Executive Images
To assemble "The American Presidency" exhibition, experts scour a treasure trove of historic pictures
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2001, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
But a photo archive is a bit like the Egyptian desert—no one knows what ancient wonders it holds. It takes an expert to unearth these treasures. "You have to rely on good archivists who know their collections," said Kreiss, who has been freelancing for the Smithsonian for 20 years.
"You want, say, some farmers picking cotton in the 1940s. Which repository would have them? Well, probably several in Washington. I would check the Department of Agriculture, the Library of Congress, the National Archives and the Museum of American History. It can be very labor intensive, especially if you’re trying to find the best photographs."
For "The American Presidency," Kreiss and colleagues Carrie Bruns, Shannon Perich and Sue Ostroff dug up some 400 photographs, engravings and lithographs to accompany a plethora of Presidential artifacts, such as the lap desk on which Thomas Jefferson penned the Declaration of Independence, Lincoln’s top hat, a bullet-pierced eyeglass case that saved Theodore Roosevelt’s life when it deflected an assassin’s bullet, a filing cabinet—its drawers crudely crowbarred open—from Richard Nixon’s scandals, and even Warren Harding’s monogrammed silk pajamas.
At the behest of Smithsonian Secretary Lawrence Small, the exhibition was put together in eight months; normally it would take at least three years. Fortunately, most of the 900 objects in the show were in the Smithsonian’s legendary "attic." And about 80 percent of the photographs are from Smithsonian repositories.
A couple of hours poring over old photographs sounds like fun to me. Kreiss says you come across some great things you weren’t looking for.
While she was scouring the National Archives on a project for the Women’s Museum in Dallas, she turned up some 1920s photographs predicting what women would be wearing in 2000: "soft metal" dresses, frocks with built-in wings for flying, and electric coats. Kreiss took me on a tour of "The American Presidency" to show me some of the photographic gems that bring the exhibition together. What fascinated me was the imaginative use made of some pictures. A shot of Harry Truman on a whistle-stop train tour was blown up to life-size and curved to look just like the real thing.
The original print of James Buchanan taking the oath of office outside the Capitol in 1857, the oldest known photograph of a Presidential inauguration, is here in a glass case. The print is very fragile and will be removed from the display and replaced by a durable modern copy.
I was equally taken with a grand indoor scene: an image of the old Pension Building, now the National Building Museum, all rigged out for William McKinley’s inaugural ball in 1901. Equipped with electricity for the first time, the place is ablaze with strings and spirals of brilliant lights, making the enormous columns shine.
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