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October 13, 2010

Wednesday Roundup: Anthems, Feathers and Pheon

These supplies were recommended for making your own sketchbook at the Luce Center's drawing workshop. Image courtesy of Eye Level.

These supplies were recommended for making your own sketchbook at the Luce Center's drawing workshop. Image courtesy of Eye Level.

Feather Forensics—Featured right now on the Smithsonian Science homepage is a video about identifying dead birds who have mostly been struck by airplanes, such as the Canada geese that brought a US Airways plane down into the Hudson River. The video is an interview with forensic ornithologist Carla Dove (no, that’s not her stage name), who talks about how she and her team can determine bird species just by closely examining their feathers.

Anthem Newsflash—The American History Museum’s Star-Spangled Banner exhibit is home to the flag that inspired Francis Scott Key to write a poem that would become the lyrics to the national anthem. So the question is, did Key intend for his poem to be a song when he wrote it in 1814?  “Oh Say Can You See” reports that the historians at American History believe Key’s intention was to write a composition to be set to a melody.

Pheon Now Online—A few weeks ago, I reported on the launch of Pheon, the new alternate reality game at American Art. While we were all off on our holiday weekend, the museum launched the online version of Pheon, which can be played from the comfort of your own computer. The game currently has 21 beginner missions, seven of which are directly related to artworks in the museum’s collections. Don’t get too comfortable behind that screen, though, because most missions send you out into the real world. Go straight to the game’s Facebook app to get started (you must have a Facebook account to play).

Make Your Own Sketchbook—Featured this week on Eye Level are a few tips for making your own sketchbook, as offered by Katherine Rand, who taught the Luce Center of American Art’s latest drawing workshop. The Luce Center offers an ongoing drawing program, called Draw and Discover, where anyone from the public can come and not only practice their drawing skills but also learn nifty tidbits about sketchbooks, like what to use to bind your own book and what kind of paper holds up best.






Writing New Chapters of African American History Through The Kinsey Collection

Bernard and Shirley Kinsey also have a portrait of themselves in their collection.

Portrait of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey, 2002, by Artis Lane, image courtesy of the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Bernard and Shirley Kinsey have been married 44 years. Since Bernard’s retirement in 1991 from the Xerox corporation, the couple has traveled extensively, collecting art from around the world. But in an effort to uncover their own family history, the Kinseys began to delve into African American history and art. This has become their primary area of interest, and over the years they have acquired a wealth of historical objects, documents and artworks, from shackles used on an African slave ship to a copy of the program from the 1963 March On Washington, where Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.

A group of artworks and artifacts from the Kinsey Collection comprises the next exhibition in the National Museum of African American History and Culture’s gallery in the American History Museum. The Kinseys have also published a book—The Kinsey Collection: Shared Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey-Where Art and History Intersect—which accompanies the exhibit and includes the objects on display as well as several supplementary pieces in their collection. I spoke with Bernard Kinsey about the exhibit, which opens this Friday, October 15, and will be on display through May 1, 2011.

What first inspired you and your wife to begin collecting objects from African American history?

We live our lives on two simple principles: To whom much is given, much is required and a life of no regrets. We started with $26 and a job in 1967 right out of college. And my wife and I decided that we were going to live on one paycheck and save the rest. My wife, Shirley, worked for 15 years and never spent a dime of her paycheck. We saved it and we bought property and made investments, which allowed us to retire while still in our forties in 1991 and to do the two things we love most, which is to travel and to collect art. We’ve been to 90 countries. And we want to share our blessings—we’ve raised $22 million for charities and  for historically black colleges. We’ve sent or assisted more than 300 kids to college. And we embarked on telling this story of the African American experience through dedicated research about the history that has not been told about our people.

But we started African American collecting in a serious way when Khalil, our son, came home with a book report on family history. We couldn’t go past my granddaddy. We knew immediately that we needed to do something about that.

Tell me a bit about your collection. What kind of narrative is represented?

This is a story about the Kinsey family and how we see and experience the African American culture. We’ve gone out all over the world to try to integrate all this stuff in a collection that says, “Who are these people that did so much that nobody knows about?”

Josiah Walls was the first black congressman from the state of Florida in 1871. This brother owned a farm in Gainesville, Florida, in the 1860s, after the Civil War, and worked at Florida A&M University, our alma mater. Walls fought three different election recalls to be elected and died in 1902 in obscurity. And we did not have another black congressman in the state of Florida until 1993. All three from Florida A&M, all classmates of mine. What we try to do also, all through the exhibition, all through the book, is emphasize the importance of black colleges, the importance of our churches, the importance of our community organizations.

