You are here: American University College of Arts & Sciences American University Museum 2019 Christine Neill: Observations from the Valley Floor

Christine Neill: Observations from the Valley Floor

Curated by Mollie Berger Salah
November 9-December 15, 2019
Presented by the Alper Initiative for Washington Art

Christine Neill, Disappearing Cavendish, 2017.

Christine Neill, Disappearing Cavendish, 2017. Watercolor and archival ink print on paper and framing Plexiglas, 31 x 44 in. Courtesy of Goya Contemporary. Photography by John Dean.

Christine Neill, Holey Leaves, Violet, 2019.

Christine Neill, Holey Leaves, Violet, 2019. Watercolor on laser cut Arches paper, 24 x 36 in. Courtesy of Goya Contemporary. Photography by John Dean.

Christine Neill, Strangler Fig, 2019.

Christine Neill, Strangler Fig, 2019. Watercolor on laser cut Arches paper, 39 x 28.5 in. Courtesy of Goya Contemporary. Photography by John Dean.

Press

Washington Post: In the galleries: At American University Museum, a world of atmosphere

Related events

Late Fall Opening Reception
November 9, 6-9PM
free and open to all, no RSVP required

Free Parking: Christine Neill
December 5, 5:30-7PM
Free and open to all, please RSVP

Christine Neill is a nationally celebrated American artist whose work blends motifs of biological examination with visual processes and techniques. She has exhibited widely while influencing thousands of students over her long tenure as professor at the Maryland Institute College of Art. The effects of environmental changes on human life, and the reaction of the earth’s habitats to these threats underlie her investigations and images.

About the Curator

Mollie Salah has worked in the Prints and Drawings department at the National Gallery since 2014. She has published essays on Kenneth Noland, Thomas Downing, and Mary Pinchot Meyer. Mollie’s research interests include artists who have lived and worked in Washington, DC, early twentieth century American landscape painting, and the cultural impact of the Cold War.