Conversations

An Art Exhibition by Tim Davis

Tim Davis discusses his “Ashe” acrylic on plexiglass with a map of Virginia

Art exhibitions often ask questions of the visitors. If the artist is present, social conversations develop. However, silent conversations often take place while viewing a work of art. What is the artist’s message? How does the work inspire or inform?

Tim Davis’s exhibition, Conversations, at the Fred Schnider Gallery of Art in Arlington, Virginia opened with a gracious reception on January 10. Upon entering the gallery, the tone was set by presence. It was calm, intentional, and quietly confident.

Artist Tim Davis is the consummate host. Gracious, inviting, gentle, and generous, he was never too occupied to make introductions, whether to an ambassador and his wife or to a fellow artist. I felt among friends. There were no strangers.

Tim Davis introduced his friends – Left: David Young, the prominent retired U.S. Ambassador to Malawi, known for his extensive service and cultural integration Right: Krasi with Artvocate.us founder, Syahidah Osman and her son

Davis is a gentleman, an artist, a scholar, and a teacher. Those qualities quickly revealed themselves. Soft-spoken and attentive he was the ideal considerate host. He was generous with his time and friends, and sincerely curious about those in the room.

He engaged warmly with guests one-on-one, including my artist goddaughter, whom he met with kindness and interest. An aspiring 15-year-old artist and visual arts student at Duke Ellington School of the Arts, she felt comfortable to share her experience and ask substantive questions with Tim.  Art transcends age and their conversation was animated and inspiring. This spoke volumes about the man behind the work. His generosity is evident in the art itself.

Davis’s paintings invite lingering. They reward patience. The craftsmanship is intricate, layered, and deliberate. Sometimes gold ‘dust’ or subtle swirling elements add both depth and dimension. There is a conversational quality to the work – of endurance, hope, and transcendence. The paintings feel like thoughts recalled rather than scenes explained.

“The Golden Three” acrylic on canvas and plexiglass – inspired by a black and white photo

One painting, “The Golden Three,” tells a story of an old black and white photograph brought to life in color.  The image of the three boys standing at a wall captured this quality beautifully. The work carries a sense of intimacy and timelessness. One of the boys, the one with the red cap, is Davis’s son. The gold dusting and soft movement within the piece lend memory and delight. It is as though the moment exists somewhere between recollection and imagination. It does not insist on meaning. It allows it.

“Do You See US?” Acrylic on Plexiglass (reverse painting)

Another work, “Do You See Us?”, featuring figures set against the Chicago skyline and the lake, resonated deeply with several viewers. The piece acknowledges a universal human truth: the desire to be seen and heard. The struggle is real.  Davis addresses it with empathy.

“Dedicated to ‘Q’ ” – mixed media on plexiglass

Throughout the evening, the atmosphere mirrored the work: thoughtful, respectful, and engaged. The gallery provided a gracious setting for conversation, and the founders’ support of Davis’s work was evident in the care taken with both installation and hospitality. It was an experience designed to connect.

Gallery curator, David Carlson, added depth and context to the exhibition by introducing the gallery’s founder’s vision and mission: “The mission of the Fred Schnider Gallery of Art is to bring together artists of all mediums and styles to showcase their work to Arlington, Virginia and its surrounding communities. We celebrate the unique connection that art can create among friends and strangers alike.”

If the exhibition draws you in, the conversation continues. The exhibition is on display until February 28.

Tim Davis will present an ‘Artist Talk’ on February 7 at the Fred Schnider Gallery of Art. It promises to be an extension of what the exhibition offers: reflection, presence, and the opportunity to experience life through the artist’s eyes.

Left: “Lady in Yellow” mixed media acrylic on plexi and wood Center: (top) “Back to Africa” mixed media, acrylic on plexi on wood (bottom) “On the Front Line #2” acrylic on plexi. Left: “Waiting No. #2” Mixed media, acrylic on canvas and and plexi.

Photo Credits: Krasi Henkel

Art: Tim Davis at Fred Schnider Gallery of Art, Arlington, VA.

Just Spend a Little Time Here

Artist Tim Davis Shares His Art

Unlocking curiosity

The gallery light reflected from a bright white line of the architectural painting on the right side of the gallery wall. I caught that light in the corner of my eye while walking past several closed galleries in the Torpedo Factory in Alexandria, Virginia. As if leading me into the studio, the light guided me to the real work of art where I was fortunate to meet the artist – Tim Davis.

Tim’s studio illuminated art. From fresh beginnings to fully completed pieces available for sale. The piece that brought me in was an architectural image with lines and perspective that guided the viewer down hallways and into rooms. Something about the piece spoke to me and encouraged my curiosity.

Versatility in medium combined with the curiosity of ‘why not,’ presents thoughtful innovation

Tim Davis welcomed me to his gallery and studio. More than even the paintings themselves, he exhibited a kindness, gentleness, and genuine hospitality that captured my spirit. We started a conversation that meandered throughout the studio. He showed me his creative works as well as some works in progress. I observed his brushes, paints, supplies, and a preparatory canvas. I felt as though I was viewing something sacred – the tools of creativity and a man’s spirit.

The more we spoke, the more I wanted to know. I took some photos which, in reflection, capture the ease with which the work and the man flowed. He shared how he repurposed drawers into works of art. He explained that his work is diverse and that he enjoys capturing and disclosing ideas.

The prevailing theme of his work is space and statement. Or is that statement with space? His interiors paintings guide and lead. His paintings of people beckon friendship and collectiveness. While the humans are ‘faceless,’ their energy is palpable. I easily imagined hearing the trumpets, clarinet, and saxophone of the jazz players. They were in mid-measure and immersed in their music.

“In the pocket.” Musicians playing perfectly in time with a strong, locked-in groove.

Asked why he painted his subjects without faces, Tim explained that he wants to bring the soul and spirit of the subject to the viewer to discover the context of narrative. He allows the viewer to project and infer. He told me that, “Blue is hopeful, gold is royal, clear space brings openness and thoughtfulness.”

