Release Date: May 24, 2004

NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
SALUTES "THE GREATEST GENERATION"
IN SPECIAL WORLD WAR II DISPLAY AND FILM PREMIERE

Portion of the French National Loan hung in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. Picture taken in December of 1944.

Washington, DC - On March 17, 1941, as the United States girded for war, the National Gallery of Art was dedicated in a glittering ceremony featuring a speech by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. In a matter of months, the Gallery became a source of respite and inspiration for the soldiers and civilians flooding into wartime Washington. The Gallery's wartime years are commemorated in a special installation, That the Freedom of the Human Spirit Shall Go On: World War II and the National Gallery of Art, on view through September 7. The display is located in the West Building Founders' Room, which was transformed into an air-conditioned lounge for men and women in uniform during World War II.

The display features photographs documenting the Gallery's wartime service to military personnel and war workers, and its efforts to protect its art collection. The photographs include scenes of President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the Gallery's dedication, visiting servicemen enjoying the galleries and reading rooms, and paintings being moved for safe storage. Also on view are original guest register pages recording the thoughts of visiting service personnel from across the nation.

It was during the World War II years that the Gallery began a series of free concerts of classical music to entertain the troops and boost civilian morale. The free Sunday concerts, now in their 62nd year, have become a popular Gallery tradition. The 2,500th free concert will be performed on Sunday, June 13, 2004, at 7:00 p.m. in the atrium of the East Building, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary. For more information about the concert series, visit www.nga.gov/programs/music/index.shtm.

Gallery Hosts Premiere of Film on Washington's Newest Memorial

The National Gallery of Art will also host the public premiere of a new feature-length documentary about the design and building of Washington's newest memorial, The World War II Memorial: A Testament to Freedom (Robert Uth and Glenn Marcus, 2004, 60 minutes). The film includes interviews with key artists and craftsmen who contributed to the memorial, including architect Friedrich St. Florian and master sculptor Raymond Kaskey. Firsthand accounts of the war, including interviews with Yogi Berra, James Arness, Tony Curtis, Robert Dole, George McGovern, and John Eisenhower, are interwoven with the story of the memorial's construction. This project was made possible with generous support from the Disabled American Veterans National Service Foundation and Ford Motor Company .

Part of Washington, DC's 100-day tribute, "America Salutes the Greatest Generation," the film can be seen in the East Building Auditorium May 26 through May 29 at 12:30 p.m., and May 31 at 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. For details, visit www.nga.gov/programs/flmevent.htm.

For more about World War II resources at the Gallery, see www.nga.gov/resources/ww2res.htm.

 

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Paintings being moved to Biltmore House for safe storage, 1942-1944.




President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicates the West Building.

 


Portion of the French National Loan hung in the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC. Picture taken in December of 1944.


Servicemen arriving at the Gallery.

 


Servicemen in the lounge.

 


War posters in the Central Gallery. Dates for exhibition were January 19 - February 19, 1943.

 

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