Dear Friends and Members,
Individual collectors have long played a role in creating the Smithsonian we know today. Just consider some of Smithsonian Associates’ neighbors on the National Mall: The Freer Gallery of Art reflects Charles Lang Freer’s appreciation of the arts of Asia; Joseph Hirshhorn’s contemporary collections provided the spark for the museum that bears his name; and the National Museum of African Art found its nucleus in the collections of Warren M. Robbins, which he’d showcased in the Frederick Douglass House on Capitol Hill.
This month’s guide invites you into the fascinating world of private collectors. The curators at the William Louis-Dreyfus Foundation examine how the poet and businessman developed a remarkable and eclectic collection of nearly 4,000 works. His daughter, actor, producer, and activist Julia Louis-Dreyfus, offers an introduction to the program (p. 41). Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum reflects the personality and the passions of a visionary 19th-century patron. Its assistant curator shares stories of how Gardner assembled a collection unlike any other of the period (p. 35).
Businesswoman Marjorie Merriweather Post created an extravagant and elegant collector’s world in her Washington, D.C., estate Hillwood. Stroll through its themed gardens and rooms that dazzle with French and Russian decorative arts on a springtime visit (p. 56).
For even more dazzle, a live-from-Italy program follows the evolution of the Uffizi Gallery from a Medici-family showcase into one of the world’s most important museums. (p. 34). Once, many of Rome’s greatest art treasures could only be seen in private collections. View several that have transformed into public museums and learn how their artworks helped shape the Italian Renaissance (p. 34).
But there’s no need for a Medici budget to collect original art. The Smithsonian Associates Art Collectors Program is the perfect place to find your inspiration (p. 19). Hope to see you in a museum on the Mall this spring!
April 2023 On the cover: Image reprinted with permission from the cookbook Ever-Green Vietnamese; Photo © Aubrie Pick
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Smithsonian Associates In Person
We invite you to join us
for selected in-person programs, concert series, studio arts classes and workshops, as well as walking tours, full-day study tours, and overnight tours that visit a range of local and regional destinations.
Musical Events
Smithsonian Chorus: Legends of Song
Pati Jinich: La Frontera
Plato’s Republic
Wed., Apr. 5
An illuminating book discussion series examines why some of the central themes in this timeless dialogue are as relevant today as they were in 4th-century Athens.
(see p. 3)
Wed., Apr. 19
Mexican chef Pati Jinich screens an episode from the new season of her PBS docuseries “La Frontera” and offers insights into how she uses food to explore the culture and people along the border of the United States and Mexico.
(see p. 14)
Thurs., Apr. 13 (see p. 16)
Performance: Thurs., June 8
The Smithsonian Chamber Music Society: 2023 Season
The Axelrod String Quartet
Sat., Apr. 29 and Sun., Apr. 30 (see p. 15)
Schubert’s “Fair Maid of the Mill”
Sun., May 14 (see p. 15)
Jazzed About Art
Sat., Apr. 1 (see p. 16)
To Have and Have Another
Thurs., May 4
Writer Philip Greene, a co-founder of the Museum of the American Cocktail, examines the life of Hemingway through his favorite drinks.
(see p. 14)
Studio Arts
Let your creative side shine in a wide variety of handson classes including photography, drawing, painting, calligraphy, fiber arts, and mixed-media, geared to all experience levels and led by professional artists.
(see pp. 42–44)
A Wine Dinner at Gravitas
Mon., June 5, Tues., June 6 Toast the start of summer and the seasonal bounty of the Chesapeake Bay with wines worth knowing at Gravitas, a Michelin-starred modern American restaurant.
(see p. 14)
The Duke Ellington Orchestra: A Centennial Celebration
Sat., June 10 (see p. 16)
Tours
Our expert-led tours offer one-of-a-kind travel experiences. They’re perfect ways to learn more about topics that intrigue you— and satisfy your yen for exploring fascinating places.
(see pp. 55–60)
Read more about these in-person programs in this guide on our website. Expanded program descriptions, presenters’ information, and more are at
SmithsonianAssociates.org
Unless noted, all programs are presented on Zoom; listed times are Eastern Time. Online registration is required.
Book Discussion
Shedding Light on Plato’s Republic
For many people, tackling The Republic feels daunting. That’s why Georgetown professor Joseph Hartman is offering this illuminating four-session discussion-based course. Hartman examines some of the central themes, questions as relevant today as they were in 4th-century Athens: What is justice? Is there an external source of goodness? What makes a political community strong, and what causes it to decline?
APR 5 Setting the Stage: Introduction and Book I
APR 12 Building and Educating the Political Community (Books II–V)
APR 19 Plato’s Cave: The Turn Toward the Good (Books VI and VII)
APR 26 The Decline of the Regime and the End of Things (Books VIII–X)
4 sessions: Wed., April 5–26, 12–1:30 p.m.; Ripley Center; CODE 1J0-263; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
J. Robert Oppenheimer
Genius, Tragedy, Ethics, and the First Atomic Bomb
J. Robert Oppenheimer never really thought about the ethics of the atomic bomb until the successful test of a plutonium device at Alamogordo, New Mexico, on July 16, 1945. Then, he experienced an inrush of ethical anguish and spent the rest of his life trying to come to terms with what he, what America, and what humankind had done.
Hardened geopoliticians of the Cold War tried to destroy Oppenheimer, principally because he expressed his misgivings about the United States’ creation of the hydrogen fusion device. Historian Clay Jenkinson examines Oppenheimer’s ethical quandary about nuclear warfare—and the price he paid for it.
Tues., April 11, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1K0-350; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
What Were They Thinking?
The Philosophies of Maimonides and Aquinas
Maimonides and St. Thomas Aquinas, the pre-eminent Jewish and Christian thinkers of the medieval period, shared a passion for applying the rationalist methods of Aristotle to questions of belief. Maimonides’ Guide for the Perplexed sought to guide the Jewish community in understanding God as they contended with the more populous and politically powerful Christian and Muslim majorities. Aquinas’ Summa Theologica addresses every conceivable issue that defined Christian thinking up to his time. Ori Z. Soltes, author and Georgetown University lecturer, considers how these gigantic thinkers differ, where they share common ground—and their relevance to our own world of thought and action.
Wed., April 12, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-764; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Jiaxiu
Traditional Roots of Modern China
How an Ancient Worldview Drives Today’s Foreign Policy
China scholar Robert Daly traces China’s 21st-century drive for wealth, power, and status to geographic influences, beliefs, and social and cultural practices rooted in its earliest dynasties. The country’s location, Taoism, social stability, and cultural cohesion all played a role.
10 a.m. Pangu’s Bones: How Geography Shaped Chinese Culture
11:30 a.m. The Struggle for Harmony: Qi and Chinese Attitudes Toward Nature
12:45 p.m. Break
1:15 p.m. Culture, Technology, Wealth, and Power
2:45 p.m. Three Ways To Look at China
Sat., April 15, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; CODE 1M2-254; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
A Journey Through Ancient China
China has more than 3,000 years of recorded history, but misconceptions abound at every stage. This series takes you on a thematic tour of four important topics in ancient Chinese history: religion, ethnicity, law, and eunuchs. Justin M. Jacobs, a professor of Chinese history at American University, gives you a nuanced overview based on the latest scholarship and illustrated with copious slides.
MAY 24 Religion in Chinese History
MAY 31 Ethnic Identity in Chinese History
JUN 7 Law and Punishment in Chinese History
JUN 14 Eunuchs in Chinese History
4 sessions: Wed., May 24, May 31, June 7, and June 14, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-270; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
Individual sessions: Wed., May 24 (CODE 1J0-270A); Wed., May 31 (CODE 1J0-270B); Wed., June 7 (CODE 1J0-270C); Wed., June 14 (CODE 1J0-270D); 6:45 p.m.; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
U.S.–China Relations: Managing Long-term Rivalry
Co-sponsored by the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States at the Woodrow Wilson Center for Scholars
Relations between the United States and China are at their lowest point since the 1970s. The superpowers are still highly integrated through trade and conflict remains unlikely, but what President Biden calls an “extreme competition” is well underway. Neither Beijing nor Washington has a clear idea of where their competition is headed, how long it will last, or what it will cost. Biden and General Secretary Xi both face domestic pressures that drive them toward a more contentious relationship and prevent them from giving competition their full attention.
Three of Washington’s leading analysts provide insights into whether and how U.S.–China relations can be managed peacefully: J. Stapleton Roy, former U.S. ambassador to China, Singapore, and Indonesia; Amy P. Celico, principal and China director at the Albright Stonebridge Group; and Yun Sun, director of the China program at the Stimson Center in Washington, D.C. Robert Daly, director of the Wilson Center’s Kissinger Institute on China and the United States, serves as moderator.
Thurs., June 15, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-267; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Changing Face of Television
YouTube, Bingeing, Streaming, and Beyond
Watching television used to be a fairly simple enterprise: You turned on the set and selected one of 500 cable channels. Now, more and more viewers are watching online-only channels like Netflix or Disney+. Many younger viewers prefer devices such as their laptops or their phones. And tens of thousands of kids and teenagers have started their own TV networks on YouTube, bypassing regular programming altogether. Drawing on video clips to illustrate his talk, media expert Brian Rose explains why the old days of simply “watching TV” are fast disappearing.
Thurs., April 13, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1J0-250; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Rasputin: The Man Who Would Not Die
More than 100 years after his death, few figures in Russian history evoke as much fascination as Grigori Rasputin, often portrayed as the “Mad Monk” who became the political power behind Czar Nicholas II and his family.
The fact that he was neither mad, nor a monk, hasn’t stopped writers from repeating these and other bogus claims. Historians also debate the extent of Rasputin’s influence on the royal family. And many questions still swirl around his murder one December night at the Yusupov Palace.
Historian Ralph Nurnberger explores the mysteries surrounding the life and death of one of Russian history’s most intriguing characters.
Tues., April 18, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-011; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Grigori Rasputin
The French Wars of Religion, 1559–1598 Reform and Conflict
In the second half of the 16th century, France teetered on the edge of an abyss. For three decades the kingdom was near anarchy, torn apart by the vicious cycles of violence between Catholics and Protestants.
Historian Alexander Mikaberidze discusses the complex origins of the Wars of Religion in France and provides concise analysis of the wars, their social and economic toll, and the lasting impact of political ideas that they generated. He also examines the effect they had on the French state, economy, culture, and society.
Thurs., April 20, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-256; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
The Sack of Lyon by Calvinists, 1565
Smithsonian Art Collectors presents
The Art of Philip Guston
Inscapes: Words and Images was a 1976 city-wide festival held in Washington, D.C. to celebrate the collaboration of poetry and visual arts. To commemorate the festival, the Smithsonian commissioned Guston and poet Stanley Kunitz to create this collaborative work inspired by and featuring one of Kunitz's poems.
Philip Guston Now is on view through August 27 at the National Gallery of Art.
Inscapes: Words and Images, 1977 Poster | Retail: $35; Member: $20*
*Member pricing applies to Promoter level and above For membership levels visit SmithsonianAssociates.org/levels
From Coronation to Committal The Traditions and Ceremonies that Shape the British Monarchy
In September 2022, the world watched the pageantry of Queen Elizabeth II’s state funeral. For the first time, the coverage included the committal ceremony, during which the emblems of royalty were taken from her coffin and placed on the altar. This ritual symbolizes the ongoing nature of the monarchy, with the crown passing from one individual to the next.
From coronation to committal, ceremonies shape the monarchy. Tudor scholar Carol Ann Lloyd-Stanger explores the history and significance of these royal traditions and discusses why the ceremonies are important today.
Sat., April 22, 10 a.m.–12:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-257; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
The Supreme Court’s Role in Our Constitutional Democracy
Recent years have seen increasing controversy concerning the Supreme Court— contentious appointments, divisive opinions, and even leaks from inside. Some critics blame the philosophy of originalism, others claim individual justices are advancing political agendas or they fault the judicial body’s structural features and the nominating and confirmation processes.
Kermit Roosevelt, a constitutional law professor, former Supreme Court clerk, and member of President Biden’s Supreme Court Reform Commission, assesses the court and its place in our system of constitutional democracy. What role should the Supreme Court play? What forces are driving the recent controversies? And what, if anything, can we do to make things better?
Mon., April 24, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-765; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Discovering Türkiye
PBS television host Darley Newman shares great places to discover in Türkiye (the now-official name for Turkey) whether you’re visiting bustling bazaars in Istanbul or venturing off the beaten path. In Istanbul, marvel at the dazzling Hagia Sophia, the Blue Mosque, and Galata Tower. In Şanlıurfa, walk through Göbeklitepe, an archaeological site older than Stonehenge. In Izmir and Urla along Türkiye’s Aegean coast, visit the oldest known olive oil workshop in Anatolia and view UNESCO World Heritage sites like Ephesus and Pergamum. Newman’s travel insights provide a guide to discovering the diversity and wonders of historic and contemporary Türkiye.
NEW DATE: Mon., April 24, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-237; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Spanish Influence in the American Revolution Guns, Ships, and Cows
The American Revolution was seen by King Carlos III and his ministers as an unprecedented opportunity to regain territory Spain had ceded to the British during the French and Indian War, argues University of Maryland historian Richard Bell
For that reason, Spanish merchants in Bilbao and the Caribbean began secretly supplying the patriots with flintlocks, shot, blankets, and cows in 1774, well before their government’s declaration of war five years later. Bell draws connections between the American Revolution and the waves of independence movements that rippled across Spain’s Latin American colonies in the decades afterward.
Mon., April 24, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-258; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Moviegoing in America
From Nickelodeons to Movie Palaces to IMAX to Streaming
Ever since the movie industry was born in the 1890s, audiences have been thrilled to watch stories come to life on the big screen. Actually, nickelodeon screens weren’t very big. But by the 1920s, extravagant movie palaces were a common venue. Then came suburban drive-ins, followed by shopping-mall multiplexes. Today, the movies offer mind-boggling experiences at 7-story IMAX theaters.
The Fox Theater in Atlanta
Media expert Brian Rose looks at the fascinating history of movie theaters, examines how the experience of moviegoing has changed over the decades, and considers whether movie theaters will survive in the age of streaming services.
Wed., May 3, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-260; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Alcatraz: 250 Years on the Rock
Alcatraz is America’s most notorious island, and its most misunderstood.
Beginning with its first sighting by Europeans in 1769 through its present standing as the top paid tourist attraction in San Francisco, its history is multi-layered. Former National Park ranger and historian John Martini uncovers both the island’s infamous past as a federal penitentiary from 1934 to 1963 and its lesser-known roles as a Civil War fortress, political prison for Confederate sympathizers, and military prison for recalcitrant U.S. Army soldiers and Native American warriors. He also covers its evolution as a National Park site, the now-resurgent natural life, and the challenges of preserving its aging infrastructure.
Wed., April 26, 7 p.m.; CODE 1CV-013; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
A Bitter Defeat
The 1863 Battle of Chancellorsville
Military historians consider the May 1863 Battle of Chancellorsville to be Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s tactical masterpiece and a notable defeat for the Union. However, the consequent Confederate overconfidence played a significant role in the decision to invade the North at Gettysburg, with results that would turn the tide of war.
Historian Christopher Hamner examines the lead-up to Chancellorsville, Lee’s tactics, and the strategic implications of the Confederate victory.
Wed., May 3, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-013; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Related tour: The Civil War at Chancellorsville (see p. 57)
Spring in the South of France
A Virtual Tour of the Region’s History, Culture, and Sights
Everyone from ancient Romans to Post-Impressionist artists to movie stars has been lured to the enchanting South of France. Its abundance of lavender-laced valleys, glittering seashores, medieval hill towns, and lively cities, all bathed in translucent light, are downright seductive. Journey with travel writer Barbara Noe Kennedy in a virtual exploration of Provence and the Côte d’Azur, including the region’s most intriguing sights, historical aspects, food and wine, and art. Among the locales are the sunny beaches of the French Riviera and the gorges known as Europe’s Grand Canyon.
MAY 4 Côte d’Azur
JUN 1 Off the Beaten Path
Individual sessions: Thurs., May 4 (CODE 1CV-C10), Thurs., June 1 (CODE 1CV-D10), 7 p.m.; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
The Cuban Missile Crisis Re-examining a Moment of Extreme Danger
The Cuban Missile Crisis is an event most Americans think they could probably recount in broad contours: In 1962, the Soviet Union tried to sneak nuclear missiles into Cuba, but the United States discovered them and forced the Soviets to back down. But is that what really happened, or is that just the myth Americans have told themselves in the years since? Allen Pietrobon, a global affairs professor at Trinity Washington University, reflects on how such a moment of extreme danger came to happen and whether the United States truly won the face-off.
Mon., May 8, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-261;
The Physiologus A Book of Nature and Fantasy
Unicorns, centaurs, and other animals—both mythological and real—make an appearance in the Physiologus (The Naturalist), a compilation written in Greek by an anonymous author, probably in Alexandria in the 3rd century A.D. Its text comprises chapters on assorted animals and magic stones, with information drawn from the works of ancient and Christian authors, the Bible, and fables. Ilya Dines, a medieval manuscripts specialist at the Library of Congress, delves into the text, illuminations, and legacy of the Physiologus.
Mon., May 15, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-265; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Global Geopolitical Organization
The View from Ground Level
According to the standard model of global politics, the world is cleanly divided into a set number of fundamental units called nation-states. In the conventional narrative, the nation-state model originated in Europe in the late 18th and early-19th centuries and subsequently spread across the world, becoming fully globalized during the post-World War II decolonization era.
But global political organization is far more complicated and chaotic, reminds historian Martin Lewis, and expecting all countries to act like nation-states can result in severe miscalculations. Imposing regime-change, for example, on a country with an inadequate national foundation can result in rapid state collapse rather than democratic reconstruction. Lewis explores how the world is geopolitically constituted at the ground level, rather than as it is ideally imagined by diplomats, scholars, and foreign-policy experts.
Tues., May 16, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-767; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Colonial India’s Complex History
While the historical relationship of India and Great Britain is well-known, events in other countries also affected how India developed into the country it is today. Author Fazle Chowdhury unravels the complicated history of India from its existence as a British colony to an independent Asian nation.
Chowdhury traces the impact of such seemingly unrelated factors as power struggles in 19th-century Afghanistan, Persian Qajar invasions, diplomatic conflicts between Britain and Czarist Russia, and revolutionary movements in both Russia and Persia.
Fri., June 2, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-266; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Perils of Polarization A History of a Nation Divided
It’s increasingly clear that the United States is fragmented: Civility is in short supply, and common values are eroding. However, that’s nothing that hasn’t happened before. Journalist, historian, and author Ken Walsh illustrates how the United States has had recurring problems with creating unity and maintaining respectful discourse. Walsh examines how the United States reached this point, places the current situation in historical context, and discusses whether there is much chance for comity, consensus, and cooperation in the future.
Thurs., May 25, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-014; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
What time does the program end? Unless noted, Smithsonian Associates programs run 1 hour 15 min.–2 hours, including Q&A
Aaron Burr
The Most Controversial Founding Father
Aaron Burr stands apart from the other Founding Fathers—then and now. Debates continue whether he was a significant political figure or a scoundrel and a traitor. He was a hero of the Revolutionary War, a United States senator, and the third vice president, preceded only by John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.
Yet Burr’s legacy is usually defined by his role in the presidential election of 1800, his potential attempt to create a breakaway nation for which he faced a trial for treason, and most notably his 1804 duel with Hamilton leading to Burr’s indictment in two states for murder. Historian Ralph Nurnberger discusses the many facets of this fascinating early American political leader and whether he’s best remembered as a patriot or a villain.
Mon., June 5, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-016; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Treaty of Versailles: How Three Men Shaped our World
In 1919, leaders from around the globe gathered in Paris to write the final chapter of World War I. The resulting Treaty of Versailles was the handiwork of three men: British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, French Premier Georges Clemenceau, and American President Woodrow Wilson. They hoped, one diplomat said, to establish “not Peace only, but Eternal Peace.” But even at the time, another eyewitness knew better. “They think they have got peace,” this French general said. “All they have got is a twenty-year truce.” He was right.
George Mason University history professor Kevin Matthews explores a legacy that is still being played out in Asia and the Middle East, in Europe and the United States, and how the men of Versailles created the world we live in.
Tues., June 6, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-018; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Bronze Age: Civilization and Collapse New Insights into a Catastrophe
For more than 300 years during the Late Bronze Age, from about 1500 B.C. until just after 1200 B.C., the Mediterranean region was the stage on which Egyptians, Mycenaeans, Minoans, Hittites, Assyrians, Babylonians, Cypriots, Trojans, and Canaanites interacted, creating a cosmopolitan world system that has only rarely been seen before the current day. When the end came in 1177 B.C. after centuries of cultural and technological evolution, the civilized and international world of the Mediterranean regions came to a dramatic halt.
Historian Eric Cline, author of 1177 BC: The Year Civilization Collapsed, surveys a dramatic period of achievement, upheaval, and catastrophe drawing on the most recent data on the Late Bronze Age civilizations of the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean and their fates.
Thurs., June 8, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-770; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Live from Poland
World War II in Poland
Significant Sites, Events, and Stories
Take a visual journey through the years of World War II in Poland and related significant locations—Warsaw, Krakow, and Gdansk—as author and tour guide Christopher Skutela sheds light on the war and its implications. Knowing what happened in Poland, a constitutional republic that lost its independence during the war, provides a deeper understanding of the history of the rest of Europe and a perspective that can help create a better future, Skutela says.
Mon., June 12, 3 p.m.; CODE 1J0-272; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Quakers and the Birth of the Antislavery Movement
As members of the Religious Society of Friends, Quakers in colonial America manifested their radical sense of equality in what they wore and how they acted. It’s not surprising, then, that 18thcentury Quakers were the first group of white Christians in America to confront slaveholding as a religious problem that demanded social action.
But for much of the colonial period, many Quakers were slaveholders themselves—including members of William Penn’s family. It took tremendous energy and effort on the part of a small number of activists to disrupt that status quo in the decades before the Revolution and steer their church towards an outspoken commitment to Black freedom.
Historian Richard Bell recounts this untold story, focusing on the dramatic antislavery crusades and wildly different tactics of three 18th-century Quakers: Benjamin Lay, a hermit; John Woolman, a shopkeeper; and Anthony Benezet, a schoolteacher.
Tues., June 13, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-264; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Churchill’s Secret Army
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare
In 1940, Winston Churchill famously ordered his Special Operations Executive (SOE) to “set Europe ablaze.” This top-secret army of mavericks, who ran the gamut from Oxford and Cambridge grads to thieves, soon began a program of sabotage and subversion behind enemy lines. Churchill remained closely involved throughout the war.
Historian Rory Cormac traces how Churchill’s enthusiasm for intelligence operations drove a global secret war. Ultimately, Cormac suggests that despite some failures, Churchill’s decisions proved astute, and that SOE’s legacy shaped the peace in surprising and sometimes dramatic ways.
Tues., June 13, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-775; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
What time does the program end? Unless noted, Smithsonian Associates programs run 1 hour 15 min.–2 hours, including Q&A
Lady Jane Grey
First
Tudor Queen or Royal Traitor?
When young King Edward VI died in 1553, England believed the next monarch would be his half-sister Mary Tudor, the daughter of Henry VIII named in the Succession Act and Henry’s will as Edward’s heir. But Edward was determined not to leave the crown to a Catholic. With the help of John Dudley, president of the regency council, Edward created a “Devise for the Succession” to rewrite history and choose his successor.
Four days after Edward’s death, Lady Jane Grey Dudley—John Dudley’s teenage daughter-in-law—was proclaimed queen. For several days, both Jane and Mary considered themselves the ruler of England. But once she was installed on the throne, Queen Jane’s reign lasted less than two weeks.
Tudor scholar and historian Carol Ann Lloyd-Stanger considers Jane’s life and character and the powerful men around her, tracing the path from noblewoman to young wife to queen. She also examines Mary Tudor’s complicated relationship with Jane—and why it was necessary for one of them to lose her life.
Wed., June 21, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-265; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
The Real Lives of Jews in the Traditional World Insights from the Jewish Theological Seminary Library
Jews through the ages were generally considered pious and thoroughly immersed in Jewish life, standing apart, often by force, from their non-Jewish neighbors. But many of the rare materials in the Jewish Theological Seminary Library in New York City, home to one of the greatest and most extensive collections of Judaica in the world, offer a different picture.
It’s a more nuanced one, based on how specific communities of Jews lived with their neighbors, experiencing life first as human beings and then as Jews. In general, they spoke the same languages as those neighbors, wore the same clothes, and related to the world in similar ways, imagining dragons where their neighbors saw dragons and admiring chivalry where it was admired by all. In a richly illustrated talk, David Kraemer, the library’s director, shares evidence from the magnificent collections that offers surprising correctives to commonly repeated historical “truths.”
Thurs., June 22, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-268; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Steel in America: A Photographic Journey
Learn the history behind who made steel in the United States, what forces shaped the fate of steel mills and steel towns, and where steel is made today. Using dramatic imagery from the National Museum of Industrial History (a Smithsonian Affiliate) and the Historic American Engineering Record, historian Mike Piersa and photographer Jeremy Blakeslee discuss and vividly showcase the growth, evolution, and sometimes death of facilities that were capable of producing millions of tons of steel per year.
Wed., June 28, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1CV-017; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Unless noted, all programs are presented on Zoom; listed times are Eastern Time. Online registration is required.
A TOP SOMMELIER'S GUIDE TO WINE
Spring Wine Adventures
Expand your knowledge of wine as you travel the world with sommelier Erik Segelbaum in delectable wine-tasting adventures. Each immersive program includes a curated personal tasting kit to enhance the experience.
In a New York State of Wine
New York wine has been pleasing palates and wowing enophiles for ages. The vineyards surrounding the Finger Lakes have proven time and time again to produce wines on a world-class scale. Erik Segelbaum leads a tasty, in-depth session focused on the red and white varieties that grow best in the state, as well as explores some up-and-coming varieties that are being pioneered in New York’s appellations. This is a can’t-miss for any lover of bright, elegant, and complex wines.
Fri., April 21, 6 p.m.; CODE 1L0-511; Members $65; Nonmembers $75
Wein-derlust: Exploring Austrian Wine
Austria has a long and storied history of producing extraordinary, high-acid, and fresh wines. Whether it’s bone-dry Rieslings or Austria’s heritage grape, Grüner Veltliner, its whites are guaranteed palate pleasers and are exceptionally food-friendly. But Austria has so much more to offer. Native reds like Blaufrânkisch (Lemberger), Zweigelt, and St. Laurent shine brightly, as do international varieties like Pinot Noir (Spâtburgunder). This delightful session will have you drinking like a sommelier in no time.
Fri., May 19, 6 p.m.; CODE 1L0-512; Members $65; Nonmembers $75
Deutschland Entkorkt: Uncorking Germany’s Best
Germany has some of the world’s most challenging vineyards to maintain. Steep slopes, eroding hills, and climate change all collaborate to make viticulture a harrowing challenge for even the most seasoned winemaker. However, the effort is well worth it. The country’s wines are mainstays of any sommelier’s toolkit for food-and-wine pairings. It’s here where Riesling finds its ancestral home and is readily consumed in all styles from bone-dry to semi-sweet. Germany’s fresh, bright, and food-friendly reds are also comfortably at home on dinner tables all over the world. Erik Segelbaum serves up a delicious exploration of the wines of Germany and their rich histories.
Fri., June 23, 6 p.m.; CODE 1L0-513; Members $65; Nonmembers $75
3 wine-tasting sessions: CODE 2WINE2023; Members $175; Nonmembers $200
Wine-tasting kit information: The cost includes curated personal tasting kits with enough wine for one person to sample the full lineup of wines. Additional participants must register individually to receive their own tasting kits, which is an essential component of the series. Each session has separate kits available during two scheduled pick-up times the day before the program and the day of the program, 12–4 p.m. at The Eastern wine bar in the Capitol Hill neighborhood (360 7th Street SE; Metro: Eastern Market, Orange, Silver and Blue Lines). Due to state and federal laws, wine kits may not be shipped. NOTE: Patrons receive additional wine tasting kit pick-up information by email prior to each session.
Please visit SmithsonianAssociates.org to view the FAQ on Health & Safety guidelines
VOICES Highlighting people who share their unique perspective on the world today
In Person
Pati Jinich: La Frontera
In her PBS PrimeTime docuseries “La Frontera,” Mexican chef Pati Jinich uses food as the vehicle to explore the culture and people along the border of the United States and Mexico, sharing meals with locals from all walks of life and reflecting on the melding of cultures.
Returning for a second season this spring, “La Frontera: The Everchanging Borderlands” features Jinich’s explorations on the western half of the Mexico–U.S. border, covering California and Baja California, Arizona and Sonora, and New Mexico and Chihuahua. Join her for a screening of an episode from the new season, followed by a conversation focusing on the creation of the series and what she discovered traveling in both countries.
Wed., April 19, 6:45 p.m.; Ripley Center; CODE 1L0-508; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Spices 101: Pepper
From the tangled jungles of Kerela, black pepper spread around the globe and altered the course of history as it did. Ground, dried, and cooked peppercorns have been used since antiquity, both for flavor and as a traditional medicine. Black pepper is the world’s most-traded spice, beguiling cooks worldwide with its fragrant warmth. Varieties include black, green, and pink pepper, Sichuan, cubeb, long, sansho, and more…but which are the true peppercorns and which are pretenders?
Eleanor Ford, award-winning author of The Nutmeg Trail, delves into the history, botany, lore, and culinary uses of the world’s favorite spice, then turns to the kitchen to explore flavor profiles, cooking tips, and recipes to put pepper to best use.
Wed., April 26, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1NV-032; Members $25; Nonmember $30
In Person
A Wine Dinner at Gravitas
Celebrate the start of summer with a delicious evening at Gravitas, a Michelin-starred modern American restaurant by chef Matt Baker dedicated to seasonal cooking and sourcing from local farms and waters. Baker’s three-course menu specially designed for the event showcases the summer bounty of the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and Smithsonian Associates’ favorite sommelier Erik Segelbaum, who leads the popular Wine Adventures series, pairs wines with the courses with a focus on hidden gems. Chef Baker and Segelbaum are on hand to talk about the food and drink.
To Have and Have Another
In Person
The Life and Times (and Cocktails) of Ernest Hemingway
Although he probably never drank Dos Equis, Ernest Hemingway could have been the prototype for the brand’s “Most Interesting Man in the World.” One of the 20th century’s greatest writers, he lived a big, bold, adventurous life, filled with exploits in locations across the world.
Writer Philip Greene, a co-founder of the Museum of the American Cocktail, examines the life, prose, travels, and adventures of Hemingway through the lens of his favorite drinks, watering holes, and drinking buddies. Enjoy light snacks and four cocktail samples and raise a toast to Papa.
Greene’s book To Have and Have Another: A Hemingway Cocktail Companion (TarcherPerigee) is available for purchase and signing.
Thurs., May 4, 6:45 p.m.; Ripley Center; CODE 1L0-509; Members $55; Nonmembers $70
TWO OPTIONS: Mon., June 5 (CODE 1L0-516); Tues., June 6 (CODE 1L0-517); 6:30–8:30 p.m.; Gravitas, 1401 Okie St. NE, Washington, D.C.; Members $250; Nonmembers $280
The Smithsonian Chamber Music Society: 2023 Season
All performances are in the Nicholas and Eugenia Taubman Hall of Music, American History Museum
The Axelrod String Quartet: Stradivarius and Amati
Join the Smithsonian Chamber Music Society for the unparalleled experience of hearing two magnificent quartets of instruments—one made by Antonio Stradivari, the other by his teacher Nicoló Amati. Axelrod String Quartet members Marc Destrubé, James Dunham, and Kenneth Slowik perform with guest violinists in programs that illustrate the breadth of the quartet repertoire while being unified through the inclusion of a Beethoven quartet in F Major on each program.
Sat., April 1: Mozart: Quartet in G Major, K387 Bartók: Quartet No. 1, Op. 7; Beethoven: Quartet in F Major, Op. 59, No. 1; with guest violinist Mark Fewer
Sat., April 29 and Sun., April 30: Haydn: Quartet in D Minor, Op. 76, No. 2, “Fifths”; Britten: Quartet No. 2 in C Major, Op. 36; Beethoven: Quartet in F Major, Op. 135; with guest violinist Joseph Puglia
Sat., April 1 (CODE 1P0-770); Sat., April 29 (CODE 1P0-771); 7:30 p.m.; Sun., April 30 (CODE 1P0-774); 6:30 p.m.; Members $27; Nonmembers $35
More Musical Delights in the 2023 Concert Season
Schubert’s “Fair Maid of the Mill”
The Smithsonian Chamber Players
Between them, tenor Frank Kelley and fortepianist Kenneth Slowik have lived with Franz Schubert’s great cycle of love, longing, jealousy, and death—the basic subjects of much of the German Lieder repertoire—for well over half a century. Their compelling collaboration in Die schöne Müllerin (Fair Maid of the Mill), D795 is a product of this long mutual familiarity.
Sun., May 14, 7 p.m.; CODE 1P0-805; Nicholas and Eugenia Taubman Hall of Music, National Museum of American History; Members $25; Nonmembers $35
Smithsonian Chamber Music Society concerts are held in the intimate Nicholas and Eugenia Taubman Hall of Music, American History Museum
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In Person
Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra Concert Series
Under the artistic direction of maestro Charlie Young, Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra has celebrated some of the greatest jazz music throughout its 32-year history as one of the crown jewels of the National Museum of American History.
Jazzed About Art
Jazz Appreciation Month
To kick off the annual worldwide celebration of jazz, the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra offers a soundtrack filled with rhythm, texture, and color as it showcases the work of prominent 20th–century visual artists including William Sharp, John Fenton, and Romare Bearden. Be-Bop by Dizzy Gillespie, Crying and Sighing by McKinney’s Cotton Pickers, and Kingdom of Not by Sun Ra are among the musical selections.
Sat., April 1, 7 p.m.; Baird Auditorium, Natural History Museum; CODE 1P0-780; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Duke Ellington Orchestra: A Centennial Celebration
They’ve been called everything from the Washingtonians to Duke Ellington and His Kentucky Club Orchestra to Duke Ellington and His Famous Orchestra (and more). But the Duke Ellington Orchestra under any name maintains an unparalleled place in the history of American music. This year marks the 100th anniversary of this legendary ensemble, and the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra is ready to celebrate its vast musical legacy. Performance selections include Rainy Nights, Harlem Airshaft, Charpoy, and The Biggest and Busiest Intersection.
