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Essential
Architecture- Washington D.C.
Freer Gallery of Art |
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architect
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Charles A. Platt |
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location
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National Mall, Washington, D.C. |
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date
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1923 |
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style
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Renaissance Revival |
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construction
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stone |
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type
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museum gallery |
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The entrance to the Freer Gallery.
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Plan |
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The Freer Gallery of Art is the Smithsonian Institution's museum of East
Asian art, including art from China, Korea, Japan, South Asia (India),
and southeast Asia, as well as American art. It opened to the general
public in 1923. It is located on the south side of the National Mall in
Washington, D.C.
Visitor favorites include Chinese ceramics and Chinese paintings,
Korean Ceramics, and Korean pottery, Japanese folding screens, Indian
and Persian manuscripts, and Buddhist sculpture from various regions and
time periods. The artwork of the gallery ranges from Neolithic to
modern, with multitudes of painted art mostly from the Song Dynasty,
Ming Dynasty, and Qing Dynasty of China.
History
The gallery was founded by Charles Lang Freer (1854–1919), a
railroad-car manufacturer from Detroit who gave to the United States his
collections and funds for a building to house them. The
Italian-Renaissance-style gallery, constructed in granite and marble,
was designed by American architect Charles A. Platt. When the gallery
opened to the public in 1923, it was the first Smithsonian museum for
fine arts. In subsequent years, the collections have grown through gifts
and purchases to nearly triple the size of Freer's bequest.
A highlight of the Whistler holdings is the Peacock Room, a
dining room that was once part of a London townhouse. In 1876, Whistler
lavishly decorated the room with a blue and gold peacock design. After
the owner's death, the room was purchased in toto and brought to the
United States and permanently installed in the Freer Gallery.
The adjoining Arthur M. Sackler Gallery was opened in 1987 to
house a gift of some 1,000 works of Asian art from Dr. Arthur M. Sackler
(1913–1987), a research physician and medical publisher from New York
City. Among the highlights of his gift were early Chinese bronzes and
jades, Chinese paintings and lacquerware, ancient Near Eastern ceramics
and metalware, and sculpture from South and Southeast Asia. Sackler also
donated $4 million toward construction of the gallery. Since 1987, the
gallery's collections have expanded to include the Vever Collection, an
important assemblage of the Islamic arts of the book from the 11th to
the 19th century; 19th- and 20th-century Japanese prints and
contemporary porcelain; Indian, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean paintings;
arts of village India; contemporary Chinese ceramics; and photography.
International loan exhibitions have included Timur and the
Princely Vision: Persian Art and Culture in the 15th Century; Yani: the
Brush of Innocence, featuring paintings by a 14-year-old Chinese
prodigy; When Kingship Descended from Heaven: Masterpieces of
Mesopotamian Art from the Louvre; Court Arts of Indonesia; Korean Art of
the 18th Century: Splendor & Simplicity; and A Basketmaker in Rural
Japan.
The Sackler Gallery is connected by an underground exhibition
space to the neighboring Freer Gallery of Art. Although their
collections are stored and exhibited separately, the two museums share a
director, administration, and staff.
The Eugene and Agnes E. Meyer Auditorium, located in the Freer,
provides a venue for a broad variety of free public programs relating to
the collections of the Freer and Sackler galleries, including concerts
of Asian music and dance, films, lectures, chamber music, and dramatic
presentations [1].
Care of the collections began before the museum came into
existence as Charles Lang Freer, the founder of the Freer Gallery of
Art, hired Japanese painting restorers to care for his works and to
prepare them for their eventual home as part of the Smithsonian
Institution. In 1932, the Freer Gallery of Art hired a full-time
Japanese restorer and created what was to become the East Asian Painting
Conservation Studio. The Technical Laboratory, and the first use of
scientific methods for the study of art at the Smithsonian Institution,
started in 1951 when the chemist Rutherford J. Gettens moved from the
Fogg Museum at Harvard University to the Freer. The East Asian Painting
Conservation Studio and the Technical Laboratory merged in 1990 to form
the Department of Conservation and Scientific Research [2].
         
        
       
      
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links
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Freer Gallery of Art |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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