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After entering, those who turn right, toward the National Portrait Gallery, will also find themselves in a familiar, contemporary environment. In two exhibitions, "Americans Now" and "Portraiture Now," visitors "will be able to see portraits of people just like them and go into the historical galleries with that visual information to start a dialogue about historical lives," says Brandon Fortune, the NPG's associate curator of painting and sculpture. "You can't get to Benjamin Franklin without walking past big photographs of teenagers. We're very proud of that." In addition to photography, which the NPG began collecting in 1976, the museum has embraced such unconventional approaches to portraiture as a hologram of President Reagan and a video triptych of David Letterman, Jay Leno and Conan O'Brien. "These are all delivery systems of personality," says Pachter. "I think of coming to the gallery as an encounter between lives. You're not coming just to look at brushstrokes."
In a kind of operatic overture—in galleries labeled "American Origins"—the NPG sweeps across the centuries from 1600 to 1900 on the first floor, before arriving, on the second, at the exhibition that most pre-renovation visitors will likely remember best: "America's Presidents." In the previous installation, the collection was confined to the Hall of Presidents, but that imposing, stone-columned space now covers only the nation's leaders from Washington to Lincoln, and a gallery about twice its size brings the story up to the present, including an official portrait, William Jefferson Clinton by Nelson Shanks, that was unveiled on April 24.
The prize of the presidential collection—arguably, of the entire NPG—is the full-length painting of Washington by Gilbert Stuart known as the Lansdowne portrait. Stuart painted it from life in 1796, shortly before the first president concluded his second term in office. Although two other versions exist, this is the original. It depicts Washington in a simple black suit, clasping a sheathed ceremonial sword in his left hand and extending his right arm in what may be a gesture of farewell. "The Constitution barely describes the presidency," Pachter says. "This painting is the defining document." Ironically, the Lansdowne portrait spent most of its life in England. It was commissioned by a wealthy Pennsylvania couple, the Binghams, as a gift for the Marquis of Lansdowne, who had been sympathetic to the American cause. In the 19th century, the painting was sold to the Earl of Rosebery, from whom it descended into the possession of Lord Dalmeny, the current heir to the earldom.
From the time the NPG first opened, the museum had exhibited the Lansdowne portrait on extended loan.When Dalmeny announced his intention of selling it at auction in 2001, Pachter was aghast. "It is a great painter doing a portrait of a great American at the perfect moment," he says. "That is our ideal image. Losing it was the most awful thing I could have contemplated." He went to Dalmeny, who offered it to the Smithsonian for $20 million—"a lot of money," Pachter admits, "but maybe less than he would have gotten at auction." Pachter took to the radio and television airwaves to publicize the museum's plight and, after just nine days, found deliverance in a benefactor. The Donald W. Reynolds Foundation of Las Vegas, Nevada—a national philanthropic organization founded in 1954 by the late media entrepreneur for which it was named—donated the full purchase price, plus an additional $10 million to renovate the Hall of Presidents and to take the Lansdowne painting on a national tour. Last October, the foundation donated an additional $45 million for the overall work on the Patent Office Building. "It was," says Pachter, "to use one of George Washington's words, 'providential.'"
While SAAM hasn't reeled in quite as big a fish as the Lansdowne, it, too, made some splashy acquisitions during the renovation, including Industrial Cottage, a 15-foot-long Pop Art painting by James Rosenquist; The Bronco Buster, a Frederic Remington bronze sculpture; and Woman Eating, a Duane Hanson resin and fiberglass sculpture. SAAM has also commissioned a new work, MVSEVM, by San Francisco artist David Beck, a treasure cabinet with pull-out drawers that is inspired by the neo-Classical grandeur of the Patent Office Building.
While the transformation of offices into galleries opened up 57,000 square feet of additional floor area, the reclamation of windows in the building resulted in a loss of wall space, which SAAM curators have seized as an opportunity to display more sculpture. "We've got the largest collection of American sculpture, period," says SAAM's Harvey. "It's not a footnote, an afterthought, an appendage. It's part of the story of American art." In the old days, SAAM displayed most of its sculpture in the building's long corridors. Now sculpture is dispersed throughout the galleries.
So is furniture, which was not previously exhibited in the museum. "It's not about becoming Winterthur [the du Pont estate near Wilmington, Delaware]," says Harvey. "In Colonial history, with the exception of John Singleton Copley and a couple of other painters, you're better off with furniture.
By the time a visitor reaches SAAM's contemporary collection on the third floor, the distinctions between fine and decorative art begin to blur. A 22-foot painting by David Hockney of interlocking abstract forms, illuminated by a programmed series of colored lights, shares space with the late video artist Nam June Paik's neon-festooned assemblage of television sets in the shape of a map of the United States. "We focused a lot on contemporary artworks that we feel are deeply experiential," says director Broun. In addition, the definition of what constitutes an American artist is interpreted broadly. The NPG depicts non-American citizens who have influenced American history—Winston Churchill and the Beatles, for example—and SAAM includes foreign artists, such as British-born David Hockney, who had an important impact on American culture. "Hockney has been in Los Angeles since the 1970s," says Harvey, "and there is no L.A. art of the 1980s without him."


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