Sat., June 10, 7 p.m; Baird Auditorium, Natural History Museum; CODE 1P0-781; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Smithsonian Chorus: Legends of Song
If you’re looking for a choral program that celebrates memorable music across the decades, this is the one for you. Join fellow music lovers to sing timeless classics from the 1920s and ’30s such as I Got Rhythm all the way to ’70s and ’80s hits like I’ll Be There and Don’t Stop Believin’
Choral conductor and music educator Ernest Johnson leads the ensemble in arrangements of the hits you know and love. Songs may include favorites by the Gershwins, Duke Ellington, the Beatles, and others, selected by the conductor. (The final song list and musical arrangements are chosen to fit the specific vocal and musical abilities of the group.)
The experience is designed to entertain, challenge, and educate adult singers of all skill levels. Singers receive general instruction in vocal techniques that include exercises in healthy breath. Basic music reading instruction included as music is rehearsed. Rehearsals culminate in a free performance on June 8.
8 sessions plus performance: Thurs., April 13–May 4, Tues., May 9, Thurs., May 18–June 1, 6:30–8:30 p.m.; Thurs., June 8 performance, 7 p.m.; Ripley Center; CODE 1P0-782; Members $120; Nonmembers: $135
Wonder Tales from Japan
Whether they’re called fairy tales or something else, magical stories are found the world over. Like their Western counterpart, Japan’s fantastical stories—otogi-banashi—are part of the body of stories folklorists call “wonder tales”: They contain supernatural elements, are set in the land of once upon a time, and feature marvelous situations.
Folklorists Sara Cleto and Brittany Warman explore traditional tales from Japan and how contemporary Japanese creators are taking a clue from the West as they combine the enchantments of wonder tales and fairy tales in modern genres like anime (animation) and manga (comics).
Mon., April 3, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-249; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Literature’s Nobel Prize Who Won, Who Didn’t, and Why It Matters
Gender, Sexuality, and the Fairy Tale
Fairy tales have a reputation for being conventional, and many of the most famous ones—think Cinderella and Jack and the Beanstalk—appear to be just that. But they can be surprisingly inclusive and wonderfully disruptive to our expectations.
Folklorists Sara Cleto and Brittany Warman share some very old and very unconventional fairy tales and discuss modern LGBTQ+ twists on old tales and traditions.
Tues., June 20, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-271; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Each year in October, the greatest award in the world of books—the Nobel Prize in Literature—is announced. Since 1901, the Swedish Academy has given the prize to an author from any country who has produced “the most outstanding work in an idealistic direction.” These subjective words have led to choices that have been alternately celebrated and criticized.
Join Joseph Luzzi, a professor of comparative literature at Bard College, as he delves into the history of the prize, including some of the Academy’s more controversial losers (Leo Tolstoy) and winners (Bob Dylan).
Thurs., April 13, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-253; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
Your Monthly Digital Program Guide Is Always On Time!
It’s becoming harder and harder to be patient as widespread mail delays across the country are affecting the timely delivery of our monthly program guide. But, in the meanwhile, we want to remind you of some of the convenient online options available to help you keep up with Smithsonian Associates’ programs and special offers.
It Pays To Become a Member (Especially Today) The digital program guide is sent automatically to members via email (1–2 weeks before the print guide arrives).
Members receive early email announcements of new programs, free events, and other special offerings—ahead of the general public Visit Our Website Purchase tickets and make payments; become a member or renew your membership; sign up for program eAlerts; and access our popular Digital Digest.
A New Year of Delightful Destinations
Smithsonian Associates Overnight Tours for 2023
Our study tours are designed for people who want more than just a getaway: They offer one-of-a-kind experiences combined with opportunities to gain new insights into the topics that fascinate you. Whether you’re a fan of history, art, music, nature, or architecture—or simply love exploring new places—these expert-led excursions offer a year’s worth of tempting travels. Several of our most popular tours return to the schedule, offering you another chance to join us on these adventures—before they sell out again!
Note: All tour dates and content are subject to change.
A Berkshires Summer Sampler
Sun., July 30–Thurs., Aug. 3
(on sale now; see p. 60)
The scenic and historic Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts are alive with music, art, and theater. A 5-day tour offers a splendid sampling of cultural attractions in the region.
Leader: Richard Selden
By Popular DemandThe Best of Brooklyn
Sun., Apr. 16–Mon., Apr. 17
(on sale now; see p. 55)
Brooklyn offers plenty of delights for lovers of art, music, nature, and food. An arts journalist and former Brooklynite introduces you to several of its top attractions.
Leader: Richard Selden
A Mountain Rail Extravaganza
Fri., June 2–Sun., June 4
(on sale now; see p. 58)
Stunning spring vistas, vintage locomotives, and West Virginia history are on the itinerary for a weekend spent riding the Cass Scenic Railroad and other mountain routes.
Leader: Joe Nevin
Theodore Roosevelt’s North Dakota
Sat., Oct. 7–Wed., Oct. 11
(on sale May 1)
Fly west and experience the wild beauty of the Dakota Territory that shaped young Theodore Roosevelt’s course as a conservationist and naturalist.
Leader: Melanie Choukas-Bradley
Please
Fall in the Shenandoah Valley
Sun., Oct. 15–Mon., Oct. 16
(on sale July 1)
Celebrate the beauty of Virginia’s Shenandoah National Park as you hike its trails and take in the panoramas from Skyland, your historic lodge nestled along Skyline Drive.
Leader: Keith Tomlinson
Discover Queens
Sun., Nov. 12–Mon., Nov. 13
(on sale July 1)
Our series of explorations of New York City’s outer boroughs continues with a visit to the largest of all.
Leader: Richard Selden
The Corning Museum of Glass
Wed., Nov. 1–Sat., Nov. 4
(on sale July 1)
This glass-lover’s dream tour offers a true insider’s experience at the renowned museum, including many curator-conducted sessions.
Leader: Bill Keene
Travel insurance is advised for overnight and multi-day tours. Travel insurance provides additional coverage against unforeseen incidents that require last-minute cancellations. If you wish to purchase travel insurance, you can do so on your own. Smithsonian Associates does not do this for you. Overnight tours are non-refundable.
August Breakfast/Maine by Carolyn Brady (detail)
Flowers For a Country by Mindy Weisel (detail)
How Culture Works
Driven by the Intersection of Peoples
What good are the arts? Two faculty members of Harvard University, Martin Puchner, a professor of English and comparative literature, and Maya Jasanoff, a professor of history, converse on how humanity has sought to understand and transmit to future generations not just the “know-how” of life but the “know-why”— the meaning and purpose of our existence, as expressed in art, architecture, religion, and philosophy. They also explore how contact among different peoples has driven artistic innovation in every era.
Mon., April 17, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1J0-264; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Celebrating Brahms
The Man, His Music, and His Legacy
Impassioned romanticism and classical principles are reconciled in the masterworks of Johannes Brahms. Opera and classical music expert Saul Lilienstein examines the breadth of Brahms’ extraordinary career, from his teenage years playing piano in the brothels of Hamburg to his sweeping triumphs in Vienna and international recognition as the greatest living symphonist. Explore the full range of his work in this series highlighted by film clips and music recordings.
APR 18 Music for Piano and Chamber Ensembles
APR 25 Choral Masterworks and Lieder
MAY 2 Concertos
MAY 9 Symphonic Music, Part I
MAY 16 Symphonic Music, Part 2
5 sessions: Tues., April 18–May 16, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-255; Members $85; Nonmembers $95
More Stories from the American Songbook
Here are more of those wonderful songs we love and the stories behind their long and unexpected lives. Each program takes up the work of one songwriter and a few of his familiar, forever songs, where daydreams, blue skies, and love lost and found still live. Combining a lively lecture with a wide variety of film clips, filmmaker and cultural historian Sara Lukinson traces how these favorite songs from the Great American Songbook came to be and how different artists, unexpected arrangements, and changing times transformed them into something new but still the same.
APR 19 Blue Skies: Songs by Irving Berlin
MAY 3 My Huckleberry Friend: Songs by Johnny Mercer
MAY 17 The Look of Love: Songs by Burt Bacharach
3 sessions: Wed., Apr. 19, May 3, May 17, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1K0-357; Members $45; Nonmembers $55
Individual sessions: Wed., Apr. 19 (CODE 1K0-358); Wed., May 3 (CODE 1K0-359); Wed., May 17 (CODE 1K0-360); 12–1:15 p.m.; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Gods and Mortals
A Modern Look at Ancient Greek Myths
Gripping tales that abound with fantastic characters and astonishing twists and turns, Greek myths confront what it means to be mortal in a world of powerful forces beyond human control. Gods transform themselves into animals, humans, and shimmering gold to visit the earth in disguise, and mortals use their wits and strength to conquer the forces unleashed by the gods.
Classicist Sarah Iles Johnston looks at some of the best-known tales as well as others that are seldom told; highlights rich connections among characters and stories; and draws attention to the often-overlooked perspectives of female characters.
Wed., April 26, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1K0-361; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Ever-Green Vietnamese Cooking
Starring Plants from Land and Sea
Although many people think of Vietnamese cooking as beefy pho and meat-filled sandwiches, traditional Vietnamese cooking has always involved a lot of plants and seafood and a little meat. Andrea Nguyen, a James Beard Award–winning author and one of the country’s leading voices on Asian cuisine, explores where plant-based cooking meets the dynamic flavors of Vietnamese cuisine in her new book Ever-Green Vietnamese. It details how cooks in her home country draw on their natural resourcefulness and Buddhist traditions to showcase a wide array of herbs and vegetables in flavorful, comforting recipes.
Join Nguyen in conversation with the Washington Post’s Joe Yonan, as she discusses her inspiration behind the book and its dishes and shares some practical cooking tips. Following the conversation, enjoy light bites provided by chef Kevin Tien of the modern Vietnamese restaurant Moon Rabbit at The Wharf in D.C. Copies of Ever-Green Vietnamese (Ten Speed Press) are available for purchase.
Sun., April 30, 4 p.m.; CODE 1L0-515; Ripley Center; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
Virgil’s Aeneid
Perusing Ancient Rome’s Greatest Epic Poem
Two millennia after it was composed, Virgil’s Aeneid remains one of the most influential and remarkable works in Western literature. Joseph Luzzi, a professor of comparative literature at Bard College, delves into what makes Virgil’s great work tick.
This ancient poem that recounts the myth of how the Roman empire was founded remains relevant today, Luzzi says. He explains why the Aeneid has unusual force and how it continues—as well as departs from—the storyline of Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey
Thurs., May 11, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-262; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
Robinson Crusoe: The Classic Castaway
Robinson Crusoe (1719) is one of the first English novels and still one of the best. Everyone knows the basic story: Marooned alone on an island, Crusoe must create a new life of security and self-sufficiency from local resources and the items he’s able to rescue from the ship.
Daniel Defoe’s fascinating account of the survival—and the eventual triumph—of Robinson Crusoe represents a key field test of Enlightenment economics. Which is the climax of the novel: when Crusoe discovers the footprint of another man on the island or when he re-invents agriculture there with a few discarded seeds he finds in a small bag? Defoe’s prose style is entirely accessible to 21st-century readers. Join public humanities scholar Clay Jenkinson for an evening with this splendid and influential work of English fiction.
Tues., May 16, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1K0-365; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
Jazz and Blues on Film
While 20th-century jazz and blues artists have been well documented in books and documentaries, the cinematic achievements of these remarkable performers have either been downplayed or deeply undervalued. This is especially puzzling, says film historian Max Alvarez, because of the tremendous impact blues musicians and singers had on commercial films from the late 1920s to the early 1960s, where they easily stole any musical comedy, show business biopic, or edgy melodrama in which they had fleeting cameos.
Alvarez leads an electrifying two-part musical journey that begins in 1929 with Bessie Smith’s only screen appearance (Dudley Murphy’s St. Louis Blues) and culminates in Dave Brubeck’s work in the 1962 British drama All Night Long. As a bonus, Alvarez pays tribute to a 1986 French film many consider to be the greatest ever made about jazz and blues: Bertrand Tavernier’s ’Round Midnight starring brilliant tenor sax player Dexter Gordon.
2 sessions: Wed., May 17 and 24, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1K0-367; Members $50; Nonmembers $60
George Gershwin: Our Love Is Here to Stay
George Gershwin is one of the giants of American music, unique in that he was a brilliant composer of both popular songs (Swanee, I Got Rhythm, They Can’t Take That Away From Me) and more serious music, including Rhapsody in Blue, An American in Paris, and Porgy and Bess. Pianist and Gershwin authority Robert Wyatt explores the composer’s life and legacy, sharing film clips, music recordings, and rare film footage, along with unpublished photographs. Archival recordings of his 1934 radio program, “Music by Gershwin,” are also featured. S’wonderful! Tues., May 23, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-261; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
Music Inspired by the Natural World
A painter can create entire worlds on a flat piece of paper. But where is a composer to start when seeking to represent the natural universe through sound? Centuries of exquisite nature-inspired concert works show just how well it can be done through direct imitation, allegory, and symbolism. Over time, composers have fashioned powerful musical vocabularies that guide us to “see” harmonies as visual images.
In this 4-session course, popular speaker and concert pianist Rachel Franklin uses her unique live piano demonstrations and fascinating film clips to explore how such masters as Beethoven, Mahler, Wagner, Vivaldi, Holst, Vaughan Williams, Saint-Saëns, and countless others composed beloved works that conjure our natural world.
MAY 24 Earth: Its Creation, Seasons, and Landscapes
MAY 31 Heavenly Marvels
JUNE 7 Creatures of the Earth, Sea, and Sky
JUNE 14 Water, Water Everywhere
4 sessions: Wed., May 24–June 14, 12–2 p.m.; CODE 1K0-366; Members $95; Nonmembers $105
Bob Dylan and American Memory
“’Twas a dark day in Dallas, November ’63,” begins Bob Dylan’s most recent magnum opus, the song Murder Most Foul. From his earliest days as a songwriter, he presented himself as a witness to American history in songs about dispossessed workers and racial injustice. As his musical output unfolded, Dylan increasingly focused on how our art forms construct a common American culture and memory—topics that have become more significant in his work since the beginning of the current century.
Timothy Hampton, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley, examines some of Dylan’s most famous songs to reveal his deep interest in historical themes and social change as well as how his music asks us to think about the way the past is remembered and shaped by art.
Thurs., May 25, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-768; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
How Disney Conquered the Entertainment Universe
Over the last nine decades, the Walt Disney Company has played a huge role in transforming every facet of the entertainment business, including feature-length cartoons, television, theme parks, film, Broadway musicals, and streaming services. Media historian Brian Rose examines a remarkable story of creativity and media growth as he traces how the company evolved from a small cartoon studio in 1923 to one of the most powerful forces in worldwide entertainment today.
Mon., June 12, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-269; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Jane Austen: Forever Fascinating
Why do so many readers throughout the world still clamor for the books of Jane Austen? How did she help reinvent the novel with her powerfully original writing and unique artistic vision? And why is her life the subject of ongoing fascination—and Hollywood movies? Joseph Luzzi, a professor of literature, explores the remarkable career and astonishing life of a woman who overcame countless obstacles to become one of the most revered authors in the literary tradition.
10 a.m. Jane Austen: Life and Work of an Unlikely Legend
11:15 a.m. Sense and Sensibility
12:15 p.m. Break
12:45 p.m. Pride and Prejudice
2 p.m. Persuasion and Concluding Thoughts
Sat., June 3, 10 a.m.–3 p.m.; CODE 1J0-267; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
Reading Moby-Dick
The World in a Whale
“In its vast spaces and in Melville’s blazingly original style, Moby-Dick is about…the whole world; it willingly incorporates everything,” writes the critic Edward Said. This tale of yearning, obsession, wreckage, and deliverance has drawn generations of readers into its obsessive, unfinished quest. Readers have seen reflected in its pages the urgent questions of their times, including issues of democracy, race, sexuality, labor, and environment. Diverse artists in astounding number have responded to Herman Melville’s words. Samuel Otterson, a professor of English at Berkeley University, explores topics including the reception of Moby-Dick, ways of reading this surprising and heterogeneous book, and the strange qualities of a work that attempts to “incorporate everything.”
Tues., June 13, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-774; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Henry David Thoreau on Work
Meet your new favorite coworker: Henry David Thoreau. The popular conception of the transcendentalist writer as a navel-gazing recluse who was scornful of work and other mundanities isn’t an accurate one. In fact, Thoreau worked hard—surveying land, running his family’s pencilmaking business, writing, lecturing, and building his cabin at Walden Pond—and thought intensely about work in its many dimensions.
In their new book, Henry at Work, authors John Kaag and Jonathan van Bell invite readers to rethink how we work today by exploring an aspect of Henry David Thoreau that has often been overlooked: Thoreau the worker. They reveal that his ideas about work have much to teach us in an age of remote work and automation, when many people are reconsidering what kind of working lives they want to have.
Copies of Henry at Work: Thoreau on Making a Living (Princeton University Press) are available for purchase.
Tues., June 27, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1L0-518; Members $20; Nonmember $25
Virginia Woolf’s Literary Genius
Why is Virginia Woolf considered one of the most important authors of all time? Join Joseph Luzzi, a professor of literature at Bard College, as he explores Woolf’s remarkable literary contributions. Discover why her innovative writing style, extraordinary emotional insights, and profound level of learning continue to enchant readers worldwide and attract new audiences.
10 a.m. A Masterpiece: Mrs. Dalloway
11:15 a.m. Rethinking a Woman’s Place in the World: A Room of One’s Own
12:15 p.m. Break
12:45 p.m. Reinventing Stream of Consciousness: To the Lighthouse
2 p.m. Identity’s Many Masks: Orlando Sat., July 15, 10 a.m.–3 p.m.; CODE 1J0-276; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
All Smithsonian Associates online programs are closed captioned
Unless noted, all programs are presented on Zoom; listed times are Eastern Time. Online registration is required.
