SAAM Stories

Talks and Lectures on American Art
02/12/2008
Texas-born John Alexander, whose thirty-year retrospective fills the main galleries at SAAM, lived up to his introduction by chief curator Eleanor Harvey as an "incisive, witty, and irreverent" artist. The SRO crowd at Alexander's recent talk appreciated the artist's personal reflections on art as well as his professional advice and inside look at a thirty-year career in the American art world.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

02/11/2008
It was very late, the sky was as dark as the water. It was summer but there was a chill in the air. Hilda tapped me on the shoulder and said, "Look behind you, the Ryder moon." I turned and there it was, a beautiful yellow-white disk against a blue-black sky.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

Technology
02/01/2008
DCist observes that the Flickr response to the Kogod Courtyard has been enthusiastic. Judging from a selection of Flickr photographs, the response to the light available in the courtyard has indeed been strong. But a feature at least as prominent in these photographs as the canopy is the courtyard's dark floor.
Kriston

01/22/2008
Washington... Lincoln... Kennedy... and now Colbert. Just in case a writers' strike and a presidential campaign in full swing weren't enough to keep him busy, Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert was determined to have his portrait hang in the National Portrait Gallery (NPG).

Howard Kaplan
Writer

Seeing Things
01/15/2008
Sometimes I wonder if it’s the art-watching or the people-watching I seek out in museums.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

01/11/2008
I visited the tie quilt on no ordinary day in its own life or in the life of the Holen family. On that day in late December all ninety-two of the Holens, who planned their annual family reunion in D.C., to coincide with the exhibition of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century quilts, Going West! Quilts and Community. In 1935, their relative Ellen Holen of Nebraska decided to collect ties from the men in her family—her six sons and her husband—and make a quilt.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

In the museum, I like to take some time away from looking at the art to look at people, especially people when they’re looking at art. Almost everybody today seems to have a cell phone camera with them as they wander the galleries, looking for something that catches the eye.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

12/20/2007
Frank O’Hara was a poet near and dear to my heart. Born in Baltimore in 1926, he died tragically forty years later in an accident on Fire Island. The death of a poet is never a pretty thing, and this one was especially ugly: he was run over by a jeep one evening on the dunes.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

12/13/2007
The other day I went searching for a painting on the third floor of the museum—nothing in particular, but something to quench my visual thirst, as it were. I walked into a room with a Helen Frankenthaler and a Morris Louis, and was immediately drawn to the three-dimensional piece that stood out from the other artwork in the room.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

12/10/2007
"I have always enjoyed going to museums," said Gertrude Stein, "because the view from museum windows is usually very pleasant.”

Howard Kaplan
Writer

Talks and Lectures on American Art
12/03/2007
Interesting what happens when an artist speaks about his/her life and work: you get to see the other side of the canvas. As part of the Clarice Smith Distinguished Lectures in American Art, James Rosenquist, an artist on the Pop scene since the 1960s, spoke to an standing-room only house at SAAM on 11.28.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

11/27/2007
Bernice Ellis Lunder entered the Comics Quilt, featuring forty-nine characters from the funny papers, in a quilt context.
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor

11/26/2007
I plan to make this post the first in a series on technique and medium. Paint. The stuff that gets under the artist’s fingernails, and can barely be scrubbed away. I love paint. I love color. I love walking up to a painting and trying to decipher its DNA.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

11/20/2007
Over ten thousand people (including lots of children) attended our Friends and Family festival marking the opening of the Kogod Courtyard. Eye Level blogged a record eight stories that day (whew!), documented with many photos by us and by others (see our Flickr photostream).
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor

11/18/2007
With the new glass canopy in place, the courtyard itself becomes a place of changing light, in a sense, alive.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

11/18/2007
The courtyard was designed to double as a performance space, and this must have been quite a challenge to the architects.
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor

11/18/2007
Today, during the family festival in the new courtyard you'll be able to make Andy Warhol-like collages using cool, vibrant, colorful materials.

Howard Kaplan
Writer

11/18/2007
One of the coolest things going on this afternoon is the area where you can make your own hats. You begin by working with a basic shape of a hat but whatever else you add is really up to your own imagination.

Howard Kaplan
Writer