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Aliens view of classical culture.

Ellen Harvey’s new project is a glimpse into the world of the distant future. Human civilization having long-since come to an end, the earth is populated now only by ruins, ripe for archeological interpretation by visitors from another planet.

Most immediately striking to these alien historians are the remains of the classical and neo-classical buildings that seem to have taken root in every corner of the globe. Attempting to make sense of what they find, Harvey’s aliens immediately mine the potential of one of the greatest neo-classical cities—Washington, D.C.—as a tourist destination. The Alien’s Guide to the Ruins of Washington, D.C. is the result. A tour of America’s capital city through alien eyes, the exhibition’s centerpiece is a self-guided map of Washington’s landmarks. Available for pick-up at the Corcoran’s alien visitor center as well as other locations throughout the city,the Alien’s Guide contains reconstructions and interpretations of such sites as the White House, the World War II Memorial, and the U.S. Capitol.

The rest of Harvey’s exhibition follows the aliens’ attempts to interpret their findings. One of the Corcoran’s galleries is devoted to educating the alien children about the classical style around the globe, following its roots as a symbol of democracy in ancient Greece to its subsequent use in the service of empire builders, fascists, Stalinists, museums, banks, and post offices. Seduced by the architecture’s power themselves, the aliens have erected a spaceship in the neo-classical style, on view in the Corcoran’s rotunda.

The Alien’s Guide investigates the abiding influence of classicism, the dissemination of style, and the language of power. Humorous, unexpected, and eye-opening, it sheds light on a world at once familiar and strange. - See more at: http://www.corcoran.org/aliensguide#sthash.8oqZoKPJ.dpu