Close-up on Warblers
Birding fans are familiar with year-round feathered friends such as northern cardinals and blue jays, but there’s a secret world of neotropical birds that temporarily make their home in North America. Many of these tiny colorful gems are warblers, beautiful insect-eating birds that migrate from as far as South America to breed. Migrating hundreds of miles overnight, these warblers look for any suitable habitat to drop into as dawn approaches. Join naturalist Matt Felperin to learn more about why warblers undertake such a dangerous journey and how to find them in the wild—and enjoy some fantastic warbler photographs.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Wed., April 12, 7 p.m.; CODE 1NV-034; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
The Geology of Western National Parks
Join geologist Kirt Kempter as he explores the geology of Western National Parks over the course of 2023, with an in-depth look at one location every month. Each program’s content is enhanced by geologic maps, photos, and Google Earth imagery.
APR 10 Zion and Bryce, Utah
MAY 1 Valles Caldera, New Mexico
JUN 5 Death Valley, California
I N SI DE S C I ENCE 3 sessions: Mon., April 10, Mon., May 1, and Mon., June 5, 7 p.m.; CODE 1NV-GE2; Members $60; Nonmembers $75
Individual programs: Mon., Apr. 10 (CODE 1NV-029); Mon., May 1 (CODE 1NV-030); Mon., June 5 (CODE 1NV-031), 7 p.m.; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
A Grand Tour of the Solar System
Presented in partnership with George Mason University Observatory
This series treks to the sun and the four inner terrestrial planets before traveling outward to the asteroid belt, four Jovian planets, and beyond. At each session, a professional astronomer presents the latest research on a solar system body. Following the talk and a question-and-answer period, Peter Plavchan, a professor of physics and astronomy at George Mason University, brings that night’s sky right into participants’ living rooms via remote control of the university observatory, weather permitting.
The Sun, Front and Center
The tour begins with the 4½-billion-year-old star at the center of the solar system, the sun. Its gravity is the glue that holds the solar system together. Its activity, from powerful eruptions to the steady stream of charged particles it sends out, provides a protective bubble that shields the planets from damaging galactic radiation. George Mason University astrophysicist and cosmologist Hakeem Oluseyi shines a light on this special star.
Tues., April 18, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-254; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Mercury, Small but Mighty Interesting
Mercury, the innermost planet in the solar system, remained relatively unexplored until NASA’s MESSENGER probe orbited and studied it from 2011 to 2015. MESSENGER’s results have transformed the understanding of Mercury, forcing scientists to reexamine what was thought to be known about the first rock from the sun. Physicist Ronald J. Vervack Jr., who worked on the MESSENGER mission, highlights how Mercury provides insight into the formation, evolution, and current state of the solar system.
Tues., May 9, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-255; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Venus, Shrouded in Clouds
In this solar system, Venus is the planet most like Earth in size and density, yet at some point in planetary history they evolved very differently, creating a kind of Jekyll and Hyde scenario: Venus now has a toxic atmosphere and is the hottest planet, contrasting with habitable Earth. University of California, Riverside, astrophysicist Stephen Kane reveals clues that point to a possible habitable past of Venus and discusses how its environment might have become hostile to life.
Tues., May 30, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-256; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Renaissance Cabinets of Curiosity
Collecting All Sorts of Wonders
A narwhal tusk and a meticulous painting of a tulip might seem to have little in common, but they were among the wonders of nature and artifice displayed proudly in Renaissance collections of marvels known as curiosity cabinets. In their quest for knowledge, collectors ranging from apothecaries to Medici dukes acquired and categorized such intriguing pieces from around the globe.
Biologist Kay Etheridge describes how these collections provided naturalists with centers of study and source material—and ultimately led to the genesis of the modern museum.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Wed., April 19, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-251; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Mario Livio on What Makes Us Curious
The ability to ask “why?” makes us uniquely human. Curiosity drives scientific research, is the engine behind creativity in all disciplines, and provides a necessary ingredient in every form of storytelling that delights.
Renowned astrophysicist Mario Livio interprets cutting-edge research that explores the origin and mechanisms of curiosity. Livio has examined the personalities of Leonardo da Vinci and physicist Richard Feynman and interviewed nine exceptionally curious people living today, including linguist Noam Chomsky and the virtuoso lead guitarist of the rock band Queen, Brian May, who holds a Ph.D. in astrophysics.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Tues., April 25, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-259; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Live from the UK
Chasing Plants
Join botanist Chris Thorogood for a glimpse into the exhilarating adventures of a field botanist. As part of his job, Thorogood has clambered over cliffs and up erupting volcanoes and trekked through typhoons. Along the way, he’s encountered exotic pitcher plants and orchids of unimaginable beauty.
Thorogood shares details of his hair-raising excursions and explains the vital work he and other botanists are doing to protect the world’s plants. His book Chasing Plants: Journeys with a Botanist Through Rainforests, Swamps and Mountains (University of Chicago Press) is available for purchase.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Thurs., April 27, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1J0-257; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
What time does the program end? Unless noted, Smithsonian Associates programs run 1 hour 15 min.–2 hours, including Q&A
In-person and Online Program Taking a New Look at Historical Objects
Interdisciplinary Technology Studies Unveil Insights
Using sophisticated tools that include a repurposed particle accelerator and working with museums, universities, and private collectors, Michael B. Toth and his colleagues have digitized everything from manuscripts to fossils, mining them for new information about their content and creation. Among the pieces they have worked on are the earliest known copy of work by Archimedes, Sir Isaac Newton’s sketch of how a rainbow is formed, Gutenberg and other early Bibles, and Muslim manuscripts.
Toth, the president of R.B. Toth Associates, talks about some of their findings.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Tues., May 2, 6:45 p.m.; Ripley Center; CODE 1J0-259; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
Keeping the Pace
The Science of Pacemakers and Defibrillators
Today’s smallest pacemaker is the size of a multivitamin, weighing as little as a penny. It’s a long way from the first pacemaker, which was worn around the neck and weighed over half a pound. Today more than 3 million people have pacemakers, with over 600,000 implanted yearly.
Tom Choi, a pediatric cardiologist and electrophysiologist in Delaware, and Carolyn Ramwell, an electrophysiology nurse clinician in Washington, D.C., discuss the fascinating past, present, and future of this small but essential lifesaving device. In a lively talk, they cover the experimental history of the modern pacemaker and defibrillator; the current applications of both; the risk-taking scientists involved in discovering the electrical properties of the heart and the ability to restart the heartbeat; and the future implications posed by artificial intelligence and technological advances.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Thurs., May 4, 7 p.m.; CODE 1NV-033; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Notes on Complexity Connection, Consciousness, and Being
Nothing in the universe is more complex than life. In its myriad forms—from cells to human beings, social structures, and ecosystems—life is open-ended, evolving, and unpredictable, yet adaptive and self-sustaining. Complexity theory addresses the mysteries that animate science, philosophy, and metaphysics: how this teeming array of existence, from the infinitesimal to the infinite, is a seamless living whole and what our place, as conscious beings, is within it.
Physician, scientist, and philosopher Neil Theise discusses this “theory of being,” one of the pillars of modern science, and its holistic view of human existence. He notes the surprising underlying connections within a universe that is itself one vast complex. His work considers links between ant colonies and the growth of forests; cancer and economic bubbles; and the buzz of starlings and crowds walking down the street.
His book Notes on Complexity: A Scientific Theory of Connection, Consciousness, and Being (Spiegel & Grau) is available for purchase.
I N SI DE S C I ENCE Mon., May 15, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1CV-015; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Cultivating the Good Life Why Relationships Are Essential
What makes for a long, happy, meaningful, and good life? The simple but surprising answer is relationships. It’s based on 85 years of work by the Harvard Study of Adult Development, which is still active. Marc Schulz, the study’s associate director and co-author of the new book The Good Life, Lessons from the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness, highlights findings from the Harvard Study as well as others that point to the critical role of relationships in shaping happiness and health.
He discusses why relationships are the foundation of the good life, how to improve them, and how to prioritize the important things in life. His insights are timely, given the isolation so many have experienced over the course of the pandemic.
Thurs., May 18, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1NV-036; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Lawrence Krauss on Unsolved Mysteries of the Cosmos
Our understanding of science has advanced immeasurably over the last 500 years, yet many fundamental mysteries of existence persist. How did our universe begin and how big is it? Is time travel possible? What is at the center of a black hole? How did life on Earth arise? Are we alone? What is consciousness, and can we create it?
Covering time, space, matter, life, and consciousness, theoretical physicist and author Lawrence Krauss explores the greatest unanswered questions at the forefront of science today–and that will shape its state for the next century.
His book The Edge of Knowledge: Unsolved Mysteries of the Cosmos (Post Hill Press) is available for purchase.
Tues., June 6, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1K0-368; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
Landscape of Change
Historic Acadia National Park
For centuries, the coastal location and diverse landscape of Maine’s Acadia National Park—featuring mountain summits, rocky shores, and wooded valleys—have drawn Indigenous residents, explorers, settlers, and visitors in search of beauty and inspiration. The juxtaposition of landscape has created a unique region and a haven for scientists. Their centuries of written records, specimen collections, and oral histories have provided baselines for understanding environmental change on Mount Desert Island and beyond.
Author and scientist Catherine Schmitt shares the story of science in Acadia. Her book Historic Acadia National Park (Lyons Press) is available for purchase.
Thurs., June 8, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1CV-016; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Remnants of Life
The New Science of Ancient Biomolecules
We used to think of fossils as being composed of nothing but rock and minerals, but we were wrong. Today, scientists and the new science of ancient biomolecules—pigments, proteins, and DNA that once functioned in living, but now extinct, organisms—are opening a new window onto the evolution of life on Earth. Dale E. Greenwalt, a research associate at the National Museum of Natural History, is your guide to these astonishing breakthroughs.
Greenwalt is the author of Remnants of Ancient Life: The New Science of Old Fossils (Princeton University Press), available for purchase.
Tues., June 13, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-273; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
The Three Ages of Water
Prehistoric Past, Imperiled Present, and a Hope for the Future
From the creation of the planet billions of years ago to the present day, water has always been central to existence on Earth. It has shaped civilizations and empires and driven centuries of advances in science and technology as well as progress in health and medicine. But the achievements that propelled humanity forward also brought consequences: unsustainable water use, ecological destruction, and global climate change.
Leading scientist and water expert Peter Gleick traces the long, fraught history of our relationship to this precious resource, outlining how the lessons of the past can be the foundation of action designed to support a sustainable future for water and the planet.
His book The Three Ages of Water: Prehistoric Past, Imperiled Present, and a Hope for the Future (PublicAffairs) is available for purchase.
Thurs., June 15, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1K0-370; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
A History of Cartography From Stone Scratches to Crisis Mapping
Whether early stone carvings or produced by satellite imagery, maps are part science and part art—but are indispensable for understanding the world and our place in it. They tell us which way to point our car, when to pack an umbrella, and how a trouble spot across the globe might affect our national interest.
Join geographer John Rennie Scott, author of Cartographic Encounters: Indigenous Peoples and the Exploration of The New World, as he chronicles the dramatic evolution of mapmaking over the course of human history and examines why maps are and will always be a reflection of the way we view our world and ourselves.
Tues., June 20, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-772; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Live from the UK Pterosaurs: Soaring Above the Dinosaurs
The pterosaurs are the flying reptiles so often mistakenly called pterodactyls. These animals flew above the heads of dinosaurs, their close relatives, from at least 230 million years ago until they all became extinct 65 million years ago.
Although pterosaurs’ fossils are rarer than those of their dinosaur cousins, we still have a remarkable range of them, from sparrow-sized babies to giants with wingspans of nearly 33 feet. Paleontologist David Hone dives into what we know about these fascinating flying reptiles and what we still have to discover.
Sun., June 25, 2 p.m.; CODE 1J0-274; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
What an Owl Knows
New Insights into the World’s Most Enigmatic Birds
For millennia, owls have captivated and intrigued us. With their forward gaze and quiet flight, they are often a symbol of wisdom, knowledge, and foresight. But what does an owl really know? And what do we really know about owls?
Scientists have only recently begun to understand in deep detail the complex nature of these extraordinary avians. Some 260 species of owls exist today, and they reside on every continent except Antarctica, but they are far more difficult to find and study than other birds because they are cryptic, camouflaged, and mostly active in the dark of night. Jennifer Ackerman, author of The Genius of Birds, pulls back the curtain on the rich biology and natural history of owls and examines remarkable new scientific discoveries about their brains and behavior.
Her book, What an Owl Knows: The New Science of the World’s Most Enigmatic Birds (Penguin Press), is available for purchase.
Mon., June 26, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-017; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Why Do Predators Matter?
Sometimes scary but always intriguing, the world’s top predators also are quite necessary. Robert Johnson, a wildlife specialist and conservationist; Sharon Gilman, a biology professor specializing in vertebrates and science education; and Dan Abel, a marine science professor and shark specialist, share facts and tell stories about these fearsome and often misunderstood animals. Their book, Tooth and Claw: Top Predators of the World (Princeton University Press), is available for purchase.
Mon., July 17, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1J0-277; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
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CULTURE HI STORY ART
ART SCI ENCE STUDIO ARTS
Unless noted, all programs are presented on Zoom; listed times are Eastern Time. Online registration is required.
You love art. Now go deeper.
Art is all around us. It excites us, enriches our lives, and enlivens our imaginations. To truly appreciate any work of art, we need to understand the context and culture in which it was created. That’s why Smithsonian Associates offers a Certificate Program in World Art History
The wide-ranging offerings are designed to provide a global perspective on art and architecture and draw on the Smithsonian’s world-class collections and the rich resources of other Washington institutions. They are selected from among Smithsonian Associates courses, seminars, study tours, and studio art classes.
Look for World Art History Certificate throughout the program guide to see current listings. Get started today and complete the certificate requirements at your own pace. Registration is ongoing and year round. Credits are counted from day of registration and are not given retroactively.
SmithsonianAssociates.org/artcertificate
Spring’s Awakening A Reflective Writing Workshop
Discover the power of reflective writing guided by the founding instructor of the National Gallery of Art’s popular Writing Salon, Mary Hall Surface. Inspired by works of art by Vincent van Gogh and poetry by Mary Oliver, explore the lessons that the season of spring offers us when we slow down, look closely, and reflect.
Designed for writers of all levels, the workshop invites you to look outward at paintings and poetry and to look inward through writing. These reflections can become creative fertile ground for memoir, poetry, and more. The workshop has a limited enrollment to maximize interaction among the instructor and students.
NEW DATE: Tues., April 11, 10-11:30 a.m.; CODE 1K0-384; Members $40; Nonmembers $45
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn 1 credit
Art and Fiction
A picture is not only worth a thousand words: It can sometimes inspire a whole invented world. Independent art historian Heidi Applegate explores the art and artists behind three works of historical fiction. Gain new perspectives on Renaissance portraiture; Dutch still lifes, genre painting, and a cabinet house; and the Frick Collection in New York City by delving into the novels, followed by Applegate’s examination of the factual background along with the fiction.
APR 7 Maggie O’Farrell, The Marriage Portrait, 2022
MAY 12 Jessie Burton, The Miniaturist, 2014
JUN 16 Fiona Davis, The Magnolia Palace, 2022
3 sessions: Fri., April 7, May 12, June 16, 12-1:30 p.m.; CODE 1H0-762; Members $60; Nonmembers $65
Art Crimes: Stolen Secrets of the Third Reich
Expert on art fraud, author, and former FBI agent Robert Wittman draws from his book The Devil’s Diary: Alfred Rosenberg and the Stolen Secrets of the Third Reich to recount his 2013 recovery of the long-lost private diary of the Nazi Party’s chief ideologue, who laid the philosophical foundations for the Holocaust. Rosenberg’s diary had been lost for more than 60 years and its longhidden contents offer first-person insights into the Nazi rise to power, the genesis of the Final Solution, and Germany’s brutal occupation of the Soviet Union.
Wed., April 12, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1K0-351; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate core course: Earn 1 credit Introduction to American Art
From the glorious vistas of landscape painting to the bold splashes and strokes of Abstract Expressionism, American artists have captured the nation’s enormous energy and tumultuous growth. Art historian Bonita Billman introduces major artists and movements in American painting from the late 18th century to the present, revealing the connections between historical changes and artistic choices.
APR 13 Early American Art
APR 20 Landscape Painting
APR 27 Realism and Impressionism
MAY 4 Early Modernism
MAY 11 Modern and Contemporary Art
5 sessions: Thurs., April 13–May 11, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-253; Members $85; Nonmembers $95
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Artists and Friends in the World of Manet
Cézanne and Pissarro, Van Gogh and Lautrec
The lone artist, wrestling with their genius and isolated by their obsession with work, is a popular stereotype. But it’s often through their close friendships with other artists that great creative leaps are made. When thinking of great painters who painted Provence, two names jump to mind: Vincent van Gogh and Paul Cézanne. But before they created their celebrated works there, these outsiders had profound experiences and friendships in Paris that would alter their artistic paths.
Popular Smithsonian Associates speaker Paul Glenshaw examines two such relationships: Paul Cézanne’s friendship with Camille Pissarro and Vincent van Gogh’s with Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec in the vibrant avant-garde art scene pioneered by Édouard Manet.
