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goingoutguide.com | Weekend Pass Pamela Murray Winters, 6 p.m. Jammin’ Java: Concert For Marjorie Featuring Offtrax, 2 p.m.; Marie Miller, the DuPont Brothers, 7:30 p.m. Kennedy Center/Concert Hall: NSO Summer Music Institute Orchestra Concert, 6 p.m., free. Rams Head On Stage: Cracker, Lydia Loveless, 1 p.m; Mindi Abair, 8 p.m. The Fillmore: Brand New, 7:30 p.m. The Hamilton: Hamilton Leithauser, 7:30 p.m. The Howard Theatre: The Original Wailers, 8 p.m. U Street Music Hall: Nightmares on Wax, 9 p.m. Warner Theatre: “Debbie Allen’s Brothers of the Knight,” 1 p.m. Wolf Trap/Filene Center: Jennifer Nettles, 8 p.m.
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LAST CHANCE Addison/Ripley: “Edith Kuhnle: Transpositions,” the artist displays her paintings and works on paper, Thu.-Sat. 1670 Wisconsin Ave. NW; 202338-5180, addisonripleyfineart.com. American Painting: “Images of Washington,” works that capture parts of Washington by Lani Browning, Marietje Chamberlain, Hui Lai Chong, Bar-
bara Nuss and other member artists,
works on paper by Richard Cleaver, Emi-
Women, Beadwork and the Art of Inde-
American in London: Whistler and the
through Sept. 27. 5118 MacArthur Blvd.
lie Brzezinski, Fred Folsom and other
pendence,” this exhibition features a
Thames,” this is the first major exhibi-
NW; 202-244-3244, classicamerican
artists who received grants from the
new form of bead art, the ndwango
tion to examine paintings from James
painting.com.
Bader Fund, through Aug. 17. 4400 Mas-
(which translates as “cloth”), devel-
McNeill Whistler’s early period in Lon-
sachusetts Ave. NW; 202-885-1300,
oped by a community of women living
don, through Aug. 17. “Chigusa and the
american.edu/cas/katzen.
and working together in rural KwaZulu-
Art of Tea,” exploring the tea culture of
Natal, South Africa, through Sept. 21.
Japan, Korea and China, this exhibition
1901 Fort Place SE; 202-633-4820,
features Chinese calligraphy, Chinese
anacostia.si.edu.
and Korean tea bowls, Japanese stone-
American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center: “An Opening of the Field: Jess, Robert Duncan and Their Circle,” the exhibition examines artist Jess Collins (known as Jess) and his relationship with his partner/collaborator, poet Robert Duncan, through Aug. 17. “Brink and Boundary,” the exhibition features site-specific installations by four artists in such nontraditional exhibition spaces as the museum’s elevator, an emergency stairwell and the exterior of the building, through Aug. 17. “Continental Drift,” an exhibition exploring the work of artist Judy Byron, through Aug. 17. “Mynd Alive: BK Adams. I Am Art,” the sculpture garden is filled with 3-D works by a Washington artist whose art includes the whimsical and the provocative, through Aug. 17. “Passion Collectors: The Washington Print Club at 50,” nearly 150 prints from Washington collections include works by Pablo Picasso, Anthony van Dyck, Chuck Close and others, through Aug. 17. “Syzygy,” artist William Newman’s series of 19 oil paintings and digital images, and two metal sculptures, through Aug. 17. “The Franz and Virginia Bader Fund: Second Act,” an exhibit of paintings, sculptures and
OLIVERLARIC/SEVENTEEN
Brain Teaser
ARTIST OLIVER LARIC aims to challenge our preconceptions of image
hierarchy by copying and remixing imagery. His mindbending work is now on display at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
Anacostia Community Museum: “Black Baseball in the District of Columbia,” an examination of the national pastime in the African American community, indefinitely. “Home Sewn: Quilts From the Lower Mississippi Valley,” an exhibition examining the generational, social and economic fabric of an African American quilting community in rural Mississippi, through Sept. 21. “Ubuhle
Art Museum of the Americas: “Small Guide to Homeownership,” photographs from Alejandro Cartagena’s Mexicana Suburbia series are on display, through Sept. 7. 201 18th St. NW; 202370-0147, museum.oas.org. Arthur M. Sackler Gallery: “An
ware containers and more, through July 27. “Eyes of the World: Ara Guler’s Anatolia,” the photographer’s iconic snapshots of medieval Seljuk and Armenian buildings from 1965, through July 21. 1050 Independence Ave. SW; Continued on page E17