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It seems that the author of the song Home, Sweet Home, John Howard Payne, had died in Tunis and was buried there. Corcoran was incensed; certainly the author of the celebrated piece should be buried in his own country. So the philanthropist had the body exhumed and returned to Washington, where it was reburied after a proper wake in Corcoran's great building.
By 1890 Corcoran's collection had outgrown the gallery, and the museum's trustees erected the present Corcoran Gallery of Art two blocks away on 17th Street. The paintings were moved out in 1897, and two years later the U.S. Court of Claims moved in. Then that, too, overflowed the premises with its stacks of files and departed in 1964.
Slowly deteriorating, the building had been targeted for demolition. But just in time, in 1962, it was rescued by President and Mrs. Kennedy, who were already involved in a project to restore the Federal-style houses fronting Lafayette Square, opposite the White House. In June 1965 the Smithsonian requested and was granted the building to be used as a "gallery of arts, crafts and design." Officially renamed the Renwick Gallery, it became a branch of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Restoration took another six years or so, and the gallery was finally reopened to the public in January 1972. Since then it has proved a most versatile site for many arts, including lectures, dance performances and concerts. The Grand Salon, it turns out, is acoustically perfect and has been used by the Smithsonian Chamber Orchestra for recording sessions.
Surprisingly, the opulence of the Grand Salon and the exhibitions of contemporary crafts work well together.
"A walk through the Renwick proves that the magnificent Grand Salon can coexist in harmony with fine craft," said Kenneth Trapp, the Renwick's curator in charge. "The building itself is beautifully crafted; it is decorative art. And the Grand Salon falls out as a sort of separate space, but very sympathetic."
Some wonderful things have been exhibited here: ceramics by the great Peter Voulkos, Ed Rossbach's fiber work, Harvey Littleton's glass, Sam Maloof's furniture. And all of these artists have won Masters of the Medium awards from the James Renwick Alliance, a museum support group. Albert Paley, also an award winner, designed Portal Gates, an art nouveau work in steel, brass, copper and bronze, for the entrance to the museum shop. It has since been moved to an exhibition space on the second floor.
The museum shop, featuring work by American craft artists, is so outstanding that some people who have sold work there have been known to claim that they were "exhibited at the Renwick Gallery."


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