American Art Here
Morris Louis: Making Faces
July 20, 2009
Faces by Morris Louis The son of a Russian immigrant, abstract painter Morris Louis grew up in Baltimore. As an adult, Louis lived in Silver Spring, Maryland, and in Washington, D.C., where, in a small bungalow on Legation Street, NW,...
A Graphic Master: Charles White
July 14, 2009
Joann Moser, Senior Curator, wrote the following blog post about one of our recent acquisitions to American Art's collection. Untitled, by Charles White, 1950, ink and graphite on paper, 29 3/4 x 20 in., Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of...
Jean Shin
July 6, 2009
Jean Shin's Everyday Monuments If you're walking through a city, say New York or Washington D.C., you may want to have Jean Shin by your side. You may know your way around familiar streets, but through Shin's eyes you'll be...
Robert Motherwell’s Monster for Charles Ives
July 2, 2009
Robert Motherwell's Monster (for Charles Ives) Robert Motherwell, known as an intellectual painter, has sometimes been called the spokesperson for the abstract expressionist movement. He painted in a style that often involved spontaneously generated images on large fields of canvas....
In this Case: More 1934 in the Luce Foundation Center
June 25, 2009
Waterfront—Brooklyn by Harry Shokler It was August last year when visitors on my tour started to pause a bit longer in front of cases 34b to 38a. All of a sudden the public’s interest was piqued by these paintings of...
In This Case: Death of Rubén Salazar
June 23, 2009
Frank Romero's Death of Rubén Salazar As the saying goes, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Similarly, in the Luce Foundation Center, our staff members have an array of "favorites." Bridget loves folk art, Ed enjoys our new...
Looking at 1934: Lily Furedi's Subway
June 18, 2009
Lily Furedi's Subway, part of the exhibition 1934: A New Deal for Artists The other day while taking the Metro (that's D.C.-speak for subway) to the Smithsonian, I spotted something on the floor below the seat across from me. When...
Isadora Duncan
June 4, 2009
Isadora Duncan by Abraham Walkowitz Abraham Walkowitz's iconic sketches of dancer Isadora Duncan capture her spirit, passion, and zest. They also reveal her sturdy physique, which is the opposite of the balletic ideal. While ballet dancers strive for perfection in...
Goodbye and Hello to George Catlin
June 2, 2009
George Catlin paintings hang in the Renwick's Grand Salon After hanging for more than five years in the Renwick's Grand Salon, the 300 or so George Catlins (as well as the Thomas Morans) have come down to make room for...
Night at the American Art Museum
May 22, 2009
American Art's Meet Me at Midnight With the release of Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian, moviegoers will get a look at some of the most popular objects in the Smithsonian's collections—such as Amelia Earhart's airplane, Dorothy's ruby...
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