Ignatius Sancho, he was a bad brother. Born on a slave ship, and he was the first brother to be picked by the Duke of Montague to see if black people had the cranial capacity to be human. So he picked this brother, and he goes on to become a world famous opera singer, entrepreneur. And he’s the first African to vote in an election in England. Nobody knows about him. Obscurity.

Everybody knows about Phyllis Wheatley. Her name came from the slave ship Phyllis, she was bought by the Wheatley family, so she’s Phyllis Wheatley.  She comes here at seven years old, speaks no English. In two years she speaks English, Greek, and Latin. In four years, she’s playing the piano and violin, and in seven years, she writes the first book written by an African American in this country, and couldn’t get it published in America, had to go to England. And this is at the height of our revolution. 1773. So what we want to do is say there’s another side to this picture called America. And that side is a people that have done extraordinary things.

Well-to-do Black Couple, c. 1860, from the Kinsey Collection. Image courtesy of the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Well-to-do Black Couple, c. 1860, from the Kinsey Collection. Image courtesy of the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

What is the competition like for acquiring these objects and artworks?

The most competitive auctions are African American stuff. I just got this catalog the other day. The African American section could be about four or five pages, and it will be fierce. They have the Dred Scott decision, 1858, at 4 p.m. on the 14th of October. I’m going to be on that. If you’re going to do this, you have to play at a very high level. There are a lot of people that collect African American history, no question about it. And I think all of it is fine, but there are certain documents that make a difference. And if you have those documents, it says everything about that particular historical moment. So that’s what we’ve tried to do.

The Equiano book, the only written account of someone who experienced the actual horror of being on a slave ship for five months, it took me a year of talking to this guy before he would tell me he had three Equianos. He’s a Princeton professor, and we never met other than on the phone. He died before I was able to buy the book. His wife called me and said that he had died, and we began to negotiate. I ended up purchasing the book, and since then I’ve purchased two of the three books. You see these books once every 35 to 40 years. You see them when someone dies. Because most families don’t know what this stuff is. Imagine that this was just in a room, and you walked in. Unless you knew what it was, you’d just think it was a piece of paper.

Do you have any recommendations for people who are interested in getting into their own backgrounds and family histories?

First of all, everybody has a family history. We suggest that everybody start interviewing their grandparents and their aunts and uncles, and holding on to those photographs and writing on the back who they are and their relationship, doing family trees, doing your DNA. Those are things that we all can do, because in fact, you don’t need an exhibition to be able to know who you are or where you came from.

So have you discovered anything about your personal family history?

Yes. Carrie Kinsey. There’s a book called Slavery By Another Name, by Douglas Blackmon who won the 2009 Pulitzer prize for nonfiction. It’s a powerful book. It’s about the early 1900s when slavery had been abolished, but it became big business to put young black males in the prison system and the chain gang system for free labor. On page eight, they talk about this black African American woman, 1903, named Carrie Kinsey, and I immediately knew this was my family. See, we never could find out where this Kinsey name came from. But there are two big plantations in Bainbridge, Georgia: the McCree plantation and the Smith plantation. And we believe that that really is where we all came from. [Carrie Kinsey’s letter referenced the McCree plantation, and they later discovered that Carrie Kinsey was Bernard Kinsey’s cousin].

One of the wonderful things about collecting is that you really are discovering history. It’s not like all history has been discovered, because it hasn’t. The African American story has been brutalized because of racism and discrimination. And much of African American history or what is written about  our ancestors never spoke to their extraordinary contributions in building what we know as America. We’re writing new chapters everyday.

“The Kinsey Collection: Shared Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey” will be on exhibit in the American History Museum from October 15 through May 1, 2011.






October 12, 2010

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, Try a Spanish-Language Scavenger Hunt

Some happy hunters at the Luce Foundation Center. Photo courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Some happy hunters at the Luce Foundation Center. Photo courtesy of the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

The Smithsonian American Art Museum has been hosting a variety of themed scavenger hunts in its Luce Foundation Center, a visible art storage facility on the museum’s third floor, since 2006. But just last year, Tierney Sneeringer, an assistant for the center with a passion for the Spanish language, decided she would start translating the clues. So far, she has translated three of the hunts, including one with a focus on Smithsonian history that has been offered throughout Hispanic Heritage Month, from September 15 to October 15.

“I thought it would be a really good way to engage visitors who speak the language,” says Sneeringer, who studied in Spain prior to working at the Luce Foundation Center.

The offering has been enjoyed by native speakers like eight-year-0ld Mateo Flores, who begged his mother to take him, as well as learners of the language. When I navigated the clues one evening last week, it put my rusty Spanish, studied in high school and off and on in college, to the test. Once I remembered that siglo meant “century” and not “aisle,” I started to get in the flow.

Tightly-cropped images, as well as guiding hints in the questions, direct the scavenger to seven of the more than 3,3oo works of art on display and reveal the pieces’ interesting ties to Smithsonian history. Do you know what sculpture’s face was used as a model for the faces of all the first lady mannequins at the National Museum of American History? What about the famous painter who worked in a studio in the Smithsonian Castle? How about the 20th-century abstract expressionist painter—friends with Mark Rothko, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Arshile Gorky—who worked, by day, as a Smithsonian curator?

I won’t spoil the surprise. The scavenger hunt is available at the Luce Center’s information desk or can be downloaded, along with other hunts, here. Happy hunting! Or, shall I say, feliz caza!



Posted By: Megan Gambino — American Art Museum, Smithsonian Institution | Link | Comments (0)




Tim Gunn Makes it Work at the Teen Design Fair

Tim Gunn, of Project Runway fame, will be speaking at the Teen Design Fair. Photo by Richard Patterson. Courtesy of Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum.

Tim Gunn, of Project Runway fame, will be speaking at the Teen Design Fair. Photo by Richard Patterson. Courtesy of Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum.

Tonight more than 400 New York City high school students interested in pursuing careers in fashion, architecture and industrial, interior and graphic design will gather at the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum’s Teen Design Fair in Manhattan. The fair, which the museum has hosted annually since 2007, offers teens the opportunity to meet top designers and learn about programs and scholarships offered at design colleges across the country.

Tim Gunn, Chief Creative Officer at Liz Claiborne Inc. and co-host of Lifetime TV’s Project Runway, will deliver the event’s keynote address. He has spoken at the last few fairs (hear his speech from last year here), and said, in a phone interview, as long as he is invited, he will keep coming. Gunn is committed to mentoring aspiring students and at Parsons The New School of Design, where he was a faculty member and administrator for 24 years, and in the Project Runway work room, he has seen such promise in the new generation of emerging designers. ”They have a sincere passion for designing,” he says. “They have a vision, and they want to make their mark on the world.”

Fashion designer Cynthia Rowley, chief Google webmaster and logo designer Dennis Hwang, New Yorker and New York Times illustrator Maira Kalman, architect Stephen Kieran, comic book illustrator Phil Jimenez and interior designer William Sofield, among others, will be in attendance to meet with students.

The Teen Design Fair is part of the museum’s National Design Week (October 9-17) programming, taking place in New York City and around the country. Added bonus: Admission to the Cooper-Hewitt is free for the week. Take advantage!






October 11, 2010

Events: Performance Art, National Fossil Day, Michael Jackson and More

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Cub Scouts View the Stegosaurus (c. 1950s). Image courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution Archives.

Monday, October 11: Performance by Artist James Luna

In observance of Columbus Day, performance artist James Luna invites the public to “Take a Picture with a Real Indian” at the Christopher Columbus statue outside Union Station. Luna employs humor, irony, and penetrating insight to confront commonly held misperceptions of Native Americans. In this re-staging of his acclaimed performance work, he involves members of the audience, who take away photographs of themselves with the artist. Free. American Indian Museum, 4:15-5:45 PM. PLEASE NOTE: This event does not take place at the museum, but at the Christopher Columbus statue outside Union Station between Massachusetts and Delaware Avenue.

Tuesday, October 12: Lathe Demonstrations

Watch the Capital Area WoodturnersChesapeake Woodturners, and Montgomery County Woodturners demonstrate the process used by the artists in A Revolution in Wood to create their unique pieces. Free. American Art Museum, 12:00-1:00 PM.

Wednesday, October 13: National Fossil Day

Learn how fossils offer clues for understanding the history of life while exploring the museum’s Fossil Halls. Enjoy hands-on activities at Discover Carts, watch paleontologists and volunteers at work in the Fossil Lab, and meet scientists who study fossils. Then go outside to the National Mall to collect your own fossils at a fossil dig (rain or shine). Natural History Museum, 11:00 AM-4:00 PM.

Thursday, October 14: Face-to-Face Portrait Talk: Michael Jackson

Andy Warhol is famous for his silkscreened pop art portraits of celebrities and in this week’s evening gallery talk series, curator writer Warren Perry will discuss Warhol’s portrait of Michael Jackson. Free. Portrait Gallery, 6-6:30 PM.

Friday, October 15: Forensic Friday

Join Smithsonian forensic anthropologists as they study new cases from America’s historic past. Take advantage of this opportunity to ask the forensic anthropologists questions and observe first-hand the basic methods used for documenting human remains recovered from archaeological investigations. While you’re at the museum, be sure to check out the related exhibit Written in Bone, which was recently covered in Smithsonian. Free. Natural History Museum, 1:00 PM

For updates on all exhibitions and events, visit our companion site goSmithsonian.com





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