DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Bound For Freedom's Light -- Notes:
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Description of Pictures: Bound for Freedoms Light: African Americans and the Civil War
February 1, 2013, through March 2, 2014
To commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, the National Portrait Gallery will present “Bound for Freedom’s Light: African Americans and the Civil War.” This installation will focus on the roles that individual African Americans played during the course of this hard-fought conflict. In addition to highlighting the Civil War experiences of famous men and women such as Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Martin R. Delaney and Sojourner Truth, “Bound for Freedom’s Light” will include compelling stories of others whose names may be less familiar. Among those featured will be Gordon, who escaped enslavement on a Louisiana plantation to join a black regiment and fight for the Union cause; and Robert Smalls, the South Carolina bondsman who freed himself and his family by seizing control of a Confederate ship and delivering it safely into Union hands.
“Bound for Freedom’s Light” will include vintage photographs and historic prints, the majority drawn from the collection of the National Portrait Gallery. The installation’s curator is Ann Shumard, curator of photographs at the museum.
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Copyrights: All pictures were taken by Bruce Guthrie who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the Creative Commons definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. If asked for permission in advance, I'll usually waive the non-commercial clause unless it's for people trying to sell the photos. A free copy of any printed publication using the photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from official signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
BOUND_130129_02.JPG: Setting up for the new exhibit.
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Directly Related Pages: Other pages here that have content directly related to this one:
[Display ALL photos]
2006_DC_SIPG_ColdWar: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Presidency and the Cold War (11 photos from 2006)
2006_DC_SIPG_Comp: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Portrait Competition (23 photos from 2006)
2007_DC_SIPG_Motto: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Let Your Motto Be Resistance (4 photos from 2007)
2007_DC_SIPG_SDay: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Portraits of Sandra Day O'Connor (1 photos from 2007)
2007_DC_SIPG_Top: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Over the Top (7 photos from 2007)
2008_DC_SIPG_1Life: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- One Life Mask of Lincoln (2 photos from 2008)
2008_DC_SIPG_Bally: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Ballyhoo! (35 photos from 2008)
2008_DC_SIPG_Colbert: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Colbert portrait (12 photos from 2008)
2008_DC_SIPG_GM1: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Graphic Masters I (28 photos from 2008)
2008_DC_SIPG_Herblock: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center -- Special Exhibits -- Herblock (10 photos from 2008)
Generally-Related Subject Description: The country's original patent office building burned down in 1836. From 1839 to 1866, another was built. Designed by Robert Mills who also designed the Capitol and Treasury buildings, it was based in part on the design of the Parthenon with marble hallways and Doric columns. During the Civil War, it was used as both a troop barracks and a hospital; both Clara Barton and Walt Whitman nursed wounded soldiers here. Abraham Lincoln held his second inaugural ball in the main gallery in March 1865, one month before his assassination. When the building's construction was finished, it was the largest building in the country. The Patent Office moved to the Dept of Commerce building in 1932. The Civil Service Commission took over until they moved to their new headquarters in 1960. Saved from destruction by the Commission of Fine Arts, the building was turned over to the Smithsonian which established two galleries -- the National Portrait Gallery and the National Museum of American Art -- in the building.
The building closed in January 2000 for a $200 million renovation. It reopened on July 1, 2006. In the interim, it beefed up its virtual presence on the Web at http://www.npg.si.edu and had a number of exhibits have been touring the country. One of those is on American woman and "A Brush with History: Paintings from the National Portrait Gallery". In the spring of 2001, a generous $30 million donation from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation of Las Vegas, Nevada allowed it to purchase the "Lansdowne" portrait of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart.
The building closed well before I purchased my first digital camera and once it reopened, I found myself taking lots and lots of pictures. For example, during the reopening day on July 1, 2006, I took over 3,500 pictures. To keep the numbers on each page smaller, I separated them out by theme, sometimes somewhat arbitrarily, so you'll see separate listings for:
-- America's Presidents (paintings, sculpture, etc ...More...
Generally-Related Subject Pages: Other pages here that have content somewhat related to this one:
1998_DC_SIPG: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture (4 photos from 1998)
1997_DC_SIPG: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture (5 photos from 1997)
1999_DC_SIPG: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture (2 photos from 1999)
2006_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (35 photos from 2006)
2008_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (13 photos from 2008)
2009_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (219 photos from 2009)
2007_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (5 photos from 2007)
2010_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (11 photos from 2010)
2011_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (29 photos from 2011)
2012_DC_SIPG_Pres: DC -- Donald W. Reynolds Center for Amer Art & Portraiture -- America's Presidents (11 photos from 2012)
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[Museums (Art)]
2013 photos: So far, my camera is mostly the Fuji X-S1 but, depending on the event, I'm also using a Nikon D7000 and Nikon D600.
Trips this year have been limited to a Civil War Trust conference in Memphis.