Artist: Erwin Redl
Installed: 2007
Materials: Light-emitting diode (LED) installation: four panels.
Permanently installed in front of and behind the Shirlington Branch Library.
Learn more about this piece from Arlington Public Art.
Installed: 2007
Materials: Light-emitting diode (LED) installation: four panels.
Permanently installed in front of and behind the Shirlington Branch Library.
Learn more about this piece from Arlington Public Art.
Our Day of the Dead: Recycled Art exhibit at Central Library now includes a place to honor your friends and relative who have passed away.
You are invited to add you own small photo or memento to the altar:
The Day of of the Dead is celebrated throughout Mexico and many other cultures on All Saints Day (Nov. 1) and All Souls’ Day (Nov. 2), as a time to celebrate and honor the lives of our departed friends and relatives.
The Library’s traditional Day of the Dead alter is on the 2nd floor at Central Library, and will remain up (for a longer-than-traditional time) until Nov. 30.
Learn more about Art Exhibits at the Library.
The Arlington Public Library is seeking submission of recycled art for an exhibit dedicated to The Day of the Dead, a Mexican holiday which honors and remembers departed relatives.
Art must be made up of at least 50 percent recycled materials, and should speak to/interpret the history or purpose of The Day of the Dead. Entry is open to any local artist who, if selected, is able to hand deliver work to the Arlington Central Library.
Learn about The Day of the Dead:
Mail or deliver hard-copy applications to:
Art Committee
Arlington Central Library
1015 N Quincy St
Arlington VA 22201
For National Poetry Month, the Library is holding an all-ages contest for original Spine Poetry.
Submissions will be posted online for public voting, and the final prize winners will be chose by our Guest Judges, author Evan Smith Rakoff and artist Chandi Kelley.
Public Voting will take place online from April 21 – April 28, and in person at Poetry Open Mic Night on April 30 at the Aurora Hills Branch Library. Then the winners will be chosen by our Guest Judges, and announced in early May.
For more information about the Spine Poetry Contest, contact Geoff Koury at 703 228-0326 or gkoury@arlingtonva.us.
Installed: 2007
Materials: Oil on canvas.
On permanent display at Central Library.
Learn more about John Taggart, cherished friend and library colleague.
Installed: 1999 – 2000
Materials: Bronze plate, perforated plate, and rod anchored into a brick wall, finished with tortoise-shell patina
On permanent display at Central Library.
The sculpture was fabricated of bronze (plate, perforated plate, and rod). The finish is dark tortoise shell patina. All of the work was completed at Ms. Fedon’s studio in Pennsylvania and then transported to Arlington. The sections are anchored into the brick walls.
The artist, Lisa Fedon of Pen Argyl, Pennsylvania, was chosen through a competitive process by a jury of community representatives, local artists, and staff from the Library and the Public Art section of the Arlington County Cultural Affairs Division.
In her design, Ms. Fedon combined images taken by local high school photography students with her own photographic record of “life in Arlington.” The sculpture is funded by monies raised raised in the Campaign for Excellence, by the Friends of the Arlington Public Library, and by other contributions.
Learn more about this piece from Arlington Public Art.
Installed: 2000
Materials: Ceramic Tile
Created with ArtsWork students Jerryl Chandler, Brenda Keating, Julia Siple, Donna Xizo, Jerome Young and Jeannette Yue.
Permanently installed at the Columbia Pike Branch Library.
ArtsWork was a summer program for teens coordinated by Arlington Cultural Affairs from 2000 – 2003.
Each year the Central Library hosts the Regional Scholastic Art Awards. After the show, we buy one piece of art for the Young Adult Room collection.
Installed: 2010
Created: 1930s, restored 2004
Material: Leaded stained glass
Permanently installed at the Westover Branch Library in 2010. Watch a short video of the windows being installed.
Many thanks to Cultural Affairs’ Public Art Program for helping the Library to procure the windows, as well as the previously installed granite finial. We hope that our patrons will enjoy seeing them!
Three other Tiffany windows rescued from the Abbey Mausoleum were installed at the Arlington Art Center in 2004. From an Arlington County press release:
It was the type of discovery that makes an historian’s heart quicken. Three years ago, Arlington County staff rescued 13 stained glass windows from the Abbey Mausoleum, slated for demolition.
Upon closer examination, Cultural Affairs Division and the Historic Preservation Program staff discovered a signature pane on one of the windows that read “Louis C. Tiffany, NY” which appears to be authentic, based upon typical examples Tiffany’s signature from the period and consultation with several stained glass experts.
Today, three windows have been restored to their original beauty and installed at the Arlington Arts Center, 3550 Wilson Blvd.
Twelve of the 13 original mausoleum’s windows had a simple geometric/floral composition. The 13th and largest window is religious themed, portraying Christ extending his hand in benediction. It is this window which contains the signature pane, which confirms, at minimum, this panel’s authenticity to the degree possible absent written documentation of the commission.
The window is dedicated to E. St. Clair Thompson, a wealthy Mason who was interred at the Abbey Mausoleum in 1933, and likely commissioned by his family, possibly with the rest of the geometric windows, in memoriam. The panel (as well as all the windows when originally removed from the Mausoleum in 2001) is severely damaged from years of vandalism and neglect and in storage until an appropriate mode of deaccessioning it may be determined.
The restoration and expansion of the historic Maury School for the Arlington Arts Center provided the windows with a new home. Three geometric windows were selected for restoration and installation at the Center and were successfully repaired with the use of matching glass fragments from the other Mausoleum windows that were damaged beyond repair. The windows now appear much as they did when they were first installed at the Abbey Mausoleum decades ago.
About Abbey Mausoleum
Built on a hillside overlooking Arlington Cemetery and the Potomac River in 1924, the Abbey Mausoleum was once a grand final resting-place for Washington, DC’s elite. The mausoleum, built by the United States Mausoleum Company from 1924 to 1926, was an impressive Romanesque style structure that neighbored Arlington National Cemetery and in 1942 was included within the grounds of Henderson Hall, the U.S. Marine Corps headquarters.
With its granite exterior, marble interior, and stained glass windows, the building was said to have resembled a cathedral. With the bankruptcy of the managing Abbey Mausoleum Corporation in the 1950s, the building fell victim to vandalism and neglect.
In 2000, the U.S. Navy gained ownership of the site, which it wished to redevelop. Based upon the mausoleum’s poor condition, the Navy decided to tear it down. They then assumed the enormous task of contacting the families of those interred at the mausoleum in order to relocate remains, a process which took several years. Arlington County was given the opportunity to salvage architectural features from the historic building, including the Tiffany windows.
Learn more from Arlington Public Art.
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