SAAM Stories

Media - 1986.90.3 - SAAM-1986.90.3_1 - 50966
Inspired by the recent Smithsonian 2.0 conference, we've been thinking about new ways to engage visitors to the Luce Foundation Center in a conversation. We hope the Fill the Gap activity, which asks the public to help us make decisions, will encourage dialogue about the collections and reveal some of the inner workings of the museum!
Georgina
Media - 1965.18.7 - SAAM-1965.18.7_1 - 1996
03/05/2009
Two things immediately struck me about the new exhibition at American Art, 1934: A New Deal for Artists. First, I was surprised to learn that the Public Works of Art Project, or PWAP, the first of President Roosevelt's relief programs for artists, lasted just seven months. Second, these artworks, done around the time of the Great Depression (as opposed to the Great Recession of current times), are rich in color and speak of a world trying to look forward rather than forced to look back.
Media - 1992.84 - SAAM-1992.84_1 - 11538
Many art history students are taught to look closely at portraits to derive meaning from the subject’s body language, the other objects the artist includes, and even they way these objects are arranged. The Luce Foundation Center has a wonderful portrait, Godly Susan, which is a perfect subject for this kind of close reading.
Bridget Callahan
Luce Program Coordinator
A visitor to American Art looks at Nam June Paik's Electronic Superhighway: Continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii.
02/24/2009
Lots of museum work takes place behind the scenes, so that when you visit, you can enjoy the exhibitions, lectures, or public programs. Everything is in its place: curators curate, conservators conserve, and bloggers blog. (I just threw that last one in there for a little attention.) Actually, there's a lot more to it than that.
Obama in cupcakes
02/21/2009
Last Saturday nearly 10,000 people visited American Art to witness sweet history in the making. Zilly Rosen's 5,600-cupcake presidential portrait wowed folks up on the balconies in the Luce Foundation Center, stretching over an 11' x 17' area of the concourse below.
Mandy
Media - 1997.124.16 - SAAM-1997.124.16_1 - 53708
Here at the Luce Foundation Center we love using technology to add to our visitor's experience of the 3,400 objects housed here in visible storage.
Edward
Frank Gohlke
On Thursday evening, January 29, photographer Frank Gohlke presented Stories in the Dirt, Stories in the Air, a program of selected readings followed by conversation with American Art's Curator of Photography, Toby Jurovics. The exhibition of Gohlke's work, Accommodating Nature, is on view at the museum through March 3.
Media - 1967.59.579 - SAAM-1967.59.579_1 - 81304
02/12/2009
In This Case is a series of posts on art in the Luce Foundation Center for the Study of American Art at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. This piece was written by Jill Paschal, an intern here at the Luce Center this past year.
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor
Obama in cupcakes
02/10/2009
Craving something sweet, but feeling too chilly to stand in line at Georgetown Cupcake? Make a note on your calendar to visit the American Art Museum with your loved ones on Valentine’s Day and you’ll be part of a lucky crowd that gets to see artist Zilly Rosen’s confectionery composition of Presidents Abraham Lincoln and Barack Obama, made from more than 5,000 cupcakes!
Mandy
person taking a photo of an artwork
02/05/2009
Calling all DC photographers! Ever daydream what it would be like to be a museum photographer? (Sure you have.) Well, here's your chance to help American Art illustrate Wikipedia articles with images from our collection (and you might win prizes in the process).
SAAM Staff
Blog Editor
Media - 1985.12 - SAAM-1985.12_1 - 64104
02/02/2009
Paul Feeley's sculpture Jack is a visitor favorite at The Luce Foundation Center. In fact, it's one of the objects people want to reach out and touch. And probably more would do so if it weren't for the sign that asks you not to. What is it about Jack?
Luce in 3D
Luce Foundation Center staff are very excited about our new digital imaging project, which will create three-dimensional images of some of our artworks. Our objects are safe in their cases, but the glass barriers don't really allow our visitors to fully experience what's inside.
Bridget Callahan
Luce Program Coordinator
Media - 1909.7.64 - SAAM-1909.7.64_1 - 105
01/26/2009
Artists have been capturing all the different moods of light for millennia. American artists such as members of the Hudson River School, or the American impressionists, managed to capture light as a way of defining the landscape.
Media - 1983.90.64 - SAAM-1983.90.64_1 - 46356
01/22/2009
Bring the entire family to the museum's Kogod Courtyard on Saturday, January 24 from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. as we celebrate The Year of the Ox in style!
Media - 1996.63.112 - SAAM-1996.63.112_1 - 63942
01/15/2009
Greetings from D.C. where change comes every four—or sometimes eight—years. It's an interesting time to be in the nation's capital. On January 20th, our newest president will be sworn in; his election was a momentous achievement in so many ways.
Media - 1993.79.1 - SAAM-1993.79.1_1 - 64525
01/13/2009
What’s better than an evening at a museum while the world around you is settling down for the night: it’s magic.
Media - 1996.91.31 - SAAM-1996.91.31_2 - 129291
01/06/2009
Many people mistake days mentioned in the song "The Twelve Days of Christmas" for the days preceding December 25. In actuality, however, the song refers to the twelve days after Christmas.
Tierney
O'Keeffe and Adams
12/30/2008
I think of Ansel Adams as the Walt Whitman of American photography, creating "silent songs" about monumental landscapes. Georgia O'Keeffe, on the other hand, reminds me of Emily Dickinson.