from women artists globally, with visual narratives of social justice and a just world
- Helps collectors get original and affordable art with a social narrative and purpose
- Invests 100% profit in causes that help women and girls in DC and emerging markets better their lives (women’s health access across Africa; college scholarships for DC students; girls’ education in Nepal; legal services for immigrant women in DC as examples).
Shakti at The Little Gallery features works by
SONAL VARSHNEYA. Agra, India.
Etching and Aquatint on paper
Sonal (b. 1985), MFA in print-making, Lalit Kala Sansthan, Agra, India 2007; BFA fine arts (with distinction), Dayal Bagh Educational University. She has participated in several solo and some 30 group exhibitions across India, China, Taiwan, Poland and Serbia since 2005, She has received numerous awards and recognition of her work – International Award at International Biennial Print Exhibition, Taiwan (2012); All India Women Contemporary Art Exhibition (2012), All India Fine arts & crafts society (2011), and more recently national awards in India. She’s been referred to as the Engraver of a new Gender Mythology. She depicts goddesses as modern women and vice versa, weaving mythology and feminism with a quirky sense of humor.
February 4 – 24, 2022
Mother and Daughter
Bettina and Hazel Ammann on 45th street
Bettina
I am a ceramic designer who moved to DC in late-2021. When I move to a new place, ceramics are always what I come back to. Ever different conditions, require that I change my way of working over and over again and do a lot of experimentation. Ceramics have also always helped me connect with new people.
With my organic objects, I focus on the beauty of small things like seeds, dried plants or weeds. These things are often found in places that we don’t normally visit, or consider as beautiful. Most of the objects in the Little Gallery were found along busy streets or in trash dumps. I have turned them into porcelain treasures.
If you are interested in my work email me at info@rohbrand.ch, follow me on Instagram or click the link below.
Hazel
Hazel is 5 years old and loves crafts, in general. But, more than anything, she likes joining in when Bettina is working with clay. She started making ceramics from an early age. She likes to carefully observe her environment and then create her own world.
Her objects can be figures, water plants, precious stones and animals.
January 9 – February 4, 2022
Sisters
Oil on canvas: Their Eyes Are Watching Us
Tatiana Belenkaya on Garrison St
Our father was an artist and taught us to paint. In creating these pictures for the Little Gallery, I tried to capture beauty and innocence of animals in the habitat we share with them. Each picture is of my fleeting encounter with these animals as I observed them and they observed me in December 2021.
- my cat, Matilda by our house;
- a deer, two ducks, and a blue heron on the Capital Crescent trail; and
- a rooster at the National Gallery of Art.
I hope your fleeting encounter with these pictures brings you joy and encourages you to take actions to preserve our environment!
Ceramics: Svetlana Belenkaya, Rockville
This work is inspired by nature and by the countries where I have lived.
December 16, '21 - January 9, '22
Sacred Shards & Miscellany
Jane Varner Malhotra on Verplanck Street
I create relics from local salvaged pieces of something greater—for example, broken terra cotta tiles from the roof of historic Saint Elizabeths Government Hospital for the Insane, or a neighbor’s old slate. The object is made sacred through loving artful attention, anointed with water and blessed with oil, bringing good energy to the one who treasures it.
I enjoy sketching, writing, teaching and learning. I have an interest in theology and spiritual practice. I care deeply about mental health and art as healing.
November 20 - December 16, 2021
Advent Calendar with Knitted Ornaments
Stacey Marien on Fessenden Street
For many years, my kids and I would make an advent calendar out of paper, paint and colored pencils. When my daughter went off to college, I decided to make her a calendar with knitted ornaments. Since I knit and don’t sew, I enlisted the help of her stepmother, Beth to sew the calendar part. The one on display is what we made for my son when he went off to college. He is an avid basketball fan, so it was natural to have that as a theme. Each day is represented by the jersey of a professional player.
