One Stroke at a Time
WPA’s Project Space, 1350 Connecticut Avenue NW, Washington DC
Gallery hours: Wednesday–Friday, 12–6pm, and Saturday, 1–5pm
One Stroke at a Time is a new collaborative project organized by DC-based artists Lorenzo Piero Holder III and Dr. Vicenzio Holder-Perkins. Nephew (Holder) and uncle (Dr. Perkins)–an artist and a psychiatrist–have formed a collaboration that operates across age, ability, and life experience to build a shared language rooted in mutual care. This is the first public presentation of their work as a collaborative duo.
Holder and Dr. Perkins’ collaboration began through art therapy, following a stroke experienced by Dr. Perkins in 2018. During his recovery, Dr. Perkins started sketching, while Lorenzo responded through color, mark-making, and composition. This exchange became a practice of mutual care and creative experimentation. What started in the quiet of a living room grew into a shared exploration of impermanence, vulnerability, and interdependence.
As uncle and nephew who both experienced estrangement from their fathers, Holder and Dr. Perkins’ collaboration explores what it means to move and make in sync across generations shaped by trauma, resilience, and queerness. They complete each other’s drawings, sometimes in sequence and sometimes simultaneously. Their work challenges fixed roles between patient and practitioner and expands how artist-organizer relationships can function within spaces of disability, kinship, and transformation.
One Stroke at a Time will transform WPA’s Project Space into a living studio, installation, and participatory environment shaped by movement, memory, and unfinished lines. Visitors will be welcomed into a quiet and intimate space that reflects the artists’ focus on adaptation and embodied care. Collaboratively made paintings, drawings, and sculptures will be displayed alongside projected loops of performances and archive footage that offer a glimpse into Holder and Dr. Perkins’ process of shared mark-making and mirrored motion.
Opening Reception: March 28, 2026 from 3–5pm
Exhibition dates: March 28–June 20, 2026
Gallery hours: Wednesday–Friday, 12–6pm, and Saturday, 1–5pm
Extended hours: First Friday of each month, 1–8pm, in conjunction with Dupont Circle Art Walk
Public Programs
Public programming will include: a collaborative painting workshop; a panel on collaboration through art therapy; and a gallery performance by Holder and Dr. Perkins with dates and venues to be announced soon.
Presented as part of “Lineages: Generations of Creative Resilience in the District”
One Stroke at a Time is presented as part of “Lineages: Generations of Creative Resilience in the District,” a year-long exhibition and project residency series. Projects in the “Lineages” series were selected by a panel that included art historian and curator Martina Dodd, transdisciplinary artist and filmmaker Mojdeh Rezaeipour, and critic and scholar Tavia Nyong’o. Conceived in concert with WPA’s 50th Anniversary and the recent launch of its digital archive, the “Lineages” series reflects on the potential of intergenerational community-building among artists in the District as a way to carry forward vulnerable histories and imagine resilient futures.
About the Organizing Artists

Dr. Vicenzio Holder-Perkins, MD (he/him) is a psychiatrist, educator, and emerging artist whose creative practice was born from necessity after a stroke left half of his body paralyzed. Drawing from decades of work in community mental health, HIV, and AIDS advocacy, and multicultural psychiatry, Perkins brings a rare sensibility to the relationship between embodiment, vulnerability, and recovery. A graduate of UCLA, Johns Hopkins, and George Washington University, he served as Chief of Psychiatry at the Washington DC Veterans Affairs Medical Center and directed multiple behavioral health programs across the region. Following his stroke in 2018, Vicenzio turned to drawing as a therapeutic act, developing a visual language rooted in repetition, asymmetry, and adaptation.
Dr. Perkins’ drawings are not about aesthetic perfection but about creative persistence in the face of loss. They mark a return to expression on his own terms: slow, deliberate, and deeply human. Dr. Perkins is currently working on a book titled “From Practitioner to Patient”, a deeply personal and interdisciplinary project that reflects on his transition from a practicing psychiatrist to a stroke survivor navigating recovery. Blending clinical insight with lived experience, the book examines the limits of medical authority, the emotional landscape of disability, and the transformative role of DC.

Lorenzo Piero Holder III (he/him) is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice investigates how histories of power, migration, and inheritance are carried and negotiated through the body. Born in West Berlin, he works from the convergence of lineages that rarely coexist within a single narrative. Rather than attempting to resolve these tensions, Holder approaches them as generative conditions that shape his engagement with archives, institutions, and lived experience.
His practice treats the body not only as a subject but as an interpretive instrument capable of reading, responding to, and transforming historical and institutional memory. This orientation has deepened through his role in caring for his uncle, psychiatrist and stroke survivor Dr. Vicenzio Holder-Perkins, whose bodily transformation became the foundation for a sustained intergenerational collaboration. Grounded in Washington, DC while completing his MFA at the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design at George Washington University, Holder’s work integrates embodied research, collaborative art-making, and healing-centered methodologies to explore how creative practice can operate as a form of cultural infrastructure capable of engaging memory, and relational repair.
Holder founded FEVR (@fevrfestival), an international art festival and residency concept supporting collaborative, interdisciplinary work beyond traditional institutional frameworks, and Atelier Proveniersstraat, a collective studio and exhibition space for emerging artists. Together, these initiatives function as laboratories for collaborative curatorial practice and community engagement.