Mousetrap 101: Patents and Innovation with Collector Alan Rothschild

Media - 2011.37.15 - SAAM-2011.37.15_2 - 92619
Mousetrap, 1870, mixed media, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Alan and Ann Rothschild, 2011.37.15
December 13, 2011

The American Art Museum is no stranger to invention. The building that houses the museum was formerly the United States Patent Office (President Andrew Jackson authorized the construction of the building in 1836), with thousands of patent models on display on the third floor, including one designed by President Lincoln. The building was nicknamed "The Temple of Invention," and even now, in 2011, innovation and invention are never forgotten. In fact, the new exhibition, Inventing a Better Mousetrap: Patent Models from the Rothschild Collection features thirty-two models belonging to Alan and Ann Rothschild, who own four-thousand models—theirs is the largest private collection in the world. The Rothschilds have recently donated twenty-five patent models to the museum. It's a fitting place for them, since this is where they were first exhibited back in the nineteenth century.

Alan Rothschild spoke to Charles Robertson, guest curator, and deputy director emeritus of the American Art museum, the other evening at the McEvoy Auditorium about his life as a collector and his love of patent models that began with a Saturday afternoon trip to an antique fair in upstate New York. He bought a few models and the next day, decided to go back for more. If you weren't able to attend the dialogue, you can watch the webcast.

Video Player is loading.
Current Time 0:00
Duration 0:00
Loaded: 0%
Stream Type LIVE
Remaining Time 0:00
 
1x
    • Chapters
    • descriptions off, selected
    • captions off, selected

      On December 1, 2011, Collector Alan Rothschild sat down with Charles Robertson, guest curator of the exhibition, Inventing a Better Mousetrap: Patent Models from the Rothschild Collection, to discuss nineteenth-century American ingenuity, the patent models that represent the imaginative fever of the era, and the amazing craftsmanship that attracts collectors.

      The exhibition, Inventing a Better Mousetrap: Patent Models from the Rothschild Collection remains on view through November 3, 2013. For those of you who can't get enough invention, check out the exhibition, The Great American Hall of Wonders, on view through January 8, 2012.

      Categories

      Recent Posts

      Five screen video installation.
      Sir Isaac Julien’s moving image installation "Lessons of the Hour" interweaves period reenactments across five screens to create a vivid picture of nineteenth-century activist, writer, orator, and philosopher Frederick Douglass.
      This is a photograph of curator Saisha Grayson
      Saisha Grayson
      Curator of Time-Based Media
      Two visitors looking at an abstract painting. There are artworks around them.
      01/09/2025
      A poet's trip to a museum is eye-opening in unexpected ways