#1 – McGrady Tracy – Toronto Raptors
#2 – John Wall – Washington Wizards
#3 – Bradley Beal – Washington Wizards
#4 – Marcin Gortat – Washington Wizards
#5 – Kevin Garnett – Boston Celtics
#6 – Julius Erving – Philadelphia 76ers
#7 – Kevin Johnson – Phoenix Suns
#8 – Kobe Bryant – Los Angeles Lakers
#9 – Tony Parker – San Antonio Spurs
#10 – Walt Frazier – New York Knicks
#11 – John Wall – University of Kentucky
#12 – John Stockton – Utah Jazz
#13 – Wilt Chamberlain – Los Angeles Lakers
#14 – Oscar Robertson – Cincinnati Royals
#15 – Vince Carter – Toronto Raptors
#16 – Bob Lanier – Detroit Pistons
#17 – John Havlicek – Boston Celtics
#18 – Phil Jackson – New York Knicks
#19 – Willis Reed – New York Knicks
#20 – Gary Payton – Seattle SuperSonics
#21 – Tim Duncan – San Antonio Spurs
#22 – Clyde Drexler – Portland Trail Blazers
#23 – Michael Jordan – University of North Carolina
#24 – Rick Barry – Golden State Warriors
November 2 -20, 2021
Oil on Canvas: Marge Koblinsky on Fessenden Street
I have wandered far afield—from the labs of hormone biochemistry in the 60’s-70’s, to health systems research to ensure the lives of mothers and newborns in SE Asia in the 80’s-2000’s, to being entranced with color on canvas in retirement. Homebound during Covid has only enhanced this focus on color—and the excitement of following the lead of artists such as Carla Rosenberg and Jane Wilson.
October 19 - November 2, 2021
Spooky Art: Arachna Potter somewhere in Tenleytown
Arachna Potter lives in an undisclosed location in Tenleytown. Her work is inspired by spooky things. She loves bats, cats and ghosts. Arachna hopes you enjoy her scary artwork. Thanks for visiting!!
September 25 - October16, 2021
Stamp Art: David Wong on Harrison Street
David Wong started stamp collecting at the age of nine. To fund a middle school summer camp, he created a large collage of a Tiger from postage stamps and sold it to a mahjong-playing friend of his mother. David gets his inspiration from Isaiah 61:3 “Beauty for Ashes”. His craft uses discarded items and repurposes them to illustrate joy that can come out of pain and sorrow. David honors his Chinese heritage and introduces his creative work as ChinaWongArt.
August 28 - September 25, 2021
Acrylic on Clayboard: Emily Attwell on Brandywine
I am a neighborhood piano teacher on Brandywine Street who paints and draws as time allows. When the pandemic dramatically affected my teaching schedule, I established a daily morning art practice for mental survival! My work often focuses on observed organic patterns and the natural world. Growing up amid the lush vegetation of the Texas Gulf Coast, I was raised to be passionate about plant life. But I also love to explore abstraction and find it connects quite naturally to my musical brain. You can see some of my art on Instagram. Much of it is for sale.
Ranunculas 2020
August 7 - 25, 2021
Crepe Paper Flowers: Cynthia on Faraday Street
I have been making paper flowers as gifts for friends and to keep me occupied and out of trouble during the pandemic. Immersion in the detail work is therapeutic! Some flowers are meant to be realistic (cosmos, poppies and tulips) and others (“Van Gogh” sunflowers) are a bit odd. If you would like to commission a flower or two contact me below. Possibilities are not limited to the ones on display in The Little Gallery.
July 17 - August 4, 2021
Ceramics: Betsy Edelmann on Fessenden Street
I have loved making pottery since my childhood in Northern California. Growing up with many pets and nature-loving parents, my creative inspiration has always been the natural world of animals, birds, and plants. During the pandemic, I found that pottery gave me hours of pleasure and inspiration. My creations are available for sale. Click below.