The artist and the man are one and the same. Tim’s persona is expression through art. He taught art for 38 years. The last school where he taught was Thomas Jefferson School in Alexandria, Virginia. He spent years teaching, inspiring, and giving back to future generations. He shared that his high school art teacher saw something in him and took him “in hand to develop.” Tim is the youngest in his family and the only one to go to college in his family.  His instructor saw promise. Tim told me that, “He pushed me to say what I needed to say,”

Golden Faces

Born in Chicago, Tim observed and endured division, separation, and segregation. He explained that Chicago was designed by Mayor Daley into communities – Italian, Polish, Black, Hispanic, and so forth. While very young, Tim instinctively knew, “This is wrong.” This shaped his beliefs and attitude about separation. His art ‘gives voice to the voiceless.’ His figures do not need faces to breathe – they allow their viewers to see with their hearts and experience unity of spirit.  His ambition for his art is to bring awareness to the Black community – to become a beacon of art in a large scope – to demonstrate that connectivity is a key to understanding.  He brings collectors together because art is important in place and space.

Tim Davis’ credentials are deep both academically and professionally. To capture the full breadth of his credentials, a visit to his website will be worth your time.  His exhibitions and accomplishments are extensive.  His art resides in collectors’ offices and homes and has been exhibited in prestigious galleries.

Tim Davis standing before his paintings of Oxen Hill Park for his commission for Cedar Hill Regional Medical Center, 2025 – Photo by: Roy Lewis

Davis began his art journey as a sculptor with intentions of working with bronze. He loved working with form and found it more important than realism. Sculpture’s demand for large spaces caused him to evolve to alternative media.

As an instructor, Tim regularly worked in varieties of media from clay to collage, from pastels to oils, from sketching to charcoals, and from 3-D to canvas. He loved the versatility of teaching alternate media to his students. Through this diversity, he has captured and inspired students in art to pursue their media passions.

With his main studio in the Torpedo Factory, he and his work are on constant exhibit to visitors. Asked how he feels about the steady stream of eyes and potential questions, Tim loves the engagement. He explained that some people walk by, others look in the window, and others step inside. He loves visitors to spend some time – whether they just look or engage with him. He told me, “As artists, we hope they just spend a little time here.” As a teacher, he relishes the opportunity to ‘teach and answer questions.”

“The process” described by Tim Davis

Tim generously shared his artistic process with me. He told me that he can look at a blank canvas for days and weeks. He likes to work from photographs that he often captures while sitting in a park or walking along the Potomac River. He looks at colors and shapes. He sketches, then at a moment – he steps into his craft – and becomes enveloped into the flow of his work. He views his research to be key for his process. Trees, water, even people play important roles in his work.

Architectural geometry flows to ideas and expression

The Torpedo Factory is in Old Town Alexandria. The area is rich in American history, and offers endless water, river, and city views. Tim loves to walk along the banks of the Potomac and enjoys many of the area’s good restaurants. He values his time in the environment as rich sources for ideas and inspiration.

Tim Davis is the featured artist at a new exhibition, ‘Conversations,’ at the Fred Schnider Gallery of Art in Arlington Virginia. The opening reception will be on January 10, 2026, from 5:00-8:00 PM. The exhibition runs through February 28.

The Real Macbeth:

Shakespeare’s Greatest Con Job?

So many theater lovers and English majors banter the name Macbeth. Murderer. Usurper. Tyrant. The ambitious thane manipulated by his evil wife into regicide and madness. We think we know the story. Do we?

Let’s unpack this myth and discover the deception.

Shakespeare was not writing history when he penned Macbeth around 1606. He was writing for his job security. The playwright understood his audience with surgical precision, and his most important audience member had just ascended the English throne three years prior. James VI of Scotland had become James I of England in 1603. Shakespeare needed the new royal patronage. The new Scottish king needed legitimacy on English soil.

The Match Made in Theatrical Heaven

The Historical Macbeth

Mac Bethad mac Findlaích ruled Scotland from 1040 to 1057. That was seventeen years of stable rule in medieval Scotland. This was unheard of in the Scotland of the 1000’s where kings were routinely murdered, deposed, or challenged. Tyrants did not last seventeen years.

The historical Duncan I bears no resemblance to Shakespeare’s wise, elderly, benevolent king. The real Duncan I was young, weak, and foolishly aggressive. He invaded Macbeth’s territory of Moray in 1040. Macbeth slew him in the of Battle of Pitgaveny near Elgin. Warrior to warrior – an honorable death between combatants rather than the stabbing of an elderly sleeping guest in his bedchamber.

Macbeth possessed legitimate claim to the Scottish throne through his wife, Gruoch, granddaughter of King Kenneth III. Under the tanistry system of Scottish succession, Macbeth’s claim stood as valid as Duncan’s. Arguably stronger.

During his reign, Macbeth made a pilgrimage to Rome in 1050 to meet with the Pope – a pilgrimage possible only by a secure monarch. Chroniclers of the period recorded that he “scattered money like seed to the poor.” A guilt-ridden, paranoid murderer does not leave his kingdom for months to distribute charity abroad. Only a secure, prosperous, pious king would do so at the time.

The real Macbeth wore regal clothes. Shakespeare stripped them off and dressed him in villain’s rags.

Why the Lies?

Follow the money. Follow the power. This is how we uncover truth in any century.

James I needed several things when he took the English throne. He needed legitimacy, as a Scottish king ruling England was hardly popular with English subjects. He needed cultural acceptance. He craved flattery of his royal lineage. And he demanded entertainment that reinforced his divine right to rule.

Shakespeare delivered all of it with the precision of a master.

By making Duncan righteous and murdered, James’s ancestor became the martyred good king whose death must be avenged. By making Macbeth the evil usurper, anyone who would challenge rightful succession became damned by association. By making Banquo noble and prophesied to father a line of kings, Shakespeare flattered James’s other claimed ancestor as the hero whose bloodline fulfilled destiny. By adding witches and supernatural elements, the playwright appealed directly to James’s obsession with witchcraft. The king had written Daemonologie and fancied himself an expert on the subject. And by showing divine punishment for regicide, Shakespeare reinforced James’s claim to rule by divine right.

