After more than six years of extensive renovation, the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery, housed in the historic 1836 Patent Office Building, reopened to the public on July 1. Seeking to expand exhibition space and reveal the full magnificence of the Greek Revival building’s architectural features, the Smithsonian spent $166 million in federal funds and $117 million in private contributions on the project. The reward is an aesthetically enhanced structure filled with handsome galleries holding some of the best art in America. The two museums, located in what is known as the Donald W. Reynolds Center for American Art and Architecture (in honor of the largest private donor), now share a main entrance on F Street. The G Street entrance serves tour groups and provides access to the shared museums’ stores and exhibitions. There are 152,000 square feet of exhibition space in the renovated building, nearly 60,000 square feet more than before. The National Portrait Gallery (NPG) occupies 57,000 square feet, the American Art Museum (SAAM) 95,000 square feet. Administrative and other offices have been moved to the nearby Victor Building. With more than 41,000 artworks in all media spanning more than three centuries, SAAM features some of the nation’s finest visual arts in the world’s largest collection of American art. The NPG’s collection of nearly 20,000 paintings, drawings, sculpture and photographs depict men and women who have made important contributions to the history and culture of the nation. Public spaces are devoted to two new facilities: the LunderConservation Center (the first conservation facility in the countrythat allows public viewing of preservation work in progress throughfloor-to-ceiling glass windows) and the Luce Foundation Center forAmerican Art (an art storage and study center with more than 3,200works from SAAM’s permanent collection visible in secure glasscases). The two museums share a new 346-seat, state-of-the-artauditorium, and in late 2007 will also share an enclosed courtyarddesigned by British architect Norman Foster. A small exhibition covering the history of the building was organized by former SAAM deputy director Charles Robertson. His fully illustrated, 112-page book, Temple of Invention: History of a National Landmark, detailing the historical and cultural significance of the structure, was co-published by SAAM, NPG and Scala Publishers and sells for $19.95. SAAM’s permanent collection is featured in a series ofinstallations, starting with the “American Experience,” whichfeatures everything from Nineteenth and Twentieth Century landscapepaintings, like Edward Hopper’s “Cape Cod Morning,” 1950, thatconvey a sense of place, to 100 photographs of diverse Americanpeople. The Folk Art section, curated by artist William Christenberry, covers a range of vernacular art, highlighted by James Hampton’s much beloved “The Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nation’s Millennium General Assembly,” 1950-64, an expansive visionary work created from salvaged materials covered in gold and silver foil. On the second floor, a large section is devoted to “American Art through 1940,” taking visitors on a visual tour from the early days of the nation through Western expansion, the Civil War and the Gilded Age to early modernism and art of the Southwest, including a selection of WPA murals. Among other things, visitors are likely to be drawn to George Catlin’s early Native American portraits, E. Martin Hennings’s more recent depiction of Southwest Indians, “Homeward Bound,” circa 1933-34, and Childe Hassam’s Impressionist ode to the Isles of Shoals, “The South Ledges, Appledore,” 1913. Among the standout decorative arts on view is a commemorative piano decorated by Thomas Dewing for presentation by Steinway & Sons to the White House, in a gallery with paintings by Dewing of genteel ladies in sedate interiors and vivid stained glass windows by John La Farge. Period furniture pieces and sculpture – the museum has the largest collection of American sculpture in the world – complement paintings in a number of galleries. Memorable sculptures include Duane Hanson’s super-realistic “Woman Eating,” 1971, Luis Jimenez’s large fiberglass “Vaquero,” modeled in 1980 and cast in 1990, and Deborah Butterfield’s bronze skeletal horse, “Monekana,” 2001. The high, vaulted spaces of the Lincoln Gallery on the thirdfloor are well-suited for large-scale works featured in “Modern andContemporary Art.” On view are such familiar paintings as GeorgiaO’Keeffe’s “Manhattan,” 1932, Willem de Kooning’s “The Wave,” circa1942-44, and Wayne Thiebaud’s “Jackpot Machine,” 1962. SAAM director of publications Theresa J. Slowik’s American Art: Smithsonian American Art Museum is illustrated with some 225 of the museum’s treasures, along with a helpful text. Published by Abrams in association with SAAM and priced at $65 (hardcover) and $45 (softcover), this handsome, valuable volume underscores the accuracy of SAAM director Elizabeth Broun’s observation that “A museum devoted to a nation’s art provides a unique perspective on the issues and people of that country.” In addition to the awesome display of its permanent collection, SAAM has also utilized its expanded space to mount four temporary exhibitions. “William Wegman – Funney/Strange” (on view through September 24), comprises 200 photographs and other works by the artist who has made Weimaraners much-loved icons of contemporary life. “American ABC: Childhood in Nineteenth Century America” (up through September 17) explores images by the likes of Catlin, John George Brown, Winslow Homer and Thomas Eakins that helped shape national attitudes toward youngsters. Particularly noteworthy: an 1853 sculpture by Randolph Rogers, “The Truant”; African American painter Edward Mitchell Bannister’s depiction of “Newspaper Boy,” 1869; Winslow Homer’s iconic “Snap the Whip,” 1872, and “Country School,” 1873; Brown’s “The Berry Boy,” circa 1975; and trompe l’oeil master William Harnett’s “Attention, Company!” of 1878. The accompanying, 236-page, lavishly illustrated book, Young America: Childhood in Nineteenth Century Art and Culture, by Clare Perry, curator of American art at Stanford University’s Cantor Center for Visual Arts (where the show opened earlier this year), offers fresh insights into the subject. Published by Yale University Press in association with the Cantor