Entries from DCist tagged with 'smithsonianinstitution'
November 16, 2007
Dynamic, lively, stunning, soaring. These are the words used by Smithsonian officials and architect Spencer de Grey to describe the new Robert and Arlene Kogod Courtyard at the Donald W. Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture, home to both the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. With a blend of modern aesthetics and historic sensibilities, the new courtyard is a gorgeous space that the Smithsonian plans to use to hold public......
Continue Reading "Kogod Courtyard Opens Sunday @ Reynolds Center"November 2, 2007
Through a pre-coffee haze this morning, we were a little confused by an AP story up on WTOP about how the Smithsonian is looking for someone to move in and take over its Arts and Industries Building. Why did it seem so ... familiar? Oh right. Because the Washington Post wrote the same story back in May. So why did the AP pick up on it today? Because the The Smithsonian Institution issued yet......
Continue Reading "No One Wants the Arts and Industries Building"September 12, 2007
Olga Viso, who has served as director of the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden for two years, announced today she'll be stepping down at the end of the year. Viso will be taking her experience and successes in running the Hirshhorn to the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. The expert on contemporary Latin American art began as an assistant curator at the museum 12 years ago, and quickly climbed the ladder as her skill......
Continue Reading "Hirshhorn Leader Steps Down"August 8, 2007
There seems to be no end to the drama playing out at the Smithsonian Institution. The story so far: Former Secretary Lawrence M. Small resigned back in March amidst allegations of gross financial expenditures and poor management decisions. He was replaced by acting Secretary Cristián Samper, and the Board then began an overhaul of the Institution based on a scathing report on the state of museums issued earlier this year. Deputy Secretary and Chief Operating......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian: Giving Enron A Run for Their Money"August 1, 2007
>> "The Smithsonian Institution today replaced Gary M. Beer as chief executive of the museum complex's embattled business unit after an inspector general's report found that he had abused his institution-issued credit card and billed $95,000 in expenditures that were unauthorized or lacked evidence of a business purpose." [WaPo] >> Video of Marion Barry getting measured for his wax statue at the new Madame Tussauds wax museum. [Reliable Source] >> Some Orange Red line......
Continue Reading "Go Home Already: Teaching Moments"June 19, 2007
The Smithsonian Institution continues to bleed to save itself as Sheila P. Burke, the Deputy Secretary and Chief Operating Officer, resigned yesterday. Burke was the second in command to Lawrence P. Small, who resigned as Secretary back in March. The Washington Post reports today that the Board of Regents isn't taking the call for restructuring lightly, and Burke took the hit after her $1.6 million in compensation from outside activities came to light. The Regents......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Follows Through"June 5, 2007
We like this photo by Flickr user outdoor_type because of the way it incorporates two of Washington, D.C.'s best known offerings: the wealth of national artifacts available to the public through the Smithsonian Institution and being a unique place for citizens to gather to speak with one voice (although, this isn't a protest but the Race for the Cure Walk from last weekend). Photo of the Day is about finding unique views of the......
Continue Reading "Photo of the Day: June 5, 2007"May 22, 2007
As if things couldn't get any more rocky for the Smithsonian Institution, it is the subject of yet another controversy. The AP reports that an ex-Smithsonian official says the institution toned down an exhibit on the effects of climate change in the Arctic out of fear that the exhibit would draw the ire of Congress and the Bush administration. Among other things, the script, or official text, of last year's exhibit was rewritten to......
Continue Reading "Climate Change Exhibit Altered at Smithsonian"May 18, 2007
Intellectual property junkies, and we know you're out there, have another case to salivate over. As the Examiner AP reports, the Smithsonian Institution, which houses over 6,000 images of its historical treasures in a publicly accessible online database, got the IP version of a shot across their bow from Public.Resource.Org, which recently downloaded every single photograph and made them available on its Flickr stream. What's the problem? The Smithsonian claims it retains any "possible copyright"......
Continue Reading "Is the Smithsonian Claiming False Copyrights?"May 9, 2007
The Smithsonian Institution is searching for a public or private partner to redevelop and rent the historic Arts and Industries Building, since, according to the Smithsonian's facilities director, William W. Brubaker, the Institution "does not have funding now or in the foreseeable future to rehabilitate" it. The 126-year-old building, the second-oldest next to the Smithsonian Castle, has been closed for three years "in preparation for renovation" since the roof began collapsing -- but no work......
