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Like most major museums, SAAM will never have enough space to display the bulk of its treasures. To help remedy that, the renovation features an innovative storage and study center that contains some 3,300 works (more than three times the number in the exhibition galleries) and is fully accessible to visitors. Paintings, sculptures, crafts and miniatures can all be scrutinized in 64 glass cases on the third and fourth floors, with interactive kiosks to provide information on individual pieces.
Besides expanding the viewable collection, the Luce Foundation Center for American Art, as the storage and study center is known, aims to enhance the visitor's appreciation of the curator's role. "We have 41,000 artworks," says Broun. "Any other team of people would have picked different ones to show in the galleries. It's a way of empowering the public to see not only what you choose but what you didn't choose." In the same spirit, NPG curators are also emphasizing that museum displays depend on the preferences and selections of the particular person assembling them. Each year, for example, one gallery will be given over to an individual curator's take on an individual life: for the opening installation, poet and NPG historian David Ward has created an exhibit on Walt Whitman, who nursed wounded soldiers in the Patent Office Building during the Civil War. "I want people to understand that these lives are seen through different mirrors," says Pachter. "It might be the artist's, it might be the curator's, but these are representations, not the life itself."
Perhaps the most unusual feature of the reconfigured building is the Lunder Conservation Center, on the third-floor mezzanine and the skylit fourth-floor penthouse. In the center, which is shared by SAAM and the NPG, museumgoers can watch through glass walls as conservators analyze and, very carefully, restore artworks. "I think people are genuinely fascinated by what goes on behind the scenes at a museum," Harvey says. "This gives them a window on it, literally."
Another attempt at breaking down the barriers between the public and art is a national portrait competition that the NPG inaugurated last year. Named after a longtime volunteer docent who underwrote it, the Outwin Boochever Portrait Competition attracted more than 4,000 contestants, from every state, in its first year. The winner, to be announced shortly before the museum opens, will receive $25,000 and a commission to portray a prominent American.
Both museums feature works by artists who never became household names. Indeed, at SAAM, there are a number of distinguished pieces by self-taught amateurs. "Art is something you make out of passion and a desire to communicate," says Harvey. "I think it's a sad day when you stop making refrigerator art. You keep on singing in the shower. You shouldn't stop making art." Probably the most popular work in SAAM is by a man who followed that credo with religious zeal. The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations' Millennium General Assembly is an eye-popping construction of furniture, light bulbs and other discards that Washington, D.C. janitor James Hampton wrapped in tinfoil and assembled unobserved in a rented garage, beginning around 1950. Discovered only after Hampton's death in 1964, this glittering creation could be the suite of furniture of a heavenly host in a low-rent tinsel paradise.
In representing the fierce, isolated individuality of one artist's vision, Hampton's Throne is a fitting complement to a gallery devoted to eight works by Albert Pinkham Ryder. "Ryder is almost emblematic for our building," says Broun. "This building was looking back to a classic era and also looking to the future, and so was Ryder. He was painting narrative stories from the Bible and 16th-century English history. At the same time, he was working with new types of paint and exploring ways that the paint itself conveys the meaning of the picture—so that if you work long enough with layer on boggy layer, you get a meaning that you wouldn’t expect." Because Ryder experimented restlessly with new ways to bind his pigments, many of his paintings have darkened with time and their layers have cracked. Nevertheless, he was a prophetic figure for later generations of painters. Visionary, recklessly inventive, leading a life both noble and tragic, he was also peculiarly American. For a visitor wandering the reborn Patent Office Building galleries, the Ryder room is a fine place to pause and contemplate the mysteries of our national identity.
Arthur Lubow wrote about Norwegian artist Edvard Munch in the March issue of Smithsonian. Timothy Bell lives in New York City and specializes in architectural photography.


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