New culture wing showcases role of entertainment in American life

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New culture wing showcases role of entertainment in American life
Avedon photographs and iconic TV, film, theater, sports and music artifacts on view.



WASHINGTON, DC.- The new Culture Wing at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History showcases how entertainment plays a role in shaping the national conversation through two new exhibition galleries. The Ray and Dagmar Dolby Hall of American Culture hosts “Entertainment Nation/”Nacion del espectaculo” in a 7,200-square-foot gallery with the Smithsonian’s first dedicated exploration of entertainment history. The Marcia and Frank Carlucci Hall of Culture and the Arts provides a changing gallery for a rich rotation of shows that will draw on the museum’s extensive holdings. The inaugural exhibition is “(re)Framing Conversations: Richard Avedon Photographs 1946-1965,” with 20 iconic black-and-white portraits in a setting that invites discussion.

“The power of American culture will be on full view through our unparalleled collections and thoughtful scholarship,” said Anthea M. Hartig, the Elizabeth MacMillan Director of the National Museum of American History. “These galleries will transform how our visitors experience entertainment in new and unexpected ways, expanding on the promise of our democracy.” 




At the heart of the Culture Wing is the Nicholas F. and Eugenia Taubman Hall of Music with side-lobby displays of the museum’s compelling jazz and classical instrument collections. The hall is flanked by two cases highlighting recent acquisitions to the arts and culture collections. Displays include noted author Maya Angelou’s typewriter and a basketball jersey worn by a teenage Giannis Antetokounmpo before he because a National Basketball Association player.

The “Pause & Replay” installation space offers visitors a chance to recharge and reminisce about video games and take a nostalgic look through archival images, animations and retro games.

Both galleries are designed with accessibility features and universal design principles and present content in a fully bilingual English and Spanish format. Visitors will enter the third-floor wing through the “Ray Dolby Gateway to Culture,” which originally opened in fall 2018 and highlights music and sound through the “America’s Listening” display. It focuses on the public’s experience with recorded sound, including five of the innovations that have kept them listening: Thomas Edison’s phonograph, Alexander Graham Bell’s graphophone, Emile Berliner’s gramophone, Ray Dolby’s noise-reduction system and Apple’s iPod. This display leads to the Culture Wing’s landmark object—a 14-foot stained-glass window, one of four that originally graced the tower of the Victor Company’s headquarters in Camden, New Jersey. Its image of “Nipper,” the dog listening to his master’s recorded voice, became RCA’s trademark image. 










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