Continue Reading "What To Do With the Arts and Industries Building?"May 8, 2007
A month and a half after former Secretary Lawrence M. Small read the writing on the wall and left the Smithsonian Institution with his tail between his legs and an investigation committee on his back, the Smithsonian board of regents has begun its search for his replacement. The Associated Press reports that the search committee, formed yesterday but not fully yet, will include six board members, including Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), and one of Chief......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Looks for New Leader"April 26, 2007
A new permanent exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History is already making its own history as the first to require entrance fees. One part of Butterflies and Plants: Partners in Evolution, planned to open in November, will cost visitors about $5. Much of the exhibit will be free, but an admission fee will be attached to a two-tier butterfly pavilion, similar to New York's American Museum of Natural History butterfly habitat. We're......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Butterflies Won't Come for Free"March 26, 2007
The Smithsonian Institution's woes have been front and center in the news lately, and now it has sent its first victim to the chopping block. In the wake of last week's fairly crushing – though not entirely surprising – report on the state of the museums, Secretary Lawrence M. Small has submitted his resignation, announced today by the Board of Regents Executive Committee. Some have noted that Small may only be the first of the......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian's Secretary Takes the Hint"March 23, 2007
Good morning, D.C. We're all still recovering from yesterday's lively debate on the House floor on the D.C. Voting Rights Act, which as you already know was successfully stalled by Republicans when they attempted to attach language repealing the District's handgun ban to the bill. This morning tireless WaPo voting rights correspondent Mary Beth Sheridan brings us a full account, with word that "The bill's supporters said they hope to return the D.C. vote legislation......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: A Matter of Days Edition"September 20, 2006
Written by DCist contributor Lindsay Gibson. Just as we learn that tourists spent record dollars in the District last year, the Smithsonian Institution is lamenting a drop in attendance to their museums during the same time period. Apparently visitors willing to shell out cash are balking at the Capital's fine free attractions. Some buildings were closed during Deluge '06, but museum officials are primarily placing the blame on the series of crimes against tourists this......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Can't Give it Away"July 11, 2006
While we celebrate the reopening of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery as classic examples of what museum care and innovation should be, the Smithsonian Institution at large may be slowly losing its grasp on the rest of its constituency. D.C.-based art critic and blogger Tyler Green has some critical words in a Los Angeles Times op-ed about the dilapidated conditions the other Smithsonian museums are suffering due to Congress' underfunding of......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Struggles to Stay Afloat"April 12, 2006
It was on April 16, 1862 that President Abraham Lincoln signed the Compensated Emancipation Act, effectively freeing 3,100 slaves in the District some nine months before a similar step was taken nationwide. While the District officially recognized the day from 1866 to 1901, it wasn't until 2002 that it was once again elevated to a historic celebration and until last year that it became a citywide holiday. This year's celebration of Emancipation Day features a......
Continue Reading "Events Mark Emancipation Day Celebration"April 12, 2006
Have you stopped by the Phillips Collection yet? If you walked away wondering where Degas and Toulouse-Lautrec found some of their inspiration, meet Katsushika Hokusai, the Japanese artist whose novel integration of Eastern technical skill with Western style went on to influence these European giants, along with Van Gogh, Monet, and countless others. Hokusai’s innovative paintings and drawings dared to move beyond the popular Japanese styles of his time that focused on wealthy, urban lifestyles......
Continue Reading "An Old Man Mad with Painting"January 31, 2006
Mayor Returns Smoking Ban Unsigned: An unsigned-by-Mayor-Williams smoking ban now heads to the U.S. Congress, which has 30 days to review the legislation. Read: he didn't veto it, but he's allowing it to be enacted sans his signature. Williams stated in a Post article that he fears the ban would go "too far in restricting the freedom for individuals to dine and work where they please." Actually, we think it's smoking that does that, not......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Unsigned Smoking Ban Edition"January 30, 2006
We spend plenty of time complaining about the state of the region's public transit network, be it delays on Metrorail, unpredictable arrival times for Metrobuses, or just too much traffic along area roadways. But at least we don't have to hitchhike to work. Today the Post features an entertaining feature on John Schindel, a Stafford County man whose decade-old DUI conviction has left him at the mercy of fellow motorists to get him to and......
Continue Reading "Morning Roundup: Hitchhiking to Work Edition"February 24, 2005
This year marks the 25th anniversary of the National Museum of African Art as part of the Smithsonian Institution. The museum has kicked off the celebration with "Treasures," an exhibit featuring 73 masks and wooden sculptures from the museum's collections and private loans. The first in a new series, "Treasures" is an "old-fashioned" kind of exhibit, one without lengthy wall labels explaining the specific cultural context for the objects. Instead, the exhibit invites you to......
Continue Reading "A 'Treasure' of an Exhibit"November 16, 2004
The Old Patent Office, the 1830s-era building in Gallery Place that is the home to the National Portrait Gallery, just got a major infusion of needed cash to build an enclosed canopy over its courtyard. The Post reports that Washington philanthropists Robert and Arlene Kogod have given the Smithsonian Institution $25 million for the project. That gift will help make the great enclosure (pictured here), designed by the esteemed Sir Norman Foster who designed a......
Continue Reading "Smithsonian Gets $25M Gift for Old Patent Office"