APR 13 Paris and Manet
APR 20 Curious Kindreds: Cézanne and Pissarro
APR 27 Curious Kindreds: van Gogh and Toulouse-Lautrec
3 sessions: Thurs., April 13–27, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1K0-362; Members $60; Nonmembers $70
SmithsonianAssociates.org/artcertificate
Art-full Fridays | Live from Italy, with Elaine Ruffolo
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
The Uffizi Gallery
An Unrivaled Collection
Located in the heart of Florence, the Uffizi Gallery has long been regarded as one of the most important museum collections in the world. Not only was it one of the first in Europe to emerge in accordance with the modern idea of a museum, but it is also unsurpassed in the quality of works it contains, boasting some of the greatest masterpieces of the Florentine Renaissance.
Join art historian Elaine Ruffolo as she discusses the history and aspects of the gallery—including the patronage of the Medici family, the innovative architecture of Vasari, and, of course, an in-depth examination of the best of the remarkable painting collection.
Fri., April 14 and 28, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1D0-010; Members $35; Nonmembers $40
Write Into Art Creative Writing Inspired by Visual Art
Discover how visual art can inspire creative writing and how writing can offer a powerful way to experience art. Join Mary Hall Surface, the founding instructor of the National Gallery of Art’s popular Writing Salon, for three online workshops that explore essential elements of writing and styles through close looking, word-sketching, and imaginative response to prompts.
The sessions spotlight a diverse range of visual art chosen to inspire writers of all experience levels to deepen their process and practice. Each workshop has a limited enrollment to maximize interaction among the instructor and students.
APR 18 Capture Sensation
APR 25 Unveil Stories
MAY 2 Explore Place
3 sessions: Tues., April 18, 25, and May 2, 10–11:30 a.m.; CODE 1K0-352; Members $105; Nonmembers $115
Individual sessions: Tues., April 18 (CODE 1K0-353); Tues., April 25 (CODE 1K0-354); Tues., May 2 (CODE 1K0-355); 10-11:30 a.m.; Members $40; Nonmembers $45
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Three Masterpieces of Etruscan Art
The Etruscans hold a reputation for mystery, but we do know a lot about them and their remarkable contributions to the history of art. Art historian and author Laura Morelli explores what makes Etruscan culture unique in the Mediterranean world.
She spotlights three Etruscan masterworks excavated from tombs in central Italy; examines how the Etruscans adorned the places where they planned to spend eternity; and describes the incredible luxury objects they took with them. She discusses the hallmarks of Etruscan visual art and why Etruscan archaeology is a vibrant field of study today.
Tues., April 18, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1H0-763; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn 1 credit Cultural Heritage Sites of India
From India’s elaborately decorated Ajanta Caves to the splendor of the Taj Mahal, UNESCO’s list of World Heritage Sites offers a spectacular window into South Asia’s past. Art historian Robert DeCaroli highlights historic palaces, grand temples, royal mausoleums, and more that showcase how India’s rich religious traditions have inspired the creation of many of the subcontinent’s abundant historically and culturally significant destinations.
9:30 a.m. Rock-cut Wonders
11 a.m. Sacred Sites (Part 1)
12:30 p.m. Break
1:30 p.m. Sacred Sites (Part 2)
2:45 p.m. Seats of Power
Sat., April 22, 9:30 a.m.–4 p.m.; CODE 1J0-252; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Isabella Stewart Gardner: A Global Vision of Art
Isabella Stewart Gardner (1840–1924) assembled an extraordinary collection of art from diverse cultures and eras—and built a Venetian-style palazzo in Boston to share her exquisite treasures with the world. Diana Seave Greenwald, assistant curator of the collection at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, shines new light on Gardner. As one of the authors of Isabella Stewart Gardner: A Life, Greenwald provides a multifaceted portrait of a trailblazing patron who used her varied collection, including Italian Renaissance paintings and Chinese antiquities, to create a museum unprecedented in its curatorial vision.
Tues., April 25, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1L0-510; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit 20th-Century Oceanic Art
Ten thousand islands dot the Pacific Ocean, a vast expanse of water that covers one-third of the Earth’s surface. For over 40,000 years, people have lived and traveled among these islands, establishing thriving and interconnected states and societies, and creating artworks that express the excitement and vitality of their lives.
Art historian Kevin Tervala surveys the artistic practice across 20th-century Oceania, examining the ways that European colonization and decolonization, the Pacific theater of World War II, and the increasingly globalized nature of the economy transformed the work that artists did and the forms that they produced.
Tues., April 25, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1D0-012; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
What time does the program end? Unless noted, Smithsonian Associates programs run 1 hour 15 min.–2 hours, including Q&A
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Kandinsky: Abstraction’s Architect
Art historian Joseph Cassar explores Russian-born Wassily Kandinsky (1866–1944), a leading figure in the development of abstract painting. His illustrated lecture begins with Kandinsky’s initial years as a lecturer in law at the University of Moscow and proceeds with his friendship with artist Gabriele Munter and their travels to Tunisia. Cassar offers a special focus on works Kandinsky produced in the pre-World War I Murnau period and as part of the avant-garde Blaue Reiter group. He connects Kandinsky’s publications with his teaching years at the Bauhaus in Weimar and Dessau and provides a critical analysis of Kandinsky’s abstract paintings and his final years in Paris during the 1930s and ’40s.
Tues., May 9, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1K0-363; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Byrdcliffe: An American Arts and Crafts Colony
Founded in 1903, the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony was born out of the late 19th century’s Arts and Crafts movement and a passion for building a utopian community with like-minded writers, poets, painters, and craftspeople.
Overlooking the scenic Catskills in Woodstock, New York, the colony was an idealistic venture founded by Ralph and Jane Byrd McCall Whitehead and two friends, Bolton Brown and Hervey White. Offering a place where artists could train and acquire practical skills, the colony was intended to be self-sufficient through the sale of furniture, ceramics, and weavings.
Curator and author Nancy Green explores how Byrdcliffe began as a community of talented artists and artisans, students and teachers, and their commitment to the goals of joy and fulfillment in their labors and an appreciation of a simple aesthetic harnessed to a simple lifestyle.
Wed., May 10, 7 p.m.; CODE 1CV-014; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
Lesser-Known Museums of Rome
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Private Art Collections of Rome, Part 1
A number of Rome’s greatest art treasures are displayed in the private collections of historically influential Roman families. Not surprisingly, some of these families produced popes such as Innocent X (Pamphilj), Urban VIII (Barberini), and Martin V (Colonna). Fortunately, a number of these art collections are now museums open to the public.
Renaissance art expert Ruggiero explores four of these private collections—the Doria Pamphilj Gallery, the Barberini Palace Museum, the Villa Farnesina, and the Colonna Palace—and explains how the artworks they held helped shape the Italian Renaissance.
Mon., May 1, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-258; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Becoming Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright is one of the most celebrated architects of the 20th century. Despite a prolific career spanning seven decades studded with glittering accomplishments and triumphs, his personal and professional life was plagued with tragedy, scandal, divorce, murder, and financial setbacks. Bill Keene, a lecturer in urban studies and architecture, looks beyond the buildings to the man with the pencil, triangle, and T-square to shed light on the story of the master himself.
Keene traces Wright’s formative years, the marriages and the mistresses, and the cumulative negative impact on his career that branded him a has-been by 1930. But by the end of the decade, he reemerged triumphant, and the period until his death in 1959 was the busiest in his long career. Keene analyzes the reasons for his comeback and its impact on his legacy, which continues to grow as Frank Lloyd Wright became a brand associated with everything from toys and games to furniture, pop music (remember Paul Simon’s So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright?), and even an opera. Wed., May 10, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1NV-035; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn 1 credit
Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo: Contrasts in Greatness
Leonardo and Michelangelo: These towering geniuses grew up in the same city, shared patrons, and also shared an intense dislike for each other. But their fraught relationship was fueled by a secret mutual fascination and a fierce competition that spurred them to new levels of artistic achievement.
Art historian Nigel McGilchrist depicts the two artists as perfectionists and brilliant craftsmen of radically different kinds who revolutionized the received methods of painting and sculpting.
10 a.m. The Consequences of Competition
11:30 a.m. Techniques and Conservation
12:45 p.m. Break
1:15 p.m. Obsessions and Recurring Themes
2:45 p.m. Writings, Dreams, and Nightmares
Sat., May 13, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; CODE 1M2-260; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Art and Beauty in Siena
Siena’s beautiful townscape encapsulates everything we love about Tuscany—charming towns among rolling hills, rich history, and artistic and architectural treasures from its medieval heyday—rivaled only by its Tuscan neighbors, Florence and Pisa.
Art historian and author Laura Morelli leads an immersive virtual tour of Siena’s most iconic landmarks: the Gothic cathedral, Siena’s city hall or Palazzo Pubblico, and the unusually shaped town square, the Piazza del Campo. She also examines masterpieces by Siena’s most enduring artists: Duccio, Simone Martini, and the Lorenzetti brothers.
Tues., May 16, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1H0-766; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit How Catholic Art Saved the Faith
Not long after Martin Luther’s 95 Theses were posted in 1517, dialogue between Protestants and Catholics broke down and devastating religious wars erupted across Europe. Desperate to restore the peace and recover unity, the Catholic church turned to its longtime allies, the arts.
Convinced that to win over the unlettered, the best place to fight heresy was not in the streets but in stone and on canvas, prelates enlisted the century’s best artists, including Caravaggio, Guido Reni, Annibale Carracci, Federico Barocci, and Artemisia Gentileschi. Art historian and author Elizabeth Lev tells the story of the creation and successes of a magnificent, generations-long project: the affirmation through beauty of the Catholic belief in saints, sacraments, and salvation.
Wed., May 17, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1H0-769; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn 1 credit
Great Castles of Great Britain From William the Conqueror to Elizabeth I
From foreboding fortresses to captivating castles, Great Britain is home to extraordinary buildings that were the locations of some of the extremes of British history, ranging from the viciously vindictive—such as the grotesque murder of Edward II at Berkeley Castle—to the glamorously amorous, such as the adventures of Bess of Hardwick Hall, ever richer with each of her four marriages. Art historian Janetta Rebold Benton takes you on a vicarious visit to castle life in medieval and Renaissance England, examining architectural styles, historic structures, and splendid settings.
FRI., MAY 19
10 a.m. Moat, Keep, Motte, and Bailey
11:15 a.m. Manor Manners
FRI., MAY 26
10 a.m. Castle Life Fit for a King—and Queen
11:15 a.m. Architecture and Ego
2 sessions: Fri., May 19 and 26, 10 a.m.–12:15 p.m.; CODE 1D0015; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
German Expressionism
German Expressionism emphasizes the artist’s emotions or ideas over replicating reality and is characterized by simplified shapes, bright colors, and gestural marks or brushstrokes. In a program that covers paintings, drawings, etchings, woodblock prints, and sculpture, art historian Joseph Cassar introduces and explores 20th-century German Expressionism as a movement. He discusses forerunners of Expressionism such as Gruenwald’s Crucifixion and Goya’s The Third of May, and the work of Die Brücke (The Bridge), an organization of German painters and printmakers that from 1905 to 1913 played a pivotal role in the movement’s development. He also examines the Degenerate Art exhibition of 1937, with an emphasis on artists such as Kirchner, Nolde, Otto Mueller, Schmidt-Rottluff, Grosz, Otto Dix, Beckmann, and others.
Fri., May 19, 12–2 p.m.; CODE 1K0-364; Members $30; Nonmembers $35
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
The Art of Christo and Jeanne-Claude Outdoors, Outsized, and Out of the Ordinary
From their New York City apartment, Christo Javacheff and Jeanne-Claude Denat de Guillebon initiated some of the most enigmatic, ephemeral, and beautiful works of public art ever created around the world. Each used acres of colorful fabric to cover an entire building, line a path, or surround islands—on display for no more than two weeks.
Art historian Nancy G. Heller analyzes the couple’s most important projects and explains their significance in the history of contemporary art.
Wed., May 24, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-262; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
The Mosque
Linking Religious and Architectural Traditions
The mosque is the defining element of an Islamic community. While there are a few essential components of a mosque, over time and across geographies an astonishing variety of form, building materials, and decoration in mosque architecture developed. With the spread of Islam around the world, mosques that were built for Muslim communities maintained the core components needed for the building’s function but developed regional styles depending on local building materials, architectural traditions, and climate.
Nancy Micklewright, a specialist in the history of Islamic art and architecture, looks closely at some of the most iconic and spectacular examples of mosques from different parts of the Islamicate world—including the Washington area—to survey this regional and temporal variety. From one of the smallest and oldest to one of the newest and most grand, she explores how these buildings maintain a connection with a building tradition that stretches back to the 7th century CE.
Tues., May 23, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1L0-514; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Hokusai’s
Career in Prints
Internationally renowned for iconic works such as Under the Wave off Kanagawa, Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) designed popular woodblock prints for more than five decades. His boundless creativity led to a prolific output on a range of subjects in a variety of genres. National Museum of Asian Art curator Kit Brooks examines the print works of this artist, who has come to be seen as an embodiment of Japanese artistic style.
Mon., June 5, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-268; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
What time does the program end? Unless noted, Smithsonian Associates programs run 1 hour 15 min.–2 hours, including Q&A
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Renoir: The Gift of Joy
Pierre-Auguste Renoir, celebrated as a founding member of the Impressionists, is also hailed by modern realists for his painterly technique and happy subjects. His work reflected one central tenet: “To my mind, a picture should be something pleasant, cheerful and pretty. …There are too many ugly things in life as it is without creating still more of them.” No stonebreakers or railway stations for him.
Renoir reveled in lush color that can be seen in sensual nudes, family portraits, landscapes, and genre depictions such as Luncheon of the Boating Party. Art historian Bonita Billman showcases selections from his prolific oeuvre of more than 4,000 works as she illustrates why Renoir is one of the most highly regarded artists of his time.
Thurs., June 8, 12–1:30 p.m.; CODE 1M2-266; Members $20; Nonmembers $25
World Art History Certificate core course: Earn 1 credit
Understanding Modern Art
The radical innovations made by European and American painters and sculptors between 1900 and 1960 forever altered the way we think about visual art. Before World War I, Fauvist and Expressionist painters challenged the traditional Western concept of beauty, while Picasso and Malevich took on thousands of years of art history by exploring the controversial realm of abstraction.
Between the wars, artists as different as Salvador Dali and Frida Kahlo made images based on their own dreams and hallucinations. Later, American art finally achieved international recognition through the enormous, dramatic canvases of Jackson Pollock, paving the way for several decades of cultural prominence that began in the 1960s.
In this richly illustrated two-part course, art historian Nancy G. Heller, professor emerita of art history at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, discusses major works by the period’s seminal painters and sculptors, emphasizing their broader socio-political and aesthetic contexts.
FRI., JUNE 9
6:30 p.m. New Art for a New Century
SAT., JUNE 10
10 a.m. Empathy and Shock
11:30 a.m. Beyond Realism and Narrative
12:45 p.m. Break
1:15 p.m. Exploring the Subconscious
2:45 p.m. The Triumph of American Painting
2 sessions: Fri., June 9, 6:30 p.m. and Sat., June 10, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; CODE 1M2-263; Members $85; Nonmembers $95
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
The Elgin Marbles Controversy
Did Britain’s Lord Elgin rescue ancient Greek marble sculptures and architectural fragments–including a 24-foot marble frieze–from the Parthenon in 1801 or did he steal them? Greece’s position is clear: The country wants them back from the British Museum. But do the citizens of modern Greece have any claim over items produced in their region by people who lived thousands of years ago?
While the battle over ownership roils, the famed works have already been renamed in wide circles from the Elgin Marbles to the Parthenon Marbles. Art historian Joseph Cassar explores these ancient sculptures made under the supervision of architect and sculptor Phidias and the controversies that have swirled around them since they left Greece.
Mon., June 12, 6:45 p.m.; CODE 1K0-369; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Discovering the William Louis-Dreyfus Foundation Art Collection
William Louis-Dreyfus (1932–2016) was a poet, businessman, and committed art collector whose collection of close to 4,000 works represents over 50 years of discovery and dedication. Shaped by curiosity, an open mind, and a lifelong fascination with the power of visual media, Louis-Dreyfus’s collection remains remarkable today for its depth and diversity.
Get an introduction to this one-of-a-kind collection in a program that begins with a recorded message by actress Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who talks about her father’s passion for art and his commitment to education. Then, Paul Glenshaw (of the popular Smithsonian Associates Art+History series) hosts a live-streamed illustrated lecture about this extraordinary and fascinating collection by Mary Anne Costello and Christina Kee, the curators at the William Louis-Dreyfus Foundation in Mount Kisco, New York.
Fri., June 23, 12–1:15 p.m.; CODE 1K0-371; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit for each session
The Intersection of Art and Literature
The notion that a picture is worth a thousand words is meant to convey the power of imagery. But what of the power of words—if they are personal interpretations of art that mix fact and fiction such as Giorgio Vasari’s Lives, or the writings of Dante and Shakespeare that inspired Auguste Rodin, or Émile Zola’s written defense of his great friend Édouard Manet’s work and the portrait it inspired. Explore the alchemy that occurs at the intersection of art and literature in this fascinating Sundayafternoon series with David Gariff, senior lecturer at the National Gallery of Art.
