SAAM Stories

Lighting Graphic Masters Exhibition
Behind-the-Scenes 01/14/2010
Lighting designer, Scott Rosenfeld puts the finishing touches on Graphic Masters, the final exhibition of our graphic works on paper series.
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor
Star Trek in the Kogod
01/12/2010
Our Kogod Courtyard is a great place to meet friends, read a book, or surf the net using our free WiFi. But this Star Trek action figure sighting is a first. From American Art's Flickr group, photographer "Mr. T in DC" explains it all:
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor
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01/07/2010
American art lost one of its finest painters on Tuesday: Kenneth Noland died at age 85 at his home in Maine.
Nancy
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Seeing Things 01/06/2010
This is the fifth in a series of personal observations about how people experience and explore museums. Take a look at Howard's other blog posts on the subject.
handouts
The museum community is a close one, and we often take inspiration from innovative projects that our colleagues are implementing around the world. Take our new self-guided tours for the Luce Foundation Center. Visitors can choose a topic they are interested in from one of the clearly labeled hand-outs, such as "I like animals," "I like African American Artists," "I like the Color Red" and "I like Ex-Pats."
Georgina
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12/28/2009
On a recent Sunday afternoon, pianist and music educator Leslie Amper presented a program at American Art on the WPA Federal Music Project, providing a perfect antidote to the gloomy weather outside. With the exhibition 1934: A New Deal for Artists, currently on view through January 3, 2010, Amper's program added another layer to our understanding of the importance of FDR's initiatives to help artists, as well as composers, musicians, and dancers among others, in need.
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Ask the Expert 12/23/2009
This post marks the inauguration of a new series here on Eye Level: The Best of Ask Joan of Art. Begun in 1993, Ask Joan of Art is the longest running arts-based electronic reference service in the country. Question: We bought a print of an angel that is somewhat faded, sitting on a rock. The work has the letters VAEA written on it. Who painted this and what do the letters stand for?
Kathleen
Perry Lions Old and New
12/18/2009
Historical photographs are important for the visual perspective they provide on the past; they are also fun to look at. I recently finished cataloging a collection of photographs dating from 1898 to 1940 and, as I worked with these images, I relished the opportunity to hold history in my hands.
Nicole
Kogod Courtyard Time Lapse
New Media Initiatives intern Lauren Pond recently made this time lapse of the light in our Kogod Courtyard. Here's her story.
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor
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12/10/2009
Abe Pollin changed the face of downtown D.C. when he opened the MCI (now Verizon) Center over a decade ago in Gallery Place, across the street from the Smithsonian American Art Museum. To coincide with the opening of the MCI Center on December 2, 1997, and to welcome our new neighbors, American Art curated the exhibition Time Out! Sports in Art.
Handmade ornaments made by the Society of Decorative Painters
12/08/2009
This year the Smithsonian American Art Museum is displaying a decorated holiday tree at its Renwick Gallery, the museum’s branch for contemporary craft and decorative arts. The 15-foot, 1,000-pound, bulbed Douglas fir was provided and installed by the friendly folks at the Smithsonian’s Horticulture Services Division and the Office of Facilities Management.
Mandy
Holiday card
12/04/2009
Season's Greetings, an exhibition from the Archives of American Art, features holiday cards made by artists, many of whose works are in the collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Stanford White tabernacle-style frame
A picture may be worth a thousand words, but doesn't the frame have an equally interesting story to tell? Martin Kotler, frames conservator at American Art, led an enthusiastic group through Frames 101 the other day in the Renwick Gallery's Grand Salon.
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11/24/2009
Forty years ago, German-born American artist Werner Drewes created this colorful woodcut in honor of what may be the most typically American holiday. I like it for its vivid lines, burst of energy, and full-blown spectrum, especially the use of the color purple.
Image Not Available
11/20/2009
When I heard that artist Jeanne-Claude had died, I went back to the blog post I wrote last year about her visit to American Art with her other half, Christo. Together, as husband and wife and as artists, Christo and Jeanne-Claude have been reinventing the contemporary art landscape for more than fifty years with their installations such as wrapping the Reichstag in Berlin and the Pont Neuf in Paris, and of course, Running Fence, their monumental project in Northern California from the 1970s.
Luce Tours in Spanish
11/17/2009
Recently, American Art staff member Tierney Sneeringer was very excited to conduct her first Spanish tour, welcoming the "Friends of the Canal Museum" to the Luce Foundation Center.
Tierney
Image Not Available
11/12/2009
Roy DeCarava, an American master, died October 27, 2009, a few weeks shy of his ninetieth birthday. Born in Harlem in 1919, and coming to adulthood during the Harlem Renaissance, DeCarava became a photographer of the street and the people who inhabited that day-to-day world.
A museum visitor plays William T. Wiley's Punball: Only One Earth
11/09/2009
You've seen the William T. Wiley exhibition. Now play the game! What, you haven't seen the show yet? Well, now's your opportunity to kill two birds with one stone.
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor