ABOUT THE COLLECTION
The complete Hechinger Collection, featuring nearly 400 works of art, was donated to IA&A in 2003 by hardware-industry pioneer John Hechinger, Sr. The collection’s contemporary prints, drawings, paintings, and sculptures represent a wealth of 20th-century art that incorporates tools and hardware by artists Berenice Abbott, Arman, Jim Dine, Walker Evans, Jacob Lawrence, Fernand Léger, and Claes Oldenburg, among others.
The collection celebrates the ubiquity of tools in our lives with art that magically transforms utilitarian objects into fanciful works of beauty, surprise, and wit. Selections from IA&A’s Hechinger Collection are on view in IA&A’s offices and have been exhibited at IA&A at Hillyer. IA&A regularly culls from the collection for a national tour—as with our exhibitions Tools as Art, Tools in Motion, ReTooled and Making You Mark—and can loan individual works to other exhibiting institutions.
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Exhibition Presentations
A fifth-generation Washingtonian, John Hechinger attended Lehigh and Yale Universities and served in the United States Air Force in the China-Burma theater in World War II. Until his retirement in 1996, he headed the former Hechinger Company, a 200+ hardware store chain founded by his father in 1911.
Over the years, Hechinger actively participated in numerous civic and philanthropic organizations, including the United Way Fund, the Washington Urban League, the Boys Club of Washington, and Columbia Hospital for Women. A strong civil rights advocate, he created a diverse workforce and was the first appointed chairman of Washington, DC’s City Council. He was also passionately involved in the handgun control movement and Business Executives for National Security.
John Hechinger and his wife, June Ross Hechinger, gave his collection of tool-themed art to International Arts & Artists in 2003. Mr. Hechinger died on his 84th birthday on January 18, 2004. Mrs. Hechinger died on October 14, 2015.
In seeking a posthumous home for his beloved collection, Mr. Hechinger chose IA&A because of its commitment to preserving the integrity and public access of the collection.
John Hechinger took the local hardware stores in Washington started by his father and built his company into a formidable chain of hundreds of stores throughout the entire mid-Atlantic region. Some credit him with starting the “home improvement stores” concept. In 1978, Hechinger moved his company into new corporate headquarters in Landover, Maryland, on the outskirts of the nation’s capital. As a very creative spirit, he found the building efficient yet sterile: “It struck me that the endless repetition of corridors and cubicles was boring and seemed to rebuke the fantasies that a hardware store inspires,” he said. “For anyone whose passion is to work with his or her hands, a good hardware store is a spur to the imagination.”
Hechinger already owned Jim Dine’s Tool Box, a suite of ten screenprints that combine tools with images from pop culture and the artist’s personal life. He hung the suite in his office and noted his associates’ enjoyment. Realizing the value of art with a thematic resonance with his business, Hechinger set out collecting art related to the company’s very livelihood: “(We) hoped that by surrounding employees with artistic expressions of the same objects they handled in the tens of thousands would bring a sense of dignity to their jobs.”
As Hechinger discovered early on, the collection’s narrow focus strikes a rich and diverse vein in modern art, with tool-inspired paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs, and folk art, primarily from the post-World War II era. Spanning a wide range of styles and themes, the collection honors common tools, where form and function are inextricably linked. The artists range from world-renowned to emerging and are mostly American, but with notable exceptions including Arman, Fernand Léger, Anthony Caro, Oleg Kudryashov, Ben Nicholson, and Jean Tinguely, among others.
In 1989, a survey of Hechinger’s collection at the National Building Museum led to a 15-year series of exhibitions. Concurrently, International Arts & Artists collaborated with Sarah Tanguy, the curator of the collection, to develop a traveling exhibition. Featuring 65 highlights from the collection, Tools as Art: The Hechinger Collection was one of IA&A’s most popular traveling exhibitions. The selection featured works by Berenice Abbott, Donald Lipski, and Red Grooms. After its 2001 premier at the City Museum in St. Louis, MO, the exhibition crisscrossed the country with more than 20 venues, always delighting visitors and drawing new audiences with family-friendly programming.
IA&A’s second exhibition from the collection, Tools in Motion, takes a witty and light-hearted view. Touring through 2009, the 49 motion-related and visually intriguing works were chosen with children, families, and school groups in mind to foster many educational programming opportunities. At the same time, the broad array of emerging and prominent contemporary artists, including Arman, Claes Oldenburg, Jacob Lawrence, and Mr. Imagination—and the unexpected use of such common materials as wood, paper, metal, and stone—attracts art lovers of all ages.
The current traveling exhibition ReTooled: Highlights from the Hechinger Collection brings new life to the unexpected subject of tools by profiling 28 visionary artists from the Hechinger Collection, including Anthony Caro, William Eggleston, Richard Estes, Walker Evans, James Rosenquist, and Roger Shimomura. It features more than 40 imaginative paintings, sculptures, works on paper, and photographs.
The fourth incarnation of the collection, Making Your Mark: Prints and Drawings from the Hechinger Collection, will focus exclusively on works on paper. The exhibition aims to explore print and drawing techniques and tools, playing off the whimsical subject matter of the artwork. It highlights six specific methods, Drawing, Relief, Intaglio, Lithography, Screen Printing, and Photography, and examines the intricacies, similarities, and differences of each. Some of the featured artists include Jim Dine, Wayne Thiebaud, Claes Oldenburg, and Jacob Lawrence.
John Hechinger’s generous bequest to IA&A has ensured the collection’s preservation and its enjoyment by audiences worldwide. A selection of small exhibitions culled from Tools as Art has been displayed at IA&A’s Hillyer contemporary art center in Washington, DC. Additional works, including Jim Dine’s Ten Winter Tools, are on permanent view throughout the IA&A offices. In the future, new and exciting traveling exhibitions of the collection will be made available to museums around the country. IA&A also welcomes the possibility of institutional requests for exhibitions or long-term loans.
The daughter of a diplomat, Sarah Tanguy holds degrees from Georgetown University and the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. Before becoming a full-time independent curator and critic in 1995, Ms. Tanguy worked at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the National Gallery of Art, the International Exhibitions Foundation, The Tremaine Collection, the International Sculpture Center, and the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service. In 2004, she became a curator for the US State Department’s ART in Embassies program, while continuing to pursue freelance projects. Ms. Tanguy has produced more than 150 exhibitions and has written for Sculpture, American Craft, Metalsmith, Glass, and Readers Digest, among other publications.
If you would like to contact Sarah Tanguy, please visit sarahtanguy.com.
EXPLORE THE COLLECTION
Tools themselves are beyond categorizing by status or class, and they lack social boundaries, as should art.
REQUEST A LOAN
To request a loan from IA&A’s Hechinger Collection, please contact the Registrar at seniorregistrar@artsandartists.org.