JUN 25 Walker Evans and James Agee
JUL 23 William Blake: Poet and Painter
AUG 27 Pablo Picasso and Gertrude Stein
3 sessions: Sun., June 25, July 23, Aug. 27, 3 p.m.; CODE 1H0-773; Members $75; Nonmembers $80
Individual programs: Sun., June 25 (CODE 1H0-773A), July 23 (CODE 1H0-773B), Aug. 27 (CODE 1H0-773C), 3 p.m.; Members $25; Nonmembers $30
World Art History Certificate core course: Earn 1 credit
The Art of India: From the
Indus
Valley to Independence
Ever since its origins in an ancient civilization along the Indus River, the complex culture of South Asia has led to the creation of some of the world’s most remarkable art and architecture. Robert DeCaroli, a professor in the department of history and art history at George Mason University, highlights the artistic traditions and historical changes in the Indian subcontinent from the earliest archaeological evidence to the onset of colonialism.
JUL 12 Origins of South Asian Culture
JUL 19 Kingdoms, Caves, and Temples
JUL 26 Southern Dynasties and Northern Newcomers
AUG 2 The Mughal Court, the British Raj, and the Nationalists
4 sessions: Wed., July 12–Aug. 2, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1J0-275; Members $80; Nonmembers $90
IN PERSON
DRAWING n n n n
Beginning Drawing
In-person classes are taught by professional artists and teachers. View detailed class descriptions and supply lists at SmithsonianAssociates.org/studio. View portfolios of work by our instructors at SmithsonianAssociates.org/art instructors.
Color Stories Journal
This course, a valuable introduction for beginners, teaches the basic skills needed as a strong foundation for drawing. Working with a variety of materials and techniques, including charcoal and pencils, students explore the rendering of geometric forms, volume, and perspective, with an emphasis on personal gesture marks.
SOLD OUT
IN PERSON: Tues., April 18–June 6, 10:30 a.m.; George Tkabladze; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0RQ; Members $255; Nonmembers $285
Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain
Popular theory holds that the right brain is primarily responsible for the intuitive understanding of visual and spatial relationships. This class improves the way people see and record objects on paper by working through a set of visual exercises that help build the ability to draw.
IN PERSON: Wed., April 19–June 7, 2:30 p.m.; Shahin Talishkhan; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0RR; Members $235; Nonmembers $265
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Introduction to Indirect Oil Painting
Cézanne-inspired Still Life Compositions
The vibrant medium of oils was a favorite of Impressionist artists because of its luminosity and color layering effects. Working from stilllife arrangements reminiscent of Cézanne’s in-studio sessions, learn to achieve the brilliant and subtle effects characteristic of the medium.
SOLD OUT
Still Life with Apples and Peaches by Paul
Cézanne,1905
IN PERSON: Sun., April 23–May 7, 11 a.m.; Sandra Gobar; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0SE; Members $185; Nonmembers $205
Explore your relationship to individual colors and how they connect to facets of your life. Practice simple, playful acrylic painting techniques incorporating all the colors of the spectrum, plus black and white. Then, begin to record personal stories in a journal to use every day.
By Sushmita MazumdarIN PERSON: Tues., May 9–June 6, 6:30 p.m.; Sushmita Mazumdar; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0TP; Members $165; Nonmembers $195
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NEW CLASS
Mixed-Media Constructions
Take your mixedmedia ventures in a new direction with 3D constructions using wood, personal mementos, old jewelry, metal fixtures, photos, and other found objects. Experiment with molding objects from air-dry clay, along with techniques such as weaving, image transfers, and stitching with cord.
By Sharon RobinsonIN PERSON: Tues., April 18–May 23, 6:30 p.m.; Sharon Robinson; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0TR; Members $215; Nonmembers $245
Please visit SmithsonianAssociates.org to view the FAQ on Health & Safety guidelines
Fundamentals of Abstract Collage
Collage is an amazingly versatile art form with no limit when it comes to techniques and materials. In this beginner-level course, learn about tools, adhesives, materials, and appropriate bases for supporting a collage.
IN PERSON: Sat., April 29–June 17, (no class May 13 and May 27); 1 p.m., Sharon Robinson; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0TS; Members $235; Nonmembers $265
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The Ancient Art of Henna Tattoos
Henna tattoos reflect an ancient and beautiful practice of body art. Explore the form’s history as you learn to apply simple traditional Indian henna designs.
IN PERSON: Sat., June 24, 12:30 p.m.; Sharmila Karamchandani; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0UV; Members $65; Nonmembers $75
Tempered Glass Mosaics
FIBER ARTS n n n n
Abstract Embroidery
IN PERSON
Learn to apply the principles of abstract art to making embroidery. Develop a free-flowing approach to embroidery that emphasizes form, color, line, texture, pattern, composition, and process.
IN PERSON: Tues., May 2–23, 10 a.m.; Heather Kerley; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V00TW; Members $115; Nonmembers $135
SCULPTURE n n n n
Figure Sculpture
By George TkabladzeStudents examine the materials and processes for sculpting a portrait, torso, or full figure using a live model. They learn clay sculpture techniques focused on tool use, armatures, anatomy, and proportions and have the opportunity to explore their own individual styles.
IN PERSON: Tues., April 18–June 6, 6:30 p.m.; George Tkabladze; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0SS; Members $285; Nonmembers $315
Clay Portrait
Develop basic sculpting skills in this introduction to the concepts and techniques of sculpting the human head. Create copies of a plaster cast portrait or sculpt from a live model. Hands-on practice helps students develop skills in using different techniques and tools and understanding proportion and problemsolving.
By Bonnie FitzgeraldTempered glass, also known as crash glass, creates a jewel-like surface and adds some pizzaz to a finished mosaic piece. Combine collage and mosaic techniques using an overlaying technique that incorporates printed imagery, tissue paper, foils, stamps, metallic papers, glitter, and Mylar.
IN PERSON: Sat., June 17, 10:30 a.m.; Bonnie Fitzgerald; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V00UU; Members $85; Nonmembers $95
IN PERSON: Tues., April 18–June 6, 2 p.m.; George Tkabladze; details and supply list on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0SR; Members $285; Nonmembers $315
By George TkabladzePlease visit SmithsonianAssociates.org to view the FAQ on Health & Safety guidelines
On-Location Photography
Introduction to Photography
Whether you want to work in digital or film, this course offers a solid foundation for new photographers ready to learn the basics. Topics include camera functions, exposure, metering, working with natural and artificial light, and composition. Critiques of assignments enhance the technical skills you learn.
SOLD OUT
IN PERSON: Tues., April 18–June 6, 6:30 p.m.; Andargé Asfaw; details on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0SX; Members $225; Nonmembers $255
Capture images of Washington, D.C., as you sharpen your way of thinking about shooting outdoors. Emphasis is placed on what happens before the shutter release is pressed and on truly previsualizing the photograph. Sessions include lectures, Metroaccessible field trips, loosely structured assignments, and critique sessions in which students develop outdoor-shooting strategies.
IN PERSON: Sun., April 30–June 11 (no class May 28), 1:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0TE; Members $195; Nonmembers $225
Introduction to Photography II
This course is ideal for students who are interested in expanding their understanding of photography fundamentals. Sessions focus on lighting, composition, shooting techniques, gear, and photo-editing software.
IN PERSON: Wed., April 19–June 7, 6:30 p.m.; Andargé Asfaw; details on website; Ripley Center; CODE 1V0-0SZ; Members $225; Nonmembers $255
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ART SCI ENCE STUDIO ARTS CULTURE HI STORY STUDIO ARTS
Unless noted, all programs are presented on Zoom; listed times are Eastern Time. Online registration is required.
ONLINE
Online classes are taught by professional artists and teachers. View detailed class descriptions and supply lists at SmithsonianAssociates.org/studio. View portfolios of work by our instructors at SmithsonianAssociates.org/art instructors.
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Curating a Life: Art as Memoir
Visual Journaling: Creativity Workout
Gather your art materials for a morning of artistic experimentation designed to strengthen creative muscles and deepen skills in visual expression. Explore five modes of visual thinking: working from memory, observation, imagination, narrative, and experimental approaches.
By Renee SandellThis unique course is designed to engage your skills in decoding (reading) and encoding (creating) visual meaning. Explore selected works from the Smithsonian’s and other collections to find images that inspire hands-on exercises for building visual thinking skills: drawing, painting, and mixed-media; sketchbook journaling; and finally, creating a “memoir museum” of past experiences—and those yet to explore.
ONLINE: Mon., April 17–May 22, 1:30 p.m.; Renee Sandell; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0RV; Members $225; Nonmembers $255
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Composition
Composition is one of the most important elements of any artwork. Examine fundamental concepts of composition and their practical application in studio-art practice. Develop tools to enrich your own work as well to analyze and appreciate visual art in general. Create several collages based on artworks and themes discussed in class.
ONLINE Mon., May 1–22, 10:30 a.m.; Shahin Talishkhan; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0RX; Members $155; Nonmembers $175
Visual Journaling: Creativity Intensive
Strengthen your creative journaling muscles in three intensive sessions focused on artistic experimentation. Engage in markmaking and mapping exercises; use a variety of artistic media and techniques; explore modes of visual thinking and working from memory; observation, imagination, narrative, and experimental approaches.
ONLINE: Sat., May 6, May 20, and June 3, 1 p.m.; Renee Sandell; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0RW; Members $185; Nonmembers $205
By Renee SandellONLINE: Sat., May 13, 1 p.m.; Renee Sandell; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TK; Members $75; Nonmembers $85
By Mïa Vollkommer By Renee SandellCreative Mind Mapping
Take your ideas from banal to beautiful by learning how to create mind maps worthy of framing. Choose from three different styles to illustrate your thoughts and goals.
ONLINE: Mon., May 15 and 22, 6:30 p.m.; Mïa Vollkommer; details and supply list on website; CODE 1K0-0TL; Members $75; Nonmembers $95
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn
½ credit Exploring the Visual Foundations and Traditions of Art Or, Who Was Fibonacci and What Did He Do for Art?
Through lectures and drawing exercises, learn how Renaissance artists used the golden ratio, the rule of thirds, three-point perspective, and the Fibonacci spiral—as well as how these elements can provide dynamic visual interest to your compositions, no matter the medium.
ONLINE: Thurs., June 8 and 15, 2 p.m.; Chester Kasnowski; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UM; Members $55; Nonmembers $75
Introduction to Afghan Geometric Design
Beginning Drawing
By Sughra HussainyFor centuries, religious and secular Islamic manuscripts have contained beautiful geometric decorations. Explore the history and construction of these traditional designs and create designs with graph paper and a compass.
ONLINE: Sun., April 16–May 21, 1 p.m.; Sughra Hussainy; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0RP; Members $195; Nonmembers $225
NEW CLASSES
Drawing with Silverpoint
This course, a valuable introduction for beginners, teaches the basic skills needed as a strong foundation for drawing. Working with a variety of materials and techniques, including charcoal and pencils, students explore the rendering of geometric forms, volume, and perspective, with an emphasis on personal gesture marks.
ONLINE: Sun, April 23–June 18 (no class May 28), 10:15 a.m.; Josh Highter; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0RS; Members $255; Nonmembers $285
World Art History Certificate
elective: Earn ½ credit
By Lori VanKirk SchueSilverpoint drawing uses a silver stylus on specially prepared paper to produce delicate lines. Initially silver-gray, the drawing tarnishes when exposed to air, resulting in a characteristic warm brown tone. Learn the history of silverpoint, the materials required, and the vocabulary. Prior drawing experience is strongly recommended.
ONLINE: Fri., May 5 and 12, 1 p.m.; Lori VanKirk Schue; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00TJ; Member $95; Nonmembers $115
Introduction to Chalk Pastels
Chalk pastels can be used to create dynamic artworks in any genre: portrait, still life, abstract, or landscape. Techniques are demonstrated, and various types of chalk pastels, how to combine them with other media, their history, and proper storage are discussed. All levels are welcome.
By Lori VanKirk SchueONLINE: Mon., April 24–May 8, 1 p.m.; Lori VanKirk Schue; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00TH; Members $135; Nonmembers $155
By Nick Cruz VellemanDrawing Light…and How the Masters Did It
Learn the strategies artists such as Rembrandt, Cézanne, and Van Gogh used to harness light in order to give their images dimension. Inclass exercises focus on using graphite, ink, and pastel to draw studies of masterworks.
ONLINE: Tues., April 25–May 23, 6:30 p.m., Nick Cruz Velleman; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0RT; Members $185; Nonmembers $215
PAINTING n n n n
SOLD OUT SOLD OUT
Botanicals in Watercolor II
Build on your botanical painting skills as you create vibrant watercolors inspired by nature. Learn to focus on the texture and detail of botanical subjects including flowers, fruits, and vegetables. Step-by-step instructions in watercolor are given, along with practical demonstrations. Some basic watercolor experience is required.
ONLINE: Tues., April 18–June 13, 5 p.m.; Lubna Zahid; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0SB; Members $265; Nonmembers $295
By Lubna ZahidQuick-Sketch Watercolor Journaling
Virtually travel from coast to coast and to Europe in order to explore a variety of subjects using quick-sketch watercolor techniques. Capture a scene with graceful lines and paint with flowing watercolors as you learn to break down a scene into simple shapes.
ONLINE: Sat., April 22 and 29, 10 a.m.; Cindy Briggs; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TM; Members $155; Nonmembers $175
Sumi-e Watercolor for Beginners
Working with watercolor, employ beautiful, minimal brushstrokes to depict the wonders of the natural world in the style of sumi-e, which is meant to convey the ch’i, or vital energy, of what it depicts.
ONLINE: Tues., May 16–June 13, 6:30 p.m.; Susan Vitali; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00UN; Members $145; Nonmembers $175
By Susan Vitali By Cindy BriggsHill Country Cottage in Watercolor
Learn to see and draw relationships in architecture exemplified by classic Hill Country cottages. Aided by an instructor-provided tracing and video link, describe the character of stonework with reflective light in the shadows, and give depth to the surrounding landscape. Previous watercolor experience is helpful but not required.
Introduction to Scientific Illustration: Watercolor and Ink
By Cindy BriggsONLINE: Wed., April 26 and Thurs., April 27, 6:30 p.m.; Cindy Briggs; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TN; Members $95; Nonmembers $115
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Drawing Light: How the Masters Did it in Color
Using watercolor and oil pastels, learn the strategies Delacroix, Turner, Monet, and Cézanne employed to harness light in their images. By looking deep into their work, participants investigate how these masters’ use of color manipulates the experience of light.
ONLINE: Wed., May 24–June 21,
By Nick Cruz Velleman6:30 p.m.; Nick Cruz Velleman; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TQ; Members $165; Nonmembers $195
By Natalia Wilkins-TylerLearn to see like a scientist as you use watercolor and ink to illustrate specimens from nature. Experienced students develop their skills in applying key techniques such as composition, working with color, and recording fine detail in nature journaling, watercolor painting, drawing, and creating stand-alone biological illustrations.
ONLINE: Tues., May 30–June 20, 6:30 p.m.; Natalia WilkinsTyler; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UL; Members $155; Nonmembers $175
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Gyotaku: The Japanese Art of Printing with Fish
Using direct printing and waterbased printing inks, create realistic looking schools of fish or a single artistic print simply by inking a whole fish and pressing it to paper. Create several 12-by-18-inch gyotaku. Learn how to paint realistic fish-eyes to bring your print to life and cut masks to create realistic compositions.
By Sue FierstonONLINE: Sat., April 22, 10 a.m.; Sue Fierston; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0SK; Members $75; Nonmembers $85
Artful Mind, Tranquil Mind
Centering practices used by artists to prepare for making art can be helpful in everyday life. Through guided instruction designed to enhance your own artmaking, explore mark-making with lines, swirls, and puddles, and use paper to experiment with folding and tearing.
Fabric Printing Using Natural Materials
SOLD OUT
ONLINE: Mon., April 17–May 22, 12 p.m.; Sushmita Mazumdar; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00SG; Members $95; Nonmembers $125
By Sushmita MazumdarCollage and MixedMedia: Animals and Nature
Experiment with hand-printing on fabrics using colorful Akua waterbased printmaking ink and natural materials. Practice printmaking techniques on muslin and cotton or cotton-blend fabric.
ONLINE: Sat., April 29, 10 a.m.; Sue Fierston; details and supply list on website; Members $55; Nonmembers $65
NEW CLASSES
Student work
Adult Art Camp: Working in Two Dimensions
By Marcie Wolf-HubbardWith an emphasis on imagery from the natural world, learn to sketch animals and objects found in nature, then combine your drawings with painting and additional elements and textures to create whimsical or serious mixed-media art.
ONLINE: Wed., April 19–June 7, 1:30 p.m.; Marcie WolfHubbard; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00SH; Members $245; Nonmembers $275
Collage and Mixed-Media
Collage is a highly versatile and accessible art technique that results in the playful combination of different and sometimes unlikely materials. Get an introduction to the materials, tools, and technologies used in collage and assemblage. Find inspiration in artists who worked in collage, including Joseph Cornell, Romare Bearden, and Gertrude Greene. Then, develop your own collage, mixed-media, or assemblage projects.
By Marcie Wolf-HubbardONLINE: Wed., April 19–June 7, 6:30 p.m.; Marcie WolfHubbard; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00SJ; Members $245; Nonmembers $275
By Susan VitaliThis course is a no-judgment zone to let you recapture your yearning to explore different media and let loose. Work with watercolor, pencil, pastel, collage, and printmaking, and learn the elements of art and principles of design. Easy projects with handouts and samples are provided.
ONLINE: Thurs., May 4–June 8, 6:30 p.m.; Susan Vitali; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UH; Members $185; Nonmembers $215
Creating with Pressed Botanicals
Use pressed botanicals, such as flower petals, grasses, and leaves, along with watercolors and colored pencils to make uniquely seasonal artworks. Learn how to select and press plant materials and create successful compositions with organic and rigid shapes in a no-stress environment. Designed around playfulness and working with “mistakes”, the lessons learned can be useful when creating future artworks in any chosen medium.
By Lori VanKirk SchueONLINE: Mon., June 5, 1 p.m.; Lori VanKirk Schue; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TV; Members $55; Nonmembers $65
Image Transfers and Altered Photos
Discover a variety of methods for making and using image transfers and expanding your creative horizons with photo alteration. Both techniques can offer new dimensions and interest to your artworks.
ONLINE: Mon., May 1–22, 6:30 p.m.; Sharon Robinson; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TT; Members $155; Nonmembers $175
By Sharon RobinsonLet’s Tell Our Tales: Personal Storybooks
By Sushmita MazumdarTell your story as you fill three handmade books with original art and writing. Each book presents an opportunity to work with different techniques and media, from paper-cutting and 3D structures to colored pencils on pastel paper; Chinese ink and brush; and collage.
ONLINE: Fri., May 5–19, 12 p.m.; Sushmita Mazumdar; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TU; Members $95; Nonmembers $115
Mixed-Media Art Warmups
Art warmups enable students to jump right into their projects knowing there are no wrong answers. Students work with positive and negative space, do quick sketches, go beyond the color wheel, and use mixedmedia techniques to build layers and texture.
ONLINE: Fri., June 9–23, 1 p.m.; Marcie Wolf-Hubbard; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00UP; Members $165; Nonmembers $185
By Marcie Wolf-HubbardONLINE
Introduction to White-Line Woodblock Printing
White-line woodcuts are multicolor images printed from a single block of wood. Learn to create your own by cutting a nature print or simple line drawing into a single wood block with a knife or gouge, creating the “white lines” when printed.
By Sue FierstonONLINE: Sat., June 24, 10 a.m.; Sue Fierston; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UQ; Members $75; Nonmembers $85
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Introduction to Bobbin Lace
Handmade bobbin lace has been around since the 16th century. All bobbin lace is made with two moves, with four bobbins at a time. Learn the basics of the craft, from winding the bobbins to making four small lace projects, in this introductory class.
By Karen ThompsonTapestry Weaving
ONLINE: Thurs., April 27–May 18, 12 p.m.; Karen Thompson; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TG; Members $205; Nonmembers $225
Learn basic tapestry weaving techniques and design. Then, create a miniature woven tapestry on a small frame loom. Techniques covered include warping the loom; color mixing and hatching; creating stripes and irregular shapes; and shading and contour.
ONLINE: Thurs., April 20–June 8, 10:30 a.m.; Tea Okropiridze; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0SN; Members $225; Nonmembers $255
By Tea OkropiridzeRead more about programs in this guide on our website. Search by code or date. Expanded program descriptions, presenters’ information, and more at SmithsonianAssociates.org.
NEW CLASSES
Wet Felting Workshops
Small Vessels with Fitted Stoppers
Learn the basic techniques of wet felting over small-scale resists to create small vessels, topped with lids or stoppers. Also taught is color blending. This workshop is an ideal challenge for both beginning and experienced felters.
Written in Fabric
Memory Messages Through Quilts
Preserve precious memories for future generations and express current feelings and emotions through memory quilts. Learn hand piecing, machine and hand appliqué, managing repurposed fabrics, freestyle embroidery, and creating text using needle and thread.
By Lauren Kingsland By Renate Maile-MoskowitzONLINE: Sat., May 6 and 13, 1 p.m.; Renate Maile-Moskowitz; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UK; Members $115; Nonmembers $135
Resist and Unite
ONLINE: Wed., April 26–June 14, 1 p.m.; Lauren Kingsland and Heather Kerley; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0SP; Members $245; Nonmembers $275
Circular Weaving
By Renate Maile-MoskowitzThe socio-political slogan “resist and unite” can also be used to describe two techniques of wet felting: using a resist to keep fibers from felting together and the uniting of fibers to create a form. Learn these methods to create a trivet or small wall hanging.
ONLINE: Sat., April 22 and 29, 1 p.m.; Renate MaileMoskowitz; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00UJ; Members $115; Nonmembers $135
Botanical Illustration in Redwork
Learn the history of redwork quilts and how this type of embroidery—primarily done in red but also in blue and black—can be used to make beautiful, delicate botanical illustrations. Students create designs based on plants native to their area, transfer those designs onto fabric, and then make a basic small quilt using their embroideries.
By Tea OkropiridzeCircular weaving is a fun and versatile technique for new weavers as well as experienced fiber artists. Learn how to warp and weave on several sizes of circle looms as you create projects from coasters to cushions to home décor.
ONLINE: Tues., June 6 and 20, 6 p.m.; Tea Okropiridze; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0TX; Members $125; Nonmembers $145
CALLIGRAPHY n n n n
Introduction to Pointed-Pen Calligraphy
Learn how to use the elegant Copperplate script and take your personal correspondence to a whole new level. Sessions focus on basic tools and mechanics; working with color; and using this hand in different sizes and in various applications. No prior calligraphy experience is needed.
ONLINE: Sat., April 22–June 17 (no class May 27), 1:30 p.m.; Sharmila Karamchandani; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0SQ; Members $235; Nonmembers $265
ONLINE: Thurs., June 1–15, 10 a.m.; Heather Kerley; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UR; Members $105; Nonmembers $125
By Heather KerleyOTHER MEDIA n n n
Wirework Intensive: Creative Chains
Washington’s Marvelous Mosaics
A beautifully crafted chain can adorn a handmade pendant or be worn alone as a unique and expressive piece of jewelry. Learn to create three different chain designs using wire-working, forming, and texturing. Wire fusing is also demonstrated and instructions for a complementary clasp are included.
By Mïa VollkommerONLINE: Sat., April 29–May 13, 12 p.m.; Mïa Vollkommer; details and supply list on website; CODE 1K0-0SU; Members $195; Nonmembers $215
Wirework Intensive: Rings
Learn to create three different ring designs using wire-working, forming, and riveting. Designs can be embellished with beads and easy texturing techniques. Students leave the class with several finished pieces that are ready to wear.
The Washington, D.C., area contains a surprising number of works that together provide a picture of the styles and techniques of an art form that’s been practiced since ancient times. Take a virtual tour that highlights local mosaic treasures at notable public sites, contemporary spaces, and federal and private buildings.
ONLINE: Tues., May 2, 6:30 p.m.; Bonnie Fitzgerald; details on website; CODE 1V00TY; Members $20; Nonmembers $30
Summer Orchid Care
By Mïa VollkommerONLINE: Thurs., June 1–15, 6:30 p.m.; Mïa Vollkommer; details and supply list on website; CODE 1K00US; Members $165; Nonmembers $185
Growing Show Orchids
If your orchids are thriving and blooming and you’re wondering what’s next in your orchid adventure, this class is for you. Learn about the conditions necessary to raise vigorous, healthy orchids for shows and tips on transporting competition-ready orchids.
ONLINE: Sat., June 10, 2 p.m.; Barb Schmidt; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UT; Members $30; Nonmembers $40
Just in time for summer, discover the pros and cons of moving your orchids outside in the hotter months. Learn about the extra care orchids need while they are outside and when they are ready to be brought back indoors.
ONLINE: Tues., May 23, 6:30 p.m.; Barb Schmidt; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UG; Members $35; Nonmembers $45
The Art of Floral Design
Explore the spectrum of floral design in this class that covers such practical areas as sourcing (with a focus on sustainability), making the most of seasonal flowers, creating centerpieces, wiring techniques, and photographing your work.
By Arrin SutliffONLINE: Wed., April 26–May 31, 7:30 p.m.; Arrin Sutliff; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0ST; Members $155; Nonmembers $185
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Introduction to Lightroom
Taking Better Photos
Learn to develop your photographic vision and take better photos more consistently. After fostering a more deliberate approach to composition, balance, lighting conditions, and ”keeping it simple,” students see improvement in their photographs of people, landscapes, gardens, architecture, and more.
By Joe Yablonsky By Eliot CohenAdobe Lightroom is a useful program for organizing and editing either RAW or JPEG image files. The workshop offers users an overview of Lightroom, with a focus on working with the Library and Develop modules. Functions such as importing, exporting, deleting, and grouping files; sorting and ranking files for quality; and attaching keywords for easy retrieval are covered.
TWO ONLINE OPTIONS: Sat., April 22 and Sun., April 23, 9:30 a.m. (CODE 1V0-0TC); Sat., June 24 and Sun., June 25, 9:30 a.m. (CODE 1V0-0UZ); Eliot Cohen; details on website; Members $275; Nonmembers $295
Understanding Your Digital Mirrorless or SLR Camera
Learn how digital SLRs or mirrorless cameras can help you achieve better picture quality and control. Sessions cover ISO, shutter speed, aperture, and depth of field; raw vs. jpeg files; and white balance and auto focus modes. Several photos can be uploaded before the second session, which features suggestions for possible improvement.
ONLINE: Wed., April 12–26, 1 p.m.; Eliot Cohen; details on website; CODE 1V0-0SV; Members $255; Nonmembers $275
By Eliot CohenONLINE: Wed., April 19–May 3, 6:30 p.m., Joe Yablonsky; details on website; CODE 1V0-0TA; Members $125; Nonmembers $145
Introduction to Photography
By Andargé AsfawWhether you want to work in digital or film, this course offers a solid foundation for new photographers ready to learn the basics. Topics include camera functions, exposure, metering, working with natural and artificial light, and composition. Critiques of assignments enhance the technical skills you learn.
ONLINE: Wed., April 19–June 7, 10:30 a.m.; Andargé Asfaw; details on website; CODE 1V0-0SY; Members $225; Nonmembers $255
Aspect Ratios
Gain an understanding of aspect ratios (digital sensors and film). The class explores changing the aspect ratio in camera, aspect-ratio constraints in cropping and post-production, and use of the Photoshop image size and canvas size commands. Class discussion explores how aspect ratio affects print sizes and presentation methods (mat board, frames, etc.).
ONLINE: Thurs., April 20, 6:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; CODE 1V0-0TB; Members $45; Nonmembers $55
Introduction to iPhone Photography
iPhone cameras are continually improving and replacing point-and-shoot cameras with convenient and easier ways to capture, post-produce, and share images. Learn how to use a well-designed secondary camera app to further improve the basic iPhone camera.
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Hands-On History of Photography: The Cyanotype
SOLD OUT
By Peggy FeerickONLINE: Sat., May 13 and Sun., May 14, 10 a.m.; Peggy Feerick; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UA; Members $75; Nonmembers $95
The Flash Class
Explore the world of cyanotypes, a photographic printing process that produces a cyan-blue and white print. Create your own cyanotype artwork in this unique studio arts program.
By Marty KaplanLighting can make or break your work as a digital photographer. Learn the tech tips that will make your flash one of your most effective creative tools and help create a threedimensional look in your photographs of people and objects.
ONLINE: Mon., May 1–22, 6:30 p.m.; Marty Kaplan; details on website; CODE 1V0-0UF; Members $165; Nonmembers $185
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NEW CLASS
Photographing Industrial Items
Learn the camera controls, composition, and lighting considerations to achieve artful images of items such as brickwork, apartment or office buzzers, call boxes, and vintage signage. Working knowledge of your camera is required, along with willingness to see the mundane as magnificent.
ONLINE: Thurs., June 1 and 8, 6:30 p.m.; CODE 1V0-0UD; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; Members $90; Nonmembers $110
ONLINE: Sat., June 17 and 24, 12 p.m.; Patricia Howard; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UY; Members $85; Nonmembers $105
By Patricia HowardMastering Exposure
Develop a greater understanding of the complex relationship among aperture, shutter speed, and ISO. Topics include exposure modes, exposure compensation, filter exposure factors, bracketing, metering modes, histograms, the zone system, dynamic range, eliminating camera shake, tripods, and flash concepts. Skills are honed through assignments and in-class review.
ONLINE: Thurs., April 27–May 25, 6:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; CODE 1V0-0TD; Members $185; Nonmembers $215
By Joe YablonskyAdvantages to providing your email to customer service:
• Receive a digital version of the member program guide so you can read it anywhere
• Receive important notices regarding your class along with other useful information
Slow Shutter-Speed Photography
Slow things down as you learn to capture movement and low light scenes with longer shutter speeds. Topics covered include panning, zoom effect, intentional camera movement, tripods, drive modes, neutral density filters, and the camera settings required to take slow shutter-speed photos in bright light, low light, twilight, and night.
ONLINE: Wed., May 10 and 17, 6:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; CODE 1V0-0TZ; Members $90; Nonmembers $110
The Photo Essay
Learn how to create a photo essay, a set of photographs that tell a story or evoke a series of emotions. Homework assignments are designed to encourage students to explore their own personal interests.
ONLINE: Wed., May 24 and June 21, 6:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; CODE 1V00UB; Members $90; Nonmembers $110
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit
Hands-On History of Photography: Surrealism
Learn about the world of the photo surrealists—Man Ray, László Moholy-Nagy, Hannah Höch, and others—and explore how they pushed the boundaries of photographic imagery. Then, create your own surrealist collage as part of the experience.
ONLINE: Sat., June 3 and 10, 12 p.m.; Pat Howard; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V00UE; Members $75; Nonmembers $95
Macro Photography
Take a much closer look at your photographic subjects through the art of macro photography. Get an introduction to the technique’s aesthetics and design, as well as technical tips on lenses, close-up focusing distance, depth of field, tripod use, lighting, and other key elements.
ONLINE: Thurs., June 15 and 22, 6:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details and supply list on website; CODE 1V0-0UX; Members $90; Nonmembers $110
Build Your Photographic Portfolio
Show off your photos like a pro and learn how to assemble a personal portfolio that reflects your best work and your distinctive vision as a photographer. Targeted homework assignments help you increase your collection of portfolio-quality work.
ONLINE: Wed., May 31–June 14, 6:30 p.m.; Joe Yablonsky; details on website; CODE 1V0-0UC; Members $125; Nonmembers $145
By Joe YablonskyRead more about programs in this guide on our website. Search by code or date. Expanded program descriptions, presenters’ information, and more at SmithsonianAssociates.org.
Bus Tour
Doodlebugging Through Delaware
Hop aboard a private charter of an early 20th-century self-propelled railcar called the Doodlebug and take in the spring sights along the historic Wilmington & Western Railroad line. The W&W has been in continuous operation since 1867, stretching at its longest to 20 miles of track along the Red Clay Valley from downtown Wilmington, Delaware, to Landenberg, Pennsylvania.
As you ride, tour leader Joe Nevin, a railroad historian, covers the colorful background of the W&W and offers stories of the once-bustling industrial towns along the branch line. The visit includes a tour of the W&W’s steam locomotive and passenger car shop facilities at Marshalltown, as well as a guided walking tour of a vintage amusement park site at Brandywine Springs. The day concludes with a stop in New Castle to see remnants of the New Castle and Frenchtown Railroad, one of the nation’s first. Lunch is at the Back Burner restaurant in Hockessin, the current end of the line.
Sat., April 15, 7 a.m.–7:30 p.m.; by bus; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1CD-008; Members $200; Nonmembers $250
2-Day Tour
The Best of Brooklyn
Brooklyn is New York City’s most populous borough and is arguably the most historic and colorful section of the city. Today it’s hipper than ever, filled with intriguing shops and restaurants and a booming cultural scene. On this two-day visit, arts journalist and former Brooklynite Richard Selden introduces you to several of Brooklyn’s top attractions.
The itinerary includes the Brooklyn Museum; a chamber-music performance at the floating venue Bargemusic; and a special look inside the Brooklyn Academy of Music. The Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn Bridge, Olmsted and Vaux’s Prospect Park, and other landmarks round out the sites. Stay in a hotel in the heart of Brooklyn and eat like a local with dinner at a charming Italian restaurant in Carroll Gardens and a visit to an authentic Turkish restaurant for lunch.
Sun., April 16, 7 a.m.–Mon., April 17, 9:30 p.m.; by bus; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1CN-BOB; Members $635; Nonmembers $835
Study Tours are designed for people who want more than just a getaway, Smithsonian Associates expert-led tours offer one-of-a-kind travel experiences.Bargemusic, Pier 1, DUMBO waterfront Brooklyn Bridge from the DUMBO waterfront The lake, Prospect Park, Brooklyn The Shinto shrine at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden Wilmington & Western Engine 98 crosses Red Clay Creek near Greenbank Mills and Philips Farm, Delaware
Military History in the Capital Area
Much of America’s military history—both past and present—is connected to the capital area, the backdrop for a day that spotlights three significant sites in a tour led by two staff members of the National Museum of the United States Army, public outreach manager Brent Feito and historian Matt Seelinger.
A visit to Mount Vernon, the home of the United States’ first commander in chief, George Washington, sets the stage for examining the early military campaigns of the fledgling nation. The Fort Belvoir–based Museum of the United States Army, one of the newest in the area, gives visitors the opportunity to explore the branch’s 247-year history and its direct influence on American life.
The final stop is the Smithsonian’s Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, for a look at the extensive display of American and international military aircraft, uniforms, and other artifacts and close-up views of holdings such as the Bell AH1F Cobra, a Bell UH-1H Iroquois “Huey,” and a Redstone missile.
Fri., April 21, 8 a.m.–6:30 p.m.; by bus; complete tour information on website; box lunch provided; CODE 1CD-009; Members $160; Nonmembers $210
World Art History Certificate elective: Earn ½ credit Hillwood: A Collector’s Vision of Beauty, Inside and Outside
Walking Tour
Discover one of the finest and most personal museums in Washington in a private, small-group experience that invites you to spend a spring day exploring Hillwood Estate, Museum, and Gardens, the former residence of businesswoman and collector Marjorie Merriweather Post.
Enjoy a guided tour of Hillwood’s gardens, which feature a diverse and fascinating array of trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants. It’s the perfect season to stroll through the French parterre, the Japanese-style garden, and the working greenhouse filled with orchids and other tropical plants.
Then tour the Georgian-style mansion that reflects the distinctive artistic focus of Post, who maintained strong ties to the 18th-century French decorating style when transforming Hillwood into her own after purchasing the estate in 1955. Within its walls are a large decorative arts collection focusing heavily on Russian art and religious objects—including Faberge eggs—as well as 18th- and 19th-century French art and furniture.
TWO OPTIONS: Fri., May 5 (CODE 1CD-010) and Fri., May 19 (CODE 1CD-B10), 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; detailed tour information on website; Members $150; Nonmembers $200
Glimpses of Old Arlington
The essence of Arlington County goes beyond highways and high-rises—and reaches deep into the past. From the early 17th century to the Revolution and the Civil War to the Great Depression and the postwar boom, Arlington County has been a canvas for American history. Get a close look at sites that reflect that fascinating heritage with historian Dakota Springston.
After an introductory presentation at the Ripley Center, a bus tour travels through diverse neighborhoods in East Falls Church, Fostoria, Clarendon, Cherrydale, Fort Myer Heights, Glencarlyn, and Ballston. Participants visit five historic structures such as the Ball-Sellers House, a circa-1780 log cabin that’s the oldest residence in the county; the Mary Carlin House from around 1800; and the Clarendon post office, opened in 1937. A catered box lunch is served in a firehouse.
Sat., May 6, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.; CODE 1CD-011; by bus; detailed tour information on website; Members $135; Nonmembers $185
Lincoln in Virginia: A Wartime Journey
Abraham Lincoln spent 18 of the last 21 days of his life in eastern Virginia, headquarters for Ulysses S. Grant’s campaign against Robert E. Lee, whose army was in the process of defending Richmond and Petersburg. Join Noah Andre Trudeau, author of Lincoln’s Greatest Journey: Sixteen Days That Changed a Presidency, March 24–April 8, 1865, as he leads a visit to sites in the region connected to that trip.
Highlights include City Point, Lincoln’s base during his visit; Fort Wadsworth, where Lincoln and his son Tad observed troops in combat; the Thomas Wallace House, the site at which Lincoln and General Grant met to discuss the terms for Lee’s surrender; and Richmond’s Jefferson Davis mansion, the house Lincoln visited the day after Union troops entered the city. Representatives of the National Park Service and the American Civil War Museum add perspective on Lincoln’s visit and the closing weeks of the war.
Sat., May 13, 7 a.m.–7 p.m.; by bus; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1CD-012; Members $175; Nonmembers $225
The Civil War at Chancellorsville
In the eyes of many Civil War scholars, Confederate General Robert E. Lee’s greatest victory and Union General Joseph “Fighting Joe” Hooker’s greatest lost opportunity can be found during the battle of Chancellorsville that raged in the Virginia Wilderness from May 1-4, 1863. Marc Thompson, a former Air Force military intelligence officer, leads a visit to most of the significant locations associated with this epic Civil War battle. Thompson’s extensive experience in analyzing and assessing adversary operations, along with his intimate knowledge of the Chancellorsville battlefield, provide him with some unique perspectives on combat leadership and the fog of war that impacted the battle’s participants.
Sat., May 20, 8:30 a.m.–7:30 p.m.; by bus; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1CD-013; Members $150; Nonmembers $200
Related program: A Bitter Defeat (see p. 7)
Walking Tour
A Spring Walk on Theodore Roosevelt Island
Enjoy a spring morning walk on a natural oasis in the Potomac with Melanie Choukas-Bradley, author of Finding Solace at Theodore Roosevelt Island. The nearly 2-mile path follows the island’s shore and moves deep into the swamp and tidal inlet along the boardwalk where willows, bald cypresses, and cattails frame views of Washington, D.C.
Choukas-Bradley shares an overview of the landscape’s fascinating mix of trees, wildflowers, birds, and other wildlife and highlights the island’s history and the legacy of the naturalist and conservationist president it memorializes.
THREE OPTIONS: Tues., May 23 (CODE 1CS-A06); Wed., May 24 (CODE 1CS-B06); Thurs., May 25 (CODE 1CS-C06); all tours 8:30–11:30 a.m.; detailed tour information on website; Members $55; Nonmembers $75
A Mountain Rail Extravaganza
The Cass Scenic Railroad and Other West Virginia Excursions
All aboard for an exciting rail journey through West Virginia’s breathtaking mountain scenery. Led by railroad historian Joe Nevin, this multi-day tour features three rail excursions, including a climb behind the geared steam locomotive of the Cass Scenic Railroad to the top of the second-highest point in the state.
Friday’s route descends into the scenic Shenandoah Valley before turning west into the region known as “Virginia’s Switzerland.” Continue west to the town of Durbin, West Virginia, and have lunch before a chartered trip on the last remaining 10 miles of the track along the upper Greenbrier River that once connected Durbin with Cass.
Saturday begins with a tour of the historic lumber town buildings and remnants of the great mills that once filled the valley. In Cass, board your train for an afternoon excursion (including an onboard lunch) to Bald Knob overlook, where a large platform offers panoramic views into two states and the Allegheny Mountains. On Sunday, visit the West Virginia Railroad Museum, where a specialized collection of memorabilia and railroad equipment tells the story of the state’s rail heritage. Then take your seat on the New Tygart Flyer for lunch and a fourhour round trip before returning to the station for your journey home.
Fri., June 2, 7:30 a.m.–Sun., June 4, 8:45 p.m.; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1CN-MRE; Members $850; Nonmembers $1,050
The Urban Geology of the National Mall
Washington, D.C.’s National Mall provides a world-class showcase for a diverse collection of American architectural styles, landscape design and use and building stones. Join geologist Kenneth Rasmussen on a 3-mile walking tour that views structures on the Mall built from igneous, sedimentary, and metamorphic rock formed during roughly 3.5 billion years of Earth’s history and erected during 220 years of American history.
Rasmussen discusses the rocks’ origin, age, and significance, as well as the engineering, aesthetic, and political reasons for their selection and placement. He sets the Mall’s evolution in geological and architectural context and traces roughly 230 years of design in buildings and monuments created from 1791 to the present, including recent flood-mitigation efforts in view of projected sea-level rise.
Thurs., June 8, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1ND-004; Members $105; Nonmembers $125
Exploring the Historic C&O Canal
The Chesapeake & Ohio Canal was the brainchild of George Washington, who dreamed of creating an inland waterway to ferry goods between the Ohio River and Chesapeake Bay. Washington didn’t live long enough to see it come to fruition in 1828, but the C&O Canal touched many lives during the almost 100 years it was in use.
The canal’s colorful history is the focus of this excursion, guided by Aidan Barnes, director of programs and partnerships for the C&O Canal Trust, along with other Trust and Park staff. Participants also get a close-up view of the canal’s stunning natural features, tour a rehabilitated lockhouse, and learn about the lives of the lockkeepers, boat captains, and laborers who lived and worked along the canal.
Fri., June 2, 8:30 a.m.–6 p.m.; by bus; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1CD014; Members $145; Nonmembers $195
The Distinctive Birds of Western Maryland
Habitats in the Wild
High elevation and precipitation levels in the mountains of Garrett County, Maryland, create avian habitats that closely resemble those found hundreds of miles farther north—providing birdwatchers an opportunity to observe a myriad of nesting species typically found in New England and Canada. Join naturalists and birding leaders Matt Felperin and Joley Sullivan for a full day of exploration in the Maryland panhandle region bordering Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
As you travel west on I-68, enjoy strategic stops along the way at distinctive habitats that host Henslow’s sparrows, bobolinks, grasshopper sparrows, black-billed cuckoos, and golden-winged, blue-winged, and cerulean warblers.
Then head to Garrett County’s New Germany State Park, a mountain gem filled with diverse forests and miles of trails, where you’ll be on the lookout for many species of warblers, red crossbills, and rose-breasted grosbeaks—and salamanders. The day ends at the Finzel Swamp Preserve near Frostburg, where you can watch for ruffed grouse, Nashville warblers, broad-winged hawks, and Alder flycatchers in this unique ecosystem.
Sat., June 3, 5 a.m.–7 p.m.; by bus; detailed tour information on website; CODE 1ND-003; Members $185; Nonmembers $235
Giants in the Sky: Mighty Military Aircraft
Join pilot and transportation expert Scott Hercik to go behind the scenes at Dover Air Force Base and on board the giant aircraft that carry soldiers and their supplies around the world.
The day begins by delving into the base’s history of hosting training, antisubmarine, fighter, bomber, and transport aircraft, including the state-of-the-art C-17 Globemaster III and C-5M Super Galaxy. A tour of the base includes a climb high into the control tower. Meet with leaders of the Air Force Mortuary Affairs Operations, whose responsibility is the dignified return of the remains of Department of Defense personnel and dependents from overseas operations. After a luncheon with some of the men and women who keep the Air Force’s magnificent giants flying, explore the Air Mobility Command Museum, home to vintage aircraft and the largest military airplane in any museum in the world. Explore prop, turbo-prop, and jet aircraft and climb aboard the C-141 Starlifter.
Thurs., June 8, 7:30 a.m.–7:30 p.m. by bus; CODE 1CD-015; detailed tour information on website; Members $170; Nonmembers $220
In the Footsteps of Activists
Looking at D.C. History From an LGBTQ+ Perspective
Long before the 2015 U.S. Supreme Court ruling affirming the right to same-sex marriage, Washington, D.C., was a place where LGBTQ+ history was made. Join A Tour of Her Own tour leaders to explore feminist history through a queer lens in the nation’s capital.
As you walk through downtown neighborhoods filled with theaters, street art, and historic locations, stop to hear stories of defiance, resistance, and triumph at sites that include Black Lives Matter Plaza, the White House, and Ford’s Theatre.
THREE OPTIONS: Sat., June 17, 10 a.m.–12 p.m. (CODE 1CS-A07); Sun., June 18, 4–6 p.m. (CODE 1CS-B07); and Fri., June 23, 6–8 p.m. (CODE 1CS-C07); detailed tour information on website; Members $45; Nonmembers $55
A Berkshires Summer Sampler
A popular summer retreat for Bostonians and New Yorkers for well over 150 years, the scenic and historic Berkshire hills of western Massachusetts are alive with music, art, and theater. Arts journalist Richard Selden leads a five-day tour that offers a splendid sampling of cultural attractions in the region, from writers’ historic homes to outstanding museums to music and theater performances.
Destinations with literary connections include Herman Melville’s evocative Pittsfield farmhouse, Arrowhead, and Edith Wharton’s elegant Lenox estate, The Mount.
Visit the Clark Art Institute in picture-perfect Williamstown; MASS MoCA, a collection of contemporary galleries in a 16-acre former industrial complex; and the first-rate art museums at Williams College and Yale University. Be part of the audience at two intimate chamber music venues, Music Mountain in western Connecticut and Yellow Barn in Putney, Vermont, as well as for a performance of Blues for an Alabama Sky at the Barrington Stage Company in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.
Edith Wharton’s The Mount
Sun., July 30, 6:30 a.m.–Thurs., Aug. 3, 9:30 p.m.; CODE 1CN-BER; detailed tour information on website; Members $2,050; Nonmembers $2,735
Expand Your World: Join Smithsonian Associates
Your Membership Support Will Shape Our Future
Becoming a member of Smithsonian Associates makes you part of the largest museum-based educational program in the world. You’ll be among the first to know about the outstanding programs we bring you every month, and as an insider you’ll have unparalleled access to the Smithsonian’s world of knowledge—and enjoy exclusive benefits.
You might not be aware that unlike the Smithsonian’s museums, Smithsonian Associates is not federally funded. We rely on individual member contributions to help bridge the gap between program expenses and ticket revenues. And that support ensures that Smithsonian Associates can continue to grow and reach even more people—all across the country—with outstanding educational programs.
Please, consider expanding your world by becoming part of ours at: SmithsonianAssociates.org/levels
Membership Levels
Associate ($50) Members-only ticket priority and ticket discounts, free members-only programs, Smithsonian Associates’ monthly program guide, and more.
Champion ($80) All the above and additional benefits: Up to four discounted tickets, priority consideration for waitlisted programs, and more.
Promoter ($100) All the above and additional benefits: The award-winning Smithsonian magazine delivered to you, member discount on limited-edition fine-art prints created for Smithsonian Associates’ Art Collectors Program, and more.
Advocate ($175) All the above and additional benefits: An advance digital copy of the monthly program guide, two complimentary program tickets, and more.
Contributor ($300) All the above and additional benefits: Advance registration for Smithsonian Summer Camp, recognition in the program guide’s annual donor list, and more.
Patron ($600) All the above and additional benefits: Four complimentary tickets to a headliner program, copy of the Smithsonian Annual Report, and more.
Sponsor ($1,000) All the above and additional benefits: Reserved seating at in-person programs, dedicated concierge phone line for inquiries and tickets, and more.
Partner ($2,500) All the above and additional benefits: Invitation for two to attend the prestigious annual Smithsonian Weekend, recognition in the annual report, and more.
Benefactor ($5,000) All the above and additional benefits: Recognition as a sponsor of a selected program, priority seating at all in-person programs, and more.
Bonus: Contributions at the Advocate level and higher include membership in Smithsonian Associates’ Circle of Support.
HELPFUL I NFORMATION
Unless noted, all programs are presented on Zoom; listed times are Eastern Time. Online registration is required.
Program Planner (New listings in red); (In-person programs•)
Courses, Performances, and Lectures—Multi-Session
Session
HELPFUL I NFORMATION
Program Planner (New listings in red); (In-person programs•)
HELPFUL I NFORMATION
Program Planner (New listings in red); (In-person programs•)
Read more about programs in this guide on our website. Search by code or date. Expanded program descriptions, presenters’ information, and more at
NOTICE TO OUR PATRONS:
Smithsonian Associates offers our popular online programs, as well as a number of in-person programs. Because our patrons’ well-being remains Smithsonian Associates’ highest priority, all in-person programs will follow current CDC guidelines. For additional information, please contact us at 202-633-3030 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. ET, Monday to Friday
To address your concerns, we are providing the most current information on ticket purchasing and policies, membership and audience services, and communicating with our staff.
SMITHSONIAN ASSOCIATES POLICIES AND PROCEDURES
MEMBERSHIP Depending on your level of support, you will receive special benefits, including significant savings on most Smithsonian Associates program tickets and a monthly Smithsonian Associates program guide, and much more! Visit SmithsonianAssociates.org/join for more information. Join today!
TICKETS
Online .......................SmithsonianAssociates.org
CONTACT US
Email CustomerService@SmithsonianAssociates.org
Mail Smithsonian Associates, P.O. Box 23293, Washington, D.C. 20026-3293
REFUNDS are only issued when a program is canceled or if it sells out before we receive your order.
CREDIT TO YOUR SM ITHSON IAN ASSOCIATES ACCOUNT
Credit for cancellations or exchanges are only available for ticket orders that cost more than $40. If in compliance with the specific guidelines below, credit is issued to your Smithsonian Associates account, not your credit card. Credits are non-transferable.
Important note: Cancelling your program in the Zoom personal link that you received will not entitle you to a Smithsonian Associates credit or refund, unless the cancellation took place at least two weeks prior to the program and you notified Customer Service via email about the cancellation.
All Smithsonian Associates online programs, study tours, and Studio Arts classes: If you wish to cancel or exchange tickets for any ticket order costing more than $40, please contact Customer Service via email at least two weeks before the program date to request a credit. Please note that there is a $10 cancellation fee, as well as a cost adjustment when there is a price difference if you are applying your credit to another program.
Courses: To receive credit to your Smithsonian Associates account for a course, (excluding Studio Arts classes), please contact Customer Service via email at least two weeks before the first session. Credit will also be issued within two weekdays after the first session, provided that Customer Service is contacted within that period. Credit will be prorated to reflect the cost of the first session. No credit will be given after the second session.
CHANGES I N PUBLISHE D SCHE DU LES Smithsonian Associates reserves the right to cancel, substitute speakers and session topics within a course, and reschedule any program, if needed. Occasionally, a time or date of a program must change after it has been announced or tickets have been reserved. Participants are
notified by email. Check our website SmithsonianAssociates.org for latest updates.
MOVING? If you are receiving our print publications, please email or write us with your new information and allow 6 weeks for the change of address to take effect.
MEMBER NUMBER
Viewing Smithsonian Associates Online programs on Zoom
If you have not yet downloaded Zoom go to www.zoom.us/download and download the latest version of the Zoom desktop application.
Because Internet speeds vary, try to use a hardwired internet connection (ethernet cord) to your computer. Limit the number of devices and close other applications in use while viewing, and avoid any high bandwidth activities.
You will receive two emails after registering for a program: The first is an immediate automatic confirmation of your purchase from CustomerService@SmithsonianAssociates.org and a second one from no-reply@zoom.us at least 24 hours prior to the program date with a link to your online program on Zoom.
Click the Zoom link sent to you via email (“Click Here to Join”). It will automatically open a web page asking you to launch the Zoom application. Click “Open Zoom Meetings.”
Once the meeting is open in Zoom, maximize the window by clicking “Enter Full Screen” in the top right corner. Also, make sure your speakers are on.