
Travel
Exploring Philadelphia’s public art hotspots
The popular Canadian tourist destination is a treasure trove of free art
- 948 words
- 4 minutes
This article is over 5 years old and may contain outdated information.
Washington, D.C. is so much more than the White House, monuments and memorials. It’s a cultural capital with leading restaurants, top music venues and fantastic museums – particularly those dedicated to art. While the Smithsonian museums lining “America’s front yard” are worth their popularity, take some time to venture a few blocks away and dig into a few of D.C.’s top-notch public art collections.
It’s worth coming to this free museum just to see Leonardo da Vinci’s captivating, 543-year-old portrait of the solemn Ginevra de’ Benci, the only da Vinci masterpiece on public display this side of the Atlantic. But make no mistake, there’s plenty more to see at the grand National Gallery of Art on Constitution Avenue between 4th and 9th streets. Rembrandt’s moody Self-Portrait, Degas’ Little Dancer Aged Fourteen sculpture, Pollock’s Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist), Calder’s Vertical Constellation with Bomb sculpture — these are just some of the highlights of their impressive collection housed in two buildings and a sculpture garden. Join one of the free guided tours offered daily and don’t forget to snap a picture with the big blue rooster, Hahn/Cock (2013) by Katharina Fritsch, on the Roof Terrace.
Art comes in many different forms, and The Textile Museum on 21st Street NW on George Washington University’s Foggy Bottom Campus is dedicated to the beauty and history of fabric as a medium. The museum possesses a number of globally significant collections containing more than 20,000 textiles representing five millennia and five continents. Highlights include one of the world’s most important research collections of Oriental carpets, a top assemblage of pre-Hispanic Peruvian textiles and one of North America’s largest ikat collections. New exhibitions are slated to open in September.
While the National Gallery of Art boasts 83 paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir (only 8 of which are on display), the Phillips Collection has only one, the sizable Luncheon of the Boating Party — but, according to one sassy docent (and numerous art collectors and historians) it’s the painter’s best work. This private collection on 21st Street NW is known as “America’s first museum of modern art” and houses more than 4,000 works from masters of French impressionism, such as Renoir, to American modernism, such as Georgia O’Keeffe, to contemporary art, including a room dedicated to an installation by Wolfgang Laib. From Oct. 7 to Jan. 7, 2018, learn more about Renoir’s famous painting and the friends that inspired it through an exhibition focusing on the work comprising more than 40 related works and sketches.
Travel
The popular Canadian tourist destination is a treasure trove of free art
Wildlife
In the field with researchers and volunteers scrambling to save Canada’s most endangered mammal
Wildlife
Plus: Honey bees love a puzzle and the efforts to save bison in Saskatoon, caribou in Jasper and spotted owls in B.C.
Places
Art is now the hottest commodity in the city that steel built