Staff Show 2024: Hannah Longbottom Estrada

Meet some of the talented artists on The Phillips Collection’s staff, whose works are in the 2023 James McLaughlin Memorial Staff Show (on view through February 16, 2024).

Hannah Longbottom Estrada demonstrates pieces of her thesis work in the Lithography Studio in the Corcoran School of Art and Design on April 9, 2023. : (Photo by Emmy Numann for Emmy Numann Photography)

What is your role at The Phillips Collection? What is something interesting about your job?
I am the Souls Grown Deep Conservation Fellow. An interesting aspect of my department is the use of infrared light on works in the collection. It’s used to reveal layers of materials that are covered in the final piece, sometimes revealing the artist’s process and material choices. I’ve had the opportunity to use it to observe a Cezanne painting!

Who is your favorite artist in the collection?
My favorite artists in the collection are a tie between Philip Guston and the Guerrilla Girls. I love Guston’s style, specifically in his abstract work, but also love the meaning and relevance of work by the Guerrilla Girls.

What is your favorite space within The Phillips Collection?
My favorite space has to be the Music Room. Its detail is impressive and I find something new in it each time I enter.

Music Room at The Phillips Collection. Photo: Lee Stalsworth

What would you like people to know about your artwork on view in the 2024 Staff Show (or your work in general)?
My lithographs were a part of my 8-piece undergraduate thesis, originally shown alongside two oil paintings, three screenprints, and one sawdust alfombra (carpet or rug). The body of work is about queer erasure and the Spanish colonization of Central America.

On view in the Staff Show: Hannah Longbottom Estrada, Semana Santa I and II

Hannah Longbottom Estrada, Semana Santa I and II

Lithograph stones in Hannah’s studio. Photo Emmy Numann

Creating the lithographs. Photo: Emmy Numann

About the artist:

Hannah Longbottom Estrada was born and raised in Southern California. She enjoys oil painting and printmaking, and will further her art practice at the Pyramid Atlantic Art Center’s Keyholder Residency in 2024. Her current work focuses on biopsychosocial health and the colonization of Central America, as stressed in her recent undergraduate thesis. She completed her BA in fine arts, with a minor in emergency health services, at the George Washington University’s Corcoran School of the Arts and Design and hopes to further explore conservation or museum studies in graduate school. Hannah currently holds the Souls Grown Deep Conservation Fellowship at The Phillips Collection.

Staff Show 2024: Priyananda Soubam

Meet some of the talented artists on The Phillips Collection’s staff, whose works are in the 2023 James McLaughlin Memorial Staff Show (on view through February 16, 2024).

Priyananda Soubam

What is your role at The Phillips Collection? What is an interesting part of your job?

I am working as a Museum Assistant at The Phillips Collection. My role involves creating a meaningful experience for visitors by assisting and interacting with them. Alongside overseeing and protecting the artwork, I am also responsible for sharing knowledge and providing information about the artwork, its creator, and the relevant historical context.

The interesting part of the job is being surrounded by beautiful paintings. I always try to have a dialogue with the paintings around me, especially in landscapes. I contemplate and consolidate myself within them.

I also appreciate the opportunity given here to Museum Assistants learn about cross-functional departmental roles. Through my Detail program with the Marketing and Communications Department, I have developed a deeper understanding and broadened my knowledge of the social media landscape, content analysis, development, management, and audience outreach for art museums.

Who is your favorite artist in the collection?
It’s difficult to name just one. Van Gogh, Monet, John Constable, Rothko are all-time favorites. However, the one that struck me the most is Wolfgang Laib. I love his work, Where have you gone – where are you going?, a site-specific installation (Wax Room) at our museum. I appreciate its simplicity, purity, and meditative nature. His use of material—beeswax as a medium to express a creative vision—is something I truly admire.

Wax Room by Wolfgang Laib

What is your favorite space within The Phillips Collection?

I love exploring the Main Gallery, which is next to the Wax Room. I discover many masterpieces here. I can enjoy my conventional choices and, at the same time, experience the Wax Room.

What would you like people to know about your artwork on view in the 2024 Staff Show (or your work in general)?

I love simplicity with a layer of message beneath. Similarly, I would want viewers of my painting to slow down, take a stroll on the rustic road of the landscape, and enjoy the nature around them.

The layers of mountain backdrop are inspired by my native place—Manipur, a small state in India. The foreground reflects my fascination with trees, creating a juxtaposition of my admiration for trees with my roots. These trees are weathered and wise, yet very much alive. These trees have witnessed countless narratives in the valleys and hills—the good, the bad, and the ugly. Perhaps now, the trees are suggesting us to slow down and appreciate the world around us, and live in harmony as intended by nature.

On view in the Staff Show: Contemplative Stroll

About the artist:

Priyananda Soubam consistently embraces the ideas of harmony and coexistence, subtly weaving these concepts into his paintings. A self-taught artist fascinated by artists like John Constable and Thomas Cole, he captures the essence of nature’s beauty. His inclination for depicting symbiotic relationships is evident, especially in his fascination with trees and their forms and textures. Through his art, he invites viewers to explore the imaginative world he creates, encouraging them to acknowledge and embrace the giving nature of trees and the inherent coexistence in nature.

With a background in advertising and marketing communications, Priyananda is currently learning and exploring the art world. He actively participated in art activities during his school and college days, earning awards for his colleges. He also participated in group exhibitions organized by the Indian Embassy in Oman. He has been active in promoting the art scene in Oman and India.

 

Staff Show 2024: Monica Cohen Lenoff

Meet some of the talented artists on The Phillips Collection’s staff, whose works are in the 2023 James McLaughlin Memorial Staff Show (on view through February 16, 2024).

What is your role at The Phillips Collection? What is something interesting about your job?
I am a Phillips museum educator. Besides facilitating school and adult tours, we also conduct professional development for educators and get to create workshops that I wish I had when I was an art teacher in the public schools here.

Monica Cohen Lenoff leading a school tour in the galleries

Who is your favorite artist in the collection?
It’s so hard to choose, but I am always drawn to female artists who had to push through boundaries to make it, such as motherhood and their careers. Artists like Alma Thomas, Helen Frankenthaler, and Barbara Hepworth, to name a few.

What is your favorite space within The Phillips Collection?
Honestly, the Family Gallery is the best secret room. It’s a small space with a couch and some art supplies so you can sit quietly and draw. It’s a great place to bring your kids and introduce them to the idea of what a museum is like.

The Family Gallery, located on the second floor of the Phillips House

What would you like people to know about your artwork on view in the 2024 Staff Show (or your work in general)?
I created these florals a couple years after giving birth, when I struggled with major postpartum depression and I was very drawn to flowers for some reason. I didn’t create art for almost two years and the florals helped me come back to my work, almost a way of growing out of this space. I wished people were able to come visit me with my newborn during the beginning of the pandemic when I was very isolated mentally and physically, so the flowers represent the care I needed and didn’t have.

On view in the Staff Show: Monica Cohen Lenoff, Morning Dew, 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 24 x 24 in.

Monica Cohen Lenoff, Flamingo Dance, 2023

About the artist:

Monica is a native New Yorker who most recently found her way back to DC after living in the Midwest and Puerto Rico. She holds degrees in Visual Arts Education and Teaching Students with Disabilities. She is an artist and mother who draws inspiration from the world around her and from her personal experiences as a new mom during the pandemic. Since 2010, she has been teaching art to students of all abilities including the deaf and hard of hearing community in DC. She now teaches at The Phillips Collection, as well as privately in her home studio called The Arts Avenue Club.

See more of Monica’s artwork at: https://monica-cohen.com/