Center, it is priced at $50 (hardcover). Sure to be a crowd-pleaser is “William H. Johnson’s World onPaper” (on display through January 7), curated by SAAM’s seniorcurator for graphic arts Joann Moser. It features more than 40works on paper by a gifted, appealing, underappreciated AfricanAmerican artist (1901-1970) who abandoned his academically taughtExpressionist style for a deliberate folk approach to telling thestory of his people. Characteristic of Johnson’s endearing,colorful images of the black experience are “Blind Singer,” circa1939-40, “Sowing,” circa 1940-42, and “Jitterbugs (V),” 1941-42. Christenberry (b 1936), who organized the adjoining folk art show, is a much-admired artist and teacher at Washington’s Corcoran College of Art & Design. Drawing on his rural Alabama roots, he returns each year to photograph, paint, draw and make sculptures and building constructions of everyday sites in poor, rural Hale County. “Passing Time: The Art of William Christenberry” (on view through July 8, 2007), includes multiple photographs, taken year after year, of the same building, like a nondescript structure in Warsaw, Ala., showing the ravages of time and weather. A Spartan white church in Sprott, Ala., is celebrated in a print and a wooden sculpture. Christenberry likewise evokes both a sense of place and universal themes of popular culture in a photograph, “Corn Sign with Storm Cloud, Near Greensboro, Alabama,” 1977, and a metal and tempera on wood piece, “Alabama Wall I,” 1985. Director Broun notes in the companion book that while Christenberry is “Miscast by some as a regional artist, [he] is instead a profoundly democratic and universal artist, one who gives special voice to the promise of our ideals and to the full complexity of our experience.” The 204-page tome, William Christenberry, published by the Aperture Foundation and SAAM, has an informative text and 130 color plates that document the artist’s knack for recording themes of time, memory and loss in the American South. It is priced at $50 (hardcover). In its expanded digs, the NPG, a sometimes overlooked treasury of art and history, does an excellent job of telling the American story through images of individuals who have shaped it. The museum’s mission is to present faces of significant Americans; it is secondarily concerned with the aesthetic quality of likenesses. As deputy director and chief curator Carolyn Kinder Carr has put it, “Traditionally, when a work is acquired by the gallery, a sitter’s significance takes precedence over the object’s artistic merit.” Those priorities are displayed in the centerpiece of theNPG’s exhibitions, the multiple images of all 42 past Americanpresidents. Front and center is Gilbert Stuart’s monumental “Lansdowne” portrait of George Washington, 1796, which was saved in 2001 thanks to a $30 million donation from the Donald W. Reynolds Foundation. Also highly familiar is the “cracked plate” photograph of a weary-looking Abraham Lincoln, taken by Mathew Brady’s talented assistant Alexander Gardner some six weeks before the president’s assassination. There are wonderfully whimsical sculptures of Presidents Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush by cartoonist/caricaturist Pat Oliphant. A gallery adjacent to “America’s Presidents” is devoted (through July 8, 2007) to “The Presidency and the Cold War,” an exhibition that explores decisions by the nation’s commanders-in-chief from Yalta to the fall of the Berlin Wall. Seventeen galleries covering “American Origins, 1600-1900” remind visitors of early contacts between Native Americans (such as Pocahontas) and European explorers, of diverse statesmen, such as Alexander Hamilton, Henry Clay and Frederick Douglass, and of literary figures like Nathaniel Hawthorne, Harriet Beecher Stowe and Henry James. There are plenty of artists enshrined here, ranging from John Singleton Copley and members of the Peale family to Thomas Hart Benton’s striking 1922 self-portrait and Alice Neel’s daring nude self-portrait at age 80, 1980. Galleries dealing with the Civil War feature Brady photographs, as well as painted portraits of military leaders on both sides of the conflict. Not to be missed in a stairway alcove is Oleg Peter Hansen Balling’s enormous “Grant and His Generals,” 1865, depicting Ulysses S. Grant and 26 of his generals on horseback. Third floor galleries are devoted to numerous themes: (1)major cultural, political and scientific figures of the TwentiethCentury (including botanist George Washington Carver and AndyWarhol’s screen print of movie goddess Marilyn Monroe); (2)”Bravo,” which showcases individuals, such as P.T. Barnum (with TomThumb), who promoted the performing arts; (3) “Champions,” salutingsports figures such as Babe Ruth; (4) a temporary exhibition(through April 27, 2007) of leading lights in entertainment, sportsand the arts in the last quarter century, including ahand-stenciled quilt by African American artist Faith Ringgold anda huge cast paper portrait of composer Philip Glass by Chuck Close;(5) “Portraiture Now,” first of a series of changing exhibitionsexploring the wide range of approaches to portraiture today, suchas a peek-a-boo head shot of basketball star Shaquille O’Neal; and(6) likenesses by some 50 artists, working in a variety of media,who were finalists in the NPG’s first national portraitcompetition, named for Virginia Outwin Boochever. As author John Updike has observed, if there is an “American face,” it is to be found in the NPG’s large and diverse collection. Portrait of a Nation: Highlights from the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, accompanies the reopening. In his deft introduction, director Marc Pachter suggests that “visiting here is like going to a place filled with the most extraordinary people one would ever hope to meet.” With succinct essays on scores of interesting faces, this 288-page volume, published by Merrell, is priced at $14.95 (softcover). By every measure, the refurbishing of the SAAM-NPG building is a resounding success, offering more attractive and expanded galleries in which to showcase some of the best America has to offer in fine art and portraits. The Donald W. Reynolds Center for American Art and Portraiture is located between Seventh and Ninth Streets and between F and G Streets NW, with the main entrance on F Street. Hours are 11 am to 7 pm, seven days a week. For information, 202-633-1000.