This was not art. This was propaganda dressed in iambic pentameter. Magnificent propaganda, certainly. Effective beyond measure. Propaganda, nonetheless.

The Matilda Connection

The bloodlines become truly fascinating when we examine how Scottish royal heritage eventually claimed the English throne.

After Macbeth’s death in 1057, Malcolm III assumed the Scottish crown. This is the “Malcolm” who defeats Macbeth in Shakespeare’s play, the son who avenges his father Duncan’s death. Malcolm married Margaret of Wessex, an Anglo-Saxon princess who fled to Scotland after the Norman Conquest of England.

Their daughter, Edith of Scotland, was born around 1080. When Edith married King Henry I of England in 1100, she changed her name to Matilda. The name sounded more Norman, more acceptable, less conspicuously Scottish to English ears.

This Matilda, born Edith, became the crucial bridge between kingdoms. Through her, Duncan’s blood flowed into the English monarchy via Malcolm III. Through her mother Margaret, descended from Alfred the Great, Anglo-Saxon royal blood joined the mixture. Matilda became the convergence point of Scottish and English royal heritage.

Matilda’s daughter, Empress Matilda, fought for England’s throne during the civil war known as the Anarchy. Her descendants became the Plantagenet kings who ruled England for centuries. The bloodline continued its steady march through history.

When Elizabeth I died childless in 1603, James VI of Scotland possessed the strongest claim to the English throne precisely because of these bloodlines. They traced back through the centuries, through Matilda the name-changer, through Margaret of Wessex the refugee princess, through Malcolm III the avenger, through Duncan the historical king Shakespeare would later slander.

James was not merely some Scottish king seizing an English throne. He represented the convergence of Scottish, Anglo-Saxon, and Norman royal blood meeting in one person. His legitimacy ran deep, and he knew it. He needed others to know it as well.

Shakespeare ensured they did.

A Small Digression

The Shakespeare 2020 Project founded by author, Ian Doescher, had a complete syllabus and timeframe for reading. I read and listened fast and thoroughly, then dug deep into historical relevance. I often listened to the plays while walking my dogs along the magnificent trails of parks and paths in my area. When I arrived at my ‘magiclands’ to find them closed due to the dread virus, I ushered the dogs back into their seats in my car and drove non-stop to a closer park. Furious, I decided that NOW was the time to hear Macbeth! Hear it, I did! We walked for the entire reading. When I returned to my book – I read it in its entirety with the readings still ringing in my ears. Yet, the play was enough. It did not send me on a single rabbit trail. I was too mesmerized by the psychological depth to worry about historical veracity. Until now, that it. Why? Nothing terribly intellectual – a short YouTube video addressing the very topic. I was hooked and the rabbit trail led me to rooms and rooms of pre-1000’s Scottish, English, and Norman history to the assertion of the throne by Macbeth.

What happened to King Macbeth? He was killed at the Battle of Lumphanan by Malcolm Canmore (later Malcolm III), son of Duncan I.

Why has Macbeth been an ill-fated play – sets fell, and actors died then theatrically referred to as simply “that Scottish Play?” Marginalizing and demonizing a past king? Lincoln quoted lines from Macbeth, “Out, out brief candle…” following the fall of Richmond on April 9, 1865. On April 15, 1865, SIX days later, he was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth who had played the title role in Boston two years earlier. Exactly who assassinated Lincoln? Booth or Macbeth?  Where is Macbeth’s reach?

Perhaps we should view all historical narratives with a skeptical eye. Whether from 1606 or from 2025, those who write the story control what becomes truth. Those who flatter power shape how the past is remembered.

The Lesson

I love Shakespeare for his poetry, his psychological insight, his timeless exploration of ambition, guilt, and the human condition. He was a genius wordsmith. In reality – he was a businessman, a survivor, a man who understood power and how to serve it while appearing to entertain.

Macbeth is splendid theater. The poetry soars across centuries. Lady Macbeth’s guilt, the dagger speech, “tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow” are extraordinary achievements in dramatic writing. The play deserves its place in the canon.

History? Not close.

The real Macbeth deserves better than four centuries of slander. He ruled well. He ruled long. He had legitimate claim to his throne. He was pious enough to pilgrimage to Rome and generous enough to scatter money to the poor. History should remember him as he was, not as Shakespeare portrayed him.

Politicians make promises. Playwrights craft myths. The winner writes history. The powerful control narratives.

Whether the emperor wears clothes or stands naked before us depends entirely on who holds the pen.

I like to see for myself.

The Wild Duck Soars Again

Ibsen’s Rarest Masterpiece Flies Through Moral Fog

Robert Stanton as Håkon Werle  and Mahira Kakkar as Mrs Sørby in The Wild Duck. Photo by Hollis King 

Looking for the garage exit elevator into Klein Theatre last Thursday evening, I met Angela Lee Gieras, Executive Director of Shakespeare Theatre Company, She accompanied me in the correct elevator to the main lobby where she introduced me to Artistic Director Simon Godwin. Shaking my hand, he offered quiet advice that stirred my curiosity,  “This might be the only and last time you will see this play in our lifetime.”

That alone should compel you to see Henrik Ibsen’s The Wild Duck before it closes November 16.

Unique and Complex

Henrik Ibsen (1828-1906), often called “the father of modern drama” and three-time Nobel Prize nominee, built his reputation on explosive social critiques—A Doll’s House, Ghosts, An Enemy of the People—plays that attacked the hypocrisies of 19th-century society. In The Wild Duck, considered by many to be his finest work, he turns his sharp eye inward. Here, he draws from his privileged Norwegian family. Ibsen created Gregers Werle, the idealistic crusader determined to expose truth at any cost. This was inspired by members of his own patrician class. He named his young duck-loving heroine, Hedvig, the same name as his grandmother.

The play is complex. Understanding the author’s circumstances, background, and character, helps hold the ‘color’ of the play. In The Wild Duck, Ibsen was not attacking society’s lies. He was attacking the idealism of his family and overeager reformers. The question is not whether we should seek truth, but whether forcing truth on others is salvation or destruction. That moral ambiguity is perhaps, why this masterpiece has been performed so rarely.

L. Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle, Robert Stanton as Håkon Werle in The Wild Duck. Photo by Hollis King.  R. Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle, Nick Westrate as Hjalmar Ekdal in The Wild Duck. Photo by Gerry Goodstein. 

Nothing Is As It Seems

Simon Godwin’s production, adapted by David Eldridge, opens with Victorian elegance—men in tails, ladies in ornate gowns, an elaborate dinner party. The set is bathed in shades of green. A small, grey-bearded man vanishes through a green door then reappears. He resembled a quintessential leprechaun though the play is set in Norway. He is the disgraced nature-loving Lieutenant who raises then hunts and shoots rabbits in his son’s loft.  His son has embarked on a mission to restore his father’s honor.

The production is punctuated by haunting musical interludes—Alexander Sovronsky performs arrangements of 19th-century Norwegian folk and classical music on viola, Hardanger fiddle, and langeleik. Like the narrators in Shakespeare’s plays, the music shifts between melodic reflection and foreboding darkness, guiding us through the play’s emotional terrain.

As Godwin notes in the program, Ibsen is asking something far more dangerous than honor: “In the battle for moral certainty, who is the casualty? What is the price of truth?”

L. Melanie Field as Gina Ekdal  Center: Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedvig R. Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedvig, Melanie Field as Gina Ekdal in The Wild Duck. Photos by Gerry Goodstein. 

The Typhoid Mary of Idealism

The wealthy idealist, Gregers Werle, ‘knows’ what is best for everyone. He spreads his convictions like contagion—what I describe as ‘Typhoid Mary’ in Victorian tails – delusional in his certainty that he is saving everyone by forcing them to face “truth.”

Ibsen was intimately familiar with this character. Ibsen belonged to Norway’s patrician elite, and The Wild Duck draws from his own family’s dynamics as they navigated the evolution of society. Gregers embodies the dangers of Ibsen’s own class—reformers who wield truth as a weapon.

What happens when someone appoints themselves the arbiter of others’ honesty? When does truth-telling become destruction? The answers are not simple. This is perhaps, why this play has been performed so rarely.

L: Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle Photo by Hollis King  Center: Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle, Nick Westrate as Hjalmar Ekdal Photo by Gerry Goodstein R: Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedvig, Melanie Field as Gina Ekdal, Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle Photo by Hollis King 

Mental Gymnastics Required

The Wild Duck demands the audience’s full attention for which they are rewarded. Nick Westrate (recently in STC’s Frankenstein) and Melanie Field (the heartbreaking Sonya in STC’s Uncle Vanya) lead a flawless ensemble. Maaike Laanstra-Corn’s Hedvig, the young duck-loving girl, caught in the adults’ web of lies, delivers a performance that lingers long after the stage goes dark.  The 26-year-old Washington, DC native and Brown University graduate is an artist to watch.

I felt like a voyeur and a gossip throughout the play. I was the voyeur at that dinner party, wondering what came next. Then a gossip, observing the Ekdal household. It felt like I was overhearing through a parlor wall. It felt intimate, forbidden, yet addictive. I was inside their home, yet uninvited. My real estate mind went into calculation mode of the Ekdal house – how many rooms, how many square feet, how much were they asking for the rent of their spare room?

The audience was silent.  No one even cleared their throat. When the lights dimmed, and the play ended, the audience stood up in unison, applauding politely. The applause was respectful, reverent, and slightly haunted. We were processing.

L: Nick Westrate as Hjalmar Ekdal, Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedvig – Photo by Hollis King.  L: Melanie Field as Gina Ekdal, Nick Westrate as Hjalmar Ekdal – Photo by Gerry Goodstein 

Why You Should Go

The Wild Duck is not a feel-good play. It is a feel-smart play. If you want to wrestle with questions about truth and delusion that feel urgently relevant in 2025, when crusaders of all stripes claim absolute certainty about what is best for everyone—this is your play.

What makes this play essential is Ibsen’s unprecedented psychological depth and intricacy of character. He peels back layers of late 19th-century culture and morals with surgical precision, revealing not just what people said, but what they believed, feared, and concealed. Anton Chekhov, who considered Ibsen his favorite writer, adopted this pioneering focus on psychological realism—the exploration of ordinary lives with extraordinary depth. Chekhov developed his own distinctive style with greater emphasis on subtext and naturalistic dialogue, but the foundation was Ibsen’s radical insistence that theatre could reveal the human psyche with the intuition of a psychological case study.

If you were moved by Melanie Field’s Sonya in Uncle Vanya earlier this season, then you will appreciate the direct inspiration from Ibsen to Chekhov being honored by the Shakespeare Theater Company. Both playwrights understood that the most profound dramas unfold not in grand gestures, but in the quiet devastation of people confronting uncomfortable truths about themselves and the society that shaped them.

Ibsen meticulously controlled how his work was interpreted; writing detailed instructions to directors for The Wild Duck productions. This most personal of his plays deserves to be seen with the care Godwin has brought to it, even if just once. After exploring Ibsen’s background for this blog, I find myself compelled to return—to see with new eyes what I missed the first time, armed now with understanding of what the playwright was truly after.

L: Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedvig -Photo by Hollis King  R: Maaike Laanstra-Corn as Hedvig, David Patrick Kelly as Old Ekdal, Nick Westrate as Hjalmar Ekdal, Melanie Field as Gina Ekdal, Alexander Hurt as Gregers Werle – Photo by Gerry Goodstein 

The Wild Duck runs through November 16 at Klein Theatre. Tickets: ShakespeareTheatre.org or 202.547.1122

Artist Fellow Elise Ansel's interpretation of Macbeth's witches

When Shakespeare Meets Canvas:

From Old Masters to Modern Mavericks

Excerpt from Image No. 6. Romeo and Juliet. Act 5. Scene 3. Painted by Mr. Northcote, R.A.

