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Archives Road Trip: West Virginia
Palmer Hayden (1890–1973) compiled dozens of sketchbooks during his celebrated career as a painter of African American subjects. They document the years Hayden lived in France and also his travels in the United States. While on a road trip in 1938, Hayden stopped to sketch the cityscape of Weirton, a town in the northern panhandle of West Virginia. This drawing shows smoke billowing from steel mills. At the time, Weirton was a leading producer of steel in the United States.
This sketch is currently on view in our exhibition, Off the Beaten Track: A Road Trip through the Archives of American Art, on view through June 3 in our Lawrence A. Fleischman Gallery in Washington, D.C.
#ArchivesRoadTrip#Sketchbook#WestVirginia#OfftheBeatenTrack#PalmerHayden#BlackHistoryMonth#ArchivesFind
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A page from sculptor Adolph Weinman's annotated sketchbook of human anatomy. 💪
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On National Bird Day, we’re sharing some of our favorite illustrations of our feathered friends.
Study for 'Winter' by Peter Blume, circa 1964.http://s.si.edu/2CxugKU
Watercolor sketch of a Green Heron by Edwin Lord Weeks, ca. 1900. http://s.si.edu/2m3aIre
Etching of a Mountain Bluebird by Benson Bond Moore. s.si.edu/2AviWwO
Pen and ink sketch of a bird by Nathan Oliveira, 1974. http://s.si.edu/2CJp4aF
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Archives Road Trip: South Carolina
Blanche Lazzell (1878–1956) kept this diary while attending boarding school at South Carolina Coeducational Institute in Edgefield. Lazzell provided details on her day-to-day life—her art classes, her friends, and the weather. After graduating in in 1900, she observed on her train home: “It was a lonely spring evening, I watched the sun go down behind the tall green pines. The moon came up and greeted the lonely little girl. I watched the old moon and it seemed to speak and cheer me on my lonely journey.” The thoughtful young artist eventually became a multi-talented printmaker and designer.
Lazzell's diