Dear America: Artists Explore the American Experience brings together more than 100 works on paper that examine how artists have pictured the United States over the past 250 years. On view from April 11 to September 20, 2026 in the West Building at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, the exhibition looks at landscape, people and ideas of freedom through photography, prints and drawings.
The selection ranges widely in both subject and style. It includes photographs by Carleton Watkins and
Carrie Mae Weems, prints by Thomas Hart Benton, Roy Lichtenstein and Rupert García, and drawings by Thomas Moran, John Wilson and Tonita Peña. Taken together, the works show that the question of what it means to be American has never had a single answer. Instead, artists have returned to it across generations, using different materials and points of view to describe a country shaped by expansion, conflict, identity and change.
The exhibition places photography in direct conversation with older print and drawing traditions, which gives the project a broad historical reach. Watkins’s landscape photographs help define the visual scale of the American West, while Weems’s work brings a sharper focus to questions of race, memory and representation. Around them, the prints and drawings reflect changing ideas about labor, land, power and belonging, tracing how American imagery has shifted from the nineteenth century into the present.
Organized by the National Gallery of Art and curated by Angélica Becerra, Sarah Greenough, Rena Hoisington and Shelley Langdale, the exhibition draws on the museum’s strengths in photographs, prints and drawings to build a clear, accessible view of a long and contested subject. Rather than present a fixed national story, it shows how artists have responded to the American experience as a set of lived realities and visual questions.
Seen this way,
Dear America functions as both survey and reflection, using works on paper to show how art has shaped, challenged and revised the image of the country for more than two centuries.
Image:
Carrie Mae Weems, Echoes for Marian, 2014, chromogenic print, Gift of Jo Carole and Ronald S. Lauder, 2021.8.1