Before the play, Julius X, started I spent the early evening viewing the latest Folger Shakespeare Library exhibition, Imagining Shakespeare: Mythmaking and Storytelling in the Regency Era. I realized that different artists perceive the same Shakespeare scenes in wildly different facets. At the entrance to the exhibit, I was greeted by Henry Fuseli’s witches from 1793, complete with dramatic robes and theatrical setting, juxtaposed with Artist Fellow Elise Ansel’s 2024 abstract interpretation of that same scene, where the witches dissolve into swirling brushstrokes of orange, white, and red against deep black.

Same story. Different worlds.

The Boydell Collection: Shakespeare as Blockbuster

Walking past modernism, I was greeted with Regency Era historical heavyweights. The fourteen canvases now hanging at the Folger come from the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery—the 18th century’s attempt at a Shakespeare cinematic universe. John Boydell and his nephew Josiah opened this fashionable London gallery in 1789, amassing 173 paintings (almost half of them life-size) by 35 different artists. Think of it as the Metropolitan Museum meets a Shakespeare theme park.

Only about one third of these paintings survive today. The Folger has the largest remaining collection. When seen together for the first time since 1805, one realizes that these were not simply illustrations. They were storytelling on a grand scale.

The artists read like a who’s who of British painting: Robert Smirke (32 paintings), William Hamilton, Richard Westall, Francis Wheatley, George Romney, James Northcote, and Julius Ibbetson. Each brought their own style to Shakespeare’s words, sharing a common vision: make the drama leap off the page and into visual space.

When Witches Get a Modern Makeover

Artist Fellows “…tease out the threads connecting the early modern world to our lives today.” Above, Henry Fuseli’s Macbeth Consulting the Vision of the Armed Head (1793) has been reinterpreted by Artist Fellow, Elise Ansel with color, light, and shape.

Fast-forward to today where Folger Artist Fellow Elise Ansel takes on the same Macbeth witches that Fuseli painted in 1793. Instead of recognizable figures in a dark landscape, she renders visual energy—what she calls “graceful, wavelike brushstrokes, echoed in watts of gold.”

In her piece The Nature of Witches, abstract shapes suggest bodies without defining them. In Untying the Winds, the witches become more elemental—muted swirls that might “untie” the winds from Macbeth. The gray brushstrokes feel darker, more aggressive, as if the painting itself embodies the storm building in the play.

Where Fuseli’s witches are frightening and haggish (as Shakespeare wrote them), Ansel transforms them into something more ambiguous. They are powerful, fluid, almost beautiful in their danger.

What Makes Old Master Paintings “Old Master?”

I noticed, as noted, when standing in front of the Boydell paintings that they were created by men for men. That is not a value judgment. This was the art world of the early 19th C. The subjects, the perspectives, the portrayal of women reflected a specific and limited viewpoint.

In her contemporary pieces, Ansel deliberately disrupts the male thesis. By using color and abstraction in what she calls “open-ended visual languages,” she creates “new ways of looking and engaging for modern viewers.” She is not replacing the original stories. She is showing us different angles, different emotional temperatures.

Like hearing a jazz musician interpret a classical piece, the original composition remains; suddenly revealing notes and rhythms never before noticed. One such piece: Beethoven’s Für Elise as updated and performed by jazz pianist, Chick Corea in 1993.

Looking at the Paintings

The Folger stays true to the original Boydell Shakespeare Gallery tradition by providing visitors free booklets listing each painting denoted with a number. Further in the booklet, the paintings are described by play title, act and scene, a description of the scene’s events, the artist’s name, and excerpts from the play’s text.

In the gallery, I was on my own to view, search and interpret. Without immediate instructional labels, the exhibition affords space for interpretation while the booklet affords greater depth, if desired. Standing before the massive canvas of the awakening woman in white, I felt the folly of the deception and ignorance of the friar. When you look, you can recognize your feelings and reactions to the play. Having deep-seated conflict about that play, I first saw deception then agony. What you see will depend on your attitude.

Digging further into the context of the paintings, I opened the booklet to learn about the artist, the play, and the scene. Who painted this? When? What was happening in their world? How did knowing that painting No.10 was from King Lear affect my view? I did not need the booklet to tell me. I also did not need the booklet for painting No. 8. However, painting No.1 could have been any one of Shakespeare’s female characters dressed in men’s clothing. Painting No. 14 is not a play scene; it is a semi-deification of the Bard himself.

From British Imperialism to You

There is truth embedded in these beautiful paintings. By the time the Boydell Gallery closed in 1805, Shakespeare had become “The Bard.” He was no longer a brilliant playwright, but “a larger-than-life symbol of British imperialism and economic power.” These paintings were not simply representational art. They were essentially cultural propaganda.

Two hundred twenty years later, we appreciate the artistry while acknowledging the intent. Shakespeare’s words have always been interpreted through the lens of whoever is doing the looking—whether that is a Royal Academy painter in 1790 or a contemporary Artist Fellow in 2025.

The Contemporary Conversation Continues

The Folger’s Artist Fellowship program ensures that this conversation does not stop with historical canvases. Current Fellows like Elise Ansel join Missy Dunaway, Dominick Porras, Mandy Cano Villalobos, and Alexander D’Agostino create art works “…grounded in research on the stories, art, and objects in our collection,” per the introductory statement.

These artists are not merely making art about Shakespeare. They are using the collection as a springboard to explore how art and literature shape each other; how visual language can expand or challenge written words, how what we see influences what we think we know.

Come See for Yourself

These are not paintings you can experience on a screen. You should stand before them and feel their scale, see the brushwork up close, and notice details that disappear in photographs: how light plays across Ansel’s textured surfaces, the depth of detail and scope of the Boydell canvases, designed to overwhelm and impress.

The 14 Boydell paintings are now permanent residents at the Folger. The contemporary art rotates with each fellowship. Both are free to visit. Both will make you think about Shakespeare in ways you have not before.

Next time you are near Capitol Hill, visit the collection. Spend some time with witches old and new. See what happens when you allow visual artists to have their say about those famous words.

Shakespeare wrote for theater—a visual, physical space where words created the story. These artists are continuing that tradition, reminding us that these plays are as much visual as they are heard.


The Contemporary Art at the Folger exhibition featuring Elise Ansel runs October 3–November 9, 2025. The Boydell Shakespeare Gallery paintings are on permanent display. The Folger Shakespeare Library is located on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, and admission is free.

GO! Go See the Show!

New York!

For my birthday, my daughter gave me a ticket to see Lady Gaga’s Mayhem Ball Concert at Madison Square Garden. I immediately began mentally making excuses not to go—too much work, too far to travel, too complicated. Then I bit the bullet and went to New York for the show.

What would I have missed had I stayed home working? A transformative cultural experience. That would have been my loss, despite whatever tasks I might have accomplished at my desk.

I have been attending concerts since the Who opened for Herman’s Hermits (yes, I was young once). After countless shows in theaters, stadiums, and arenas, I grew jaded. I thought having seen some of the best, I was done.

Not so fast.

These concerts are not merely performers singing their songs loudly while audiences cheer. This is an experience like none other: music, costumes, dance, theater, sociology, spectacular lighting, elaborate sets, powerful themes, and above all—generosity of spirit.

The Artist Who Delivers

We have all read about difficult performers who show up angry, battling group dynamics and technical problems. The performance I witnessed had none of those issues and all of the magic. Gaga delayed the concert start by several hours to accept the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards, including Artist of the Year. Then she arrived and gave us her heart. She had already put in a whole day’s work, then performed an electrifying two-and-a-half-hour concert. And yes, she incorporated her award statues into one of the acts.

The later start gave us time to enjoy a leisurely dinner and a relaxed entry into Madison Square Garden. The music and performance were exceptional—but you don’t need me to review an exceptional artist’s performance. Of course it was off-the-charts wonderful. What captivated me was the audience and the atmosphere they created with the performer.

London!

The Magic of the Crowd

So many people came dressed as Mayhem characters. There was me in a nice colorful cocktail dress, all the way to the full Lady Mayhem complete with lace mask, crown, and red costume. In my party, the costumes were breathtaking. I felt a bit underdressed, but the show went on.

The audience was gracious and kind. It was delightful to meet so many enthusiastic fans who came to enjoy both the performance and the camaraderie. People stopped to admire costumes and introduce themselves. The atmosphere was electric.

I spotted Gaga’s parents in the audience. They must have been over the moon—awards and adulation: proof that those voice and piano lessons paid off.

Breaking My Own Rules

I loved the NYC concert so much that I made a rash decision: I would see it again in London. I broke my promise not to travel in 2025 and booked a flight. While the NYC concert was out of this world, somehow the London performance exceeded my expectations. The audience’s appreciation and Gaga’s acknowledgment and gratitude were palpable.

The London performance was at O2 Arena, where 20,000 people entered, reached their seats, experienced the magic of the performance, and then miraculously filed out onto the Tube without pushing, shoving, or even loud words. They were gentle and patient—even in the very crowded, shoulder-to-shoulder train cars. Twenty thousand people, some dressed in their finest Mayhem costumes, made their way home peacefully. We were a bit less conspicuous on the return trip than we had been heading to the venue.

Before the concert, I worried about wearing our regalia on the Tube and causing other riders consternation. But Londoners are tactful and uninvolved with the strangers with whom they share the evening commute. A few Gaga fans even cheered us on.

Having just seen the NYC show, I was prepared for excellence. But I wasn’t prepared for excellence multiplied. How can perfection improve? The London audience’s energy was supercharged. They cheered, sang, and hugged their neighbors. The costumes weren’t as over-the-top as in NYC, but some were incredible. This time, I made better plans and packed a crown, cape, and dress in my suitcase. I WAS Lady Mayhem! Although, looking at the pictures – maybe more like Little Red Riding Hood?

The Real Gift

After the performance ended and we returned to my friend’s house in London, I pondered what I’d just experienced. This was more than entertainment—it was an entire sensory event that spoke not only to my musical and dramatic interests but to my soul. To my sense of joy and gratitude.

To those of us who have seen many concerts: go to the new ones. To those who haven’t experienced such events: this is a cultural phenomenon worthy of the cost—even if you don’t dress up and look silly on the Tube or Metro.

I thank Lady Gaga for her generosity in sharing her talents with us and creating an impeccable experience worthy of causing me to break my travel moratorium. I thank my lovely and incredible daughter for inviting me and for such a memorable birthday gift.

Photo Credits: Krasi Henkel

Where Passion Meets Purpose: Inside the Duke Ellington School of the Arts Student Exhibition

Last Friday, I had the privilege of attending the Visual Arts Student Show 2025 at the Duke Ellington School of the Arts (DESA) in Washington, D.C. As I walked through the exhibition with my goddaughter, Nicoletta, a freshman in the Visual Arts Department, I witnessed firsthand how this extraordinary institution transforms artistic potential into polished expression.

“The Vienna Flood ’24” by Lucia Gonzalo Sebastian – 2D Concepts – New Yorker – Nikki explains, “This is difficult medium because of the many details involved in its creation – selection of just the right shades of color papers, assembling meticulously to smoothly apply each piece while keeping the surface clean of glue and staining. But it is so much fun to see the result.”

A Dream Realized

For Nicoletta, DESA represents the fulfillment of a lifelong passion. Even as a toddler, while other children played with dolls, she gravitated toward pencils, paints, and clay. Her journey to DESA wasn’t easy—the school’s rigorous admission process admits only 25 visual arts students annually from hundreds of applicants, requiring portfolio presentations and in-person drawing auditions. As her Godmother, her parents invited me to attend the “Family Meeting.”

“To have professional instruction, to be moving art forward, and be in the moment where ideas, vision, and expression move smoothly, is my ideal,” Nicoletta explained as she guided me through the exhibition. The school’s unique structure, dedicating three hours daily to arts education, has transformed her academic experience as well, leading to recognition for her outstanding GPA.

” I loved creating this collage where I incorporated photographs, textures, and graphics. I think I can say that I am happy that it was selected for the show.” Nikki Zapryanov

Team Building Creativity

“Sculpture Left Standing Work” Nikki – Arm, Eliana – Leg, Khepra – Torso, Luana – Head; Luana – Leg

The centerpiece of the exhibition featured four nearly life-size ballerina sculptures created by freshman student teams. Each sculpture represented a beautiful example of collaborative artistry—individual students crafted specific body parts that were later assembled into cohesive wholes under the guidance of their sculpture teacher, Mr. Wesley.

“I carried that leg around with me for months and worked on it at home and at school. I have grown accustomed to having its company,” shared Eliana, pointing to her beautifully extended ballet leg with its perfectly pointed foot.

What made these sculptures even more impressive was their construction material: cardboard. When asked about creating such fluid forms from such a rigid medium, one student explained, “We softened it by hand by repeatedly bending and smoothing until it yielded to our shapes.”

A Nurturing Environment

Beyond the impressive artwork, what is striking is the atmosphere of the school itself. The architecture, with its vast, inspiring spaces, creates an environment where creativity flourishes. But it’s the community that truly distinguishes DESA.

“I have made wonderful friends. We are a close community where everyone is supportive and lends help when needed. Criticism is constructive, kind, and very valuable,” Nicoletta shared as she introduced us to many of her classmates.

The faculty’s approach reflects this supportive philosophy. When asked about their teaching methods at a previous event, one visual arts teacher explained, “We teach the fundamentals and basics of art—technique, tools, media, and vision. We feel that this is the best way to help prepare our students for the rigors of their future education and ultimately, life.”

Growing Artistic Vision

As we explored intricate skull drawings that would inspire next year’s projects, Nicoletta reflected on her artistic development: “This year, my eye has become more developed. I calculate and observe better. I can see differences and note details, symbolism, and emotions.”

Drawings from Students in Drawing II

The exhibition culminated with award presentations, including a historic first—a sculpture titled “Right Standing Work” winning Best in Show. Department Chair Ms. Elana Casey recognized the excellence of the faculty while emphasizing, “We are so honored to be supporting our students’ vision.”

In a world that often undervalues artistic development,  DESA remind us that nurturing creative talent isn’t just about producing art—it’s about developing young people who see the world with greater depth, collaborate with genuine respect, and approach challenges with both technical skill and imaginative vision.

BEST IN SHOW – The first time that a sculpture has been awarded in this category – “Sculpture Sitting Right

Like many instructions in today’s economic environment, funding has been cut in many ways. The Visual Arts Department field trip to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art had to be cancelled due to cessation of funding. Instead of complaining, Department Chair,  Ms. Casey, said, “This is a wonderful opportunity for you guys to DONATE and support our mission.”

Walking back to our car through the rain, I hardly noticed the weather. My mind was still discovering details in the exceptional student creations I had  just witnessed- it was an highly engaging immersive experience—each piece a testament to the transformative power of dedicated arts education.

Capturing Life’s Beauty

The Remarkable Story of 16-Year-Old Artist, Eva McKinley

Virginia Bluebells at Goose Creek ~ Oil painting by Artist, Eva McKinley

In the rolling hills of Middleburg, Virginia, a remarkable young artist is painting her way into the hearts of her community. At just 16 years old, Eva McKinley is not a typical teenager. She’s a passionate artist, a savvy businesswoman, an eager traveler, and a testament to the power of following one’s creative dreams. Eva labels her work as, “Meaningful artwork inspired by nature” and herself, as “The Old Fashioned Girl.”

From Vienna to Watercolors

Eva’s artistic journey began early. While living in Vienna, Virginia, she discovered her love for art through outside-of-school art lessons. Watercolors quickly became her medium of choice, a passion that has only grown stronger with time. Although, her prowess with oil paints is every impressive. “I was always creative,” she recalls, her eyes lighting up as she describes her early experiences with art.

The Education That Nurtures Creativity

Eva’s path to artistic excellence has been shaped by thoughtful educational choices. “My middle school experience preserved my childhood,” she shares. “I built friendships and saw how different students learn, all in an outdoor homeschool co-op.” Her foundation of learning in nature proved instrumental in her development.

When her family recognized how deeply the outdoors inspired her creativity, they made pivotal decisions. “I chose to homeschool in my high school years so I can spend more time learning and doing the things I love,” she explains. Her parents moved to Philomot, Virginia for a higher quality of life and to afford her tranquility and natural spaces,  her father adjusted his work to be remote, and the entire family embraced homeschooling, in part to support Eva’s artistic and entrepreneurial growth. Eva has a teenage sister (who helps her with packaging her prints and stationary) and toddler sister and brother (who is also interested in art).

A Businesswoman Beyond Her Years

What sets Eva apart is her extraordinary approach to her craft. She’s not just an artist – she’s a strategic entrepreneur. After a year of learning and analyzing her market, Eva developed a sophisticated business plan that would impress seasoned professionals.

Her strategy is refreshingly direct. She visits businesses with a basket of prints and cards, carefully curating her approach. The result? Her artwork is now displayed in 11 different storefronts between Middleburg and Purcellville. In 2024 alone, she painted 30 paintings – a remarkable achievement for someone so young.

The Moment Everything Changed

Eva vividly remembers the turning point in her artistic journey. “In 2024, I submitted two pieces of artwork to the Artists in Middleburg Gallery. I had no expectations whatsoever that they would sell, considering I was only a teenager and there were seventy other talented adult artists in that exhibit,” she recounts. “But to my great astonishment, I sold my first two paintings that month.”

That unexpected success transformed her confidence. “There are hardly any words to describe the feeling when a stranger sees a glimpse of the same beauty I saw, and decides to buy the original painting,” she says. Since that breakthrough moment, Eva has sold almost twenty original paintings and hundreds of art prints, and stationary packages.

Finding Her Unique Voice

While many local artists focus on horses and equestrian scenes, Eva has created her own niche. Her true passion lies in capturing wineries – spaces filled with memories and untold stories. “Wineries hold so many memories for so many people,” she explains. “Being able to provide them with an image of their special places is very meaningful to me.”

Her creative process is both methodical and intuitive. She travels to her chosen locations, takes photographs, and then begins the delicate work of sketching and painting. A single watercolor can take between 5 to 10 hours, while her oil paintings might require 15 to 20 hours of dedicated work.

A World of Inspiration

Eva’s artistic vision has been broadened by extensive travel experiences. Her family has explored nearly half of the US National Parks and more than two dozen countries, exposing her to diverse landscapes and cultural perspectives that influence her work.

Her North Macedonian heritage provides another wellspring of inspiration. One of her favorite summer activities is spending weeks in their small apartment overlooking Lake Ohrid. “Her paintings of the crystal-clear water, the boats that she sails, and the breathtaking church, Saint John at Kaneo, inspire her creative freedom,” notes a family friend. This summer, she looks forward to rowing on the beautiful Macedonian lake and capturing interesting scenery as only she can.

“Since our move to the beautiful Middleburg countryside where there is no lack of inspiration for an artist,” Eva shares. Beyond painting, she finds joy in “tending to my gardens, reading classic books, and spending time painting, in my studio and outdoors.”

A Family That Supports Dreams

Eva credits her success to her incredibly supportive family. Her mother, a business professional, has been instrumental in her education. Eva has learned financial analysis, market metrics, and business calculations as part of her curriculum – skills that have proven invaluable in her art business.

“While our family hasn’t done organized sports during the school year, we spend our summers outdoors sailing, swimming and hiking,” Eva explains, highlighting the balance her family has struck between education, art, and active outdoor living.

Community and Giving Back

Eva isn’t just selling art; she’s sharing her passion. She teaches watercolor classes at the National Sporting Library and Museum in Middleburg, inspiring others to explore their creativity. She is participating in this year’s Foxes on the Fence fundraiser for the Middleburg Art Council by completing a fox shaped painting to be auctioned for the event.

“It brings me so much happiness to recall all the people I have met who have seen my art and purchased it for their home or gifted it to their loved ones,” she reflects.

Her goals are ambitious – she dreams of painting all 50 Virginia vineyards and continues to participate in local art festivals like Art in the Burg and Art of the Piedmont. She also hopes to visit all of the National Parks and create paintings from those adventures.

Looking to the Future

With visits to universities like the University of Virginia already underway, Eva is exploring her next chapter. “I would love to continue to grow my art business and have many goals and dreams. I think that I would like to study artas well as business,” she shares, perfectly reflecting her dual artistic and entrepreneurial mindset.

But perhaps most remarkable is her long-term vision. “Ultimately, I would like to save enough funds to buy my own piece of heaven in Loudoun County, where I’d like to start a school from pre-K through high school,” Eva reveals. “My dream is to create a learning experience that is focused on classical studies but with lots of time spent outdoors. And I’ll probably teach a lot of art lessons too,” she adds with a smile.

“I hope that my art makes people pause and be drawn to it,” Eva says. “From local Virginia scenery to the awe-inspiring National Parks, my hope is that my artwork brings peace, beauty and joy into their homes.”

And pause we do – captivated by the talent, passion, and entrepreneurial spirit of this extraordinary young artist.

In a world that often separates art from business, Eva McKinley is proving that creativity and strategy can beautifully coexist, while nurturing a vision that extends far beyond her canvases.

Visit Eva’s website for information, events, and available art. https://www.theoldfashionedgirl.com/

Essential: Food for the Soul

Pansies, Henri Fantin-Latour, 1874, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

“The world will surprise you with its grace,” is a line from a movie that I have watched many times. In today’s environment, this line has been brought to fruition in the most generous ways. We are all affected in how we move about, how we work, how we interact with friends and family, and how we entertain ourselves.

Detail of Frederick Edwin Church El Rio de Luz
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

As in Sleeping Beauty, theater, music, art, dance, intellectually stimulating courses, and much of our in-person physical activities have ceased for the moment. However, the outpouring of generosity on the part of performers, museums, theaters, educators, and trainers have amazed me over and over. Sometimes I have blinked to be sure that what I was reading is true. And, so it is. We need grace and must exercise generosity now. We need the arts now more than ever. What better way to experience grace and generosity now?

From Paris to Seoul, from London to  Washington, DC , Florence to New York City,  and from Harvard to Yale, and Princeton, along with many others, the best and greatest are sharing with us their best and greatest. We can nourish our souls (this is not a theological article) profoundly by a click on our computers . We can regroup. Perhaps this is our opportunity to explore, learn, reinforce, and discover the beauty of the arts. Our souls will be better for it.

Through my love for the arts, I feel like a kid in a candy store – where to go first – what to watch first?? Actually, I am feeling like I did on my first visit to Fortnum and Mason, “Must focus. Time is fleeting.”

To help make the most of our situation, I have compiled links to complimentary  (some are pay what you can) videos from some of the world’s greatest resources. To these generous and gracious people and organizations, I give heartfelt thanks. Please remember them when times change and support them by become patrons, buying tickets, attending exhibitions, and buying future streaming services. They have gone above and beyond our expectations to feed our souls with beauty, creativity, adventure, and grace.

Ballet and Opera:

Theater:

Music:

  • Arts on the Hill – University of Virginia – weekly videos – jazz, poetry, and so much more!
  • National Philharmonic – musicians share their musical contributions – #MusicalNotes – brilliant segments  of music

Tours / Architecture:

Art and Museums:

Movies / Shows /Documentaries:

  • HBO provides movies, programs, and documentaries free to stream
  • Amazon Prime SXSW 2020 Film Festival – ““Prime Video presents the SXSW 2020 Film Festival Collection” offers filmmakers in the 2020 SXSW Film Festival lineup an invitation to opt in to take part in this online film festival, which will play exclusively on Prime Video in the U.S. for 10-days. The one-time event will be available in front of the Prime Video paywall and free to all audiences around the country, with or without an Amazon Prime membership, all that is needed is a free Amazon account.”

Literature / Books

Free Courses:

Pilates:

Petite danseuse de quatorze ans
Edgar Degas

Let’s be prepared with greater knowledge and appreciation for when the doors are opened and curtains rise once again.