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Release Date: January 24, 1992 Washington, DC--The Board of Trustees of the National Gallery of Art announced today that J. Carter Brown, the Gallerys director for the past twenty-two years, will retire from his position by the end of the year. Mr. Brown, the longest serving director in the institutions history, and only the third to hold this position, succeeded David Finley (1941-1956) and John Walker (1956-1969). Mr. Brown joined the National Gallery in 1961 and was appointed assistant director in 1964 and deputy director in 1968. On July 1, 1969, at the age of thirty-four, he was appointed director. "It makes me and my fellow trustees enormously sad to think of Carter Brown as no longer being director of this, the nations gallery," said Franklin D. Murphy, chairman of the board of trustees. "He has been an extraordinary leader of this institution and will be difficult to replace. On behalf of the board I thank him for his many services to the Gallery and wish him well in his new life." During his tenure the National Gallerys annual federal budget increased from $3.2 million to $52.3 million, its endowment from $34 million to $186 million, and attendance from 1.3 million to seven million visitors a year, while the Gallery doubled its square footage, increased its collection by some twenty thousand works of art, instituted an extensive special exhibitions program, and became a major educational resource to the nation. Also during this time, Mr. Brown oversaw the planning and construction of the Gallerys East Building, designed by I.M. Pei and voted by the American Institute of Architects one of the ten best buildings in America. Since Mr. Brown became director, the Gallerys collections have been greatly enhanced in every area in which the Gallery collects, with special emphasis in the areas of twentieth-century art, old master and modern drawings, and photography. Among the works acquired during his tenure, some of the most significant are Paul Cézannes The Artists Father (1866), Thomas Coles series The Voyage of Life (1842), Henri Matisses paper cutouts (1950-1953), Pablo Picassos Nude Woman (1910), Georges de la Tours The Repentant Magdalene (c. 1640), Jackson Pollocks Lavender Mist (1950), Georges Seurats The Lighthouse at Honfleur (1886), Paolo Veroneses The Martyrdom and Last Communion of St. Lucy (c. 1582), Rembrandt Peales Rubens Peale with a Geranium (1801), Claude Monets Woman with a Parasol (1875), Jusepe de Riberas The Martyrdom of Saint Bartholomew (1634), and Auguste Rodins The Age of Bronze (1875-76), as well as 3,702 drawings, including works by Leonardo, Michelangelo, Raphael, and others. In this period the Gallery also acquired a number of important private collections, including more than one thousand major works of nineteenth- and twentieth- century art from Paul Mellon, the bequest of Ailsa Mellon Bruce, an extensive collection of prints and drawings from Lessing Rosenwald, part of the John Hay Whitney collection, the Armand Hammer collection of old master drawings, and, most recently, the Vogel collection of twentieth-century art. During its Fiftieth Anniversary Year in 1991 the Gallery acquired 2,444 works of art, representing 224 donors from twenty-two states plus the District of Columbia and five foreign countries, and six major collections. Over the past twenty-two years an extensive special exhibitions program has become an important feature of the Gallerys activities. Some of the most notable have been African Sculpture (1970), Archeological Finds of the Peoples Republic of China (1974), Treasures of Tutankahmun (1976), The Eye of Thomas Jefferson (1976) , The Splendor of Dresden: Five Centuries of Art Collecting (1978), American Light: The Luminist Movement (1980), Rodin Rediscovered (1981), El Greco of Toledo (1982), Old Master Drawings from the Albertina (1984) , Impressionist to Early Modern Paintings from the USSR, (1986), Treasure Houses of Britain (1985), Matisse in Nice (1986) , Georgia OKeefe (1987) , Japan: The Shaping of Daimyo Culture (1988) , The Art of Paul Gaugin (1989), Titian, Prince of Painters (1990), and Circa 1492: Art in the Age of Exploration (1991), the last and the most ambitious and wide-ranging exhibition he ever organized at the Gallery.
General Information The National Gallery of Art and its Sculpture Garden, located on the National Mall between 3rd and 9th Streets at Constitution Ave. NW, are open Monday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and Sunday from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. The Gallery is closed on December 25 and January 1. For information call (202) 737-4215 or the Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) at (202) 842-6176, or visit the Gallery’s Web site at www.nga.gov. Visitors will be asked to present all carried items for inspection upon entering. Checkrooms are free of charge and located at each entrance. Luggage and other oversized bags must be presented at the Fourth Street Entrance of the East or West Building to permit X-ray screening and must be deposited in the checkrooms at those entrances. Any items larger than 17 X 26 inches cannot be accepted by the Gallery or its checkrooms. For the safety of the art work and visitors, nothing may be carried into the Gallery on a visitor’s back. Any bag or other items that cannot be carried reasonably and safely in some other manner must be left at the checkrooms. For additional press information please call or send inquiries to: Press Office Deborah Ziska If you are a member of the press and would like to be added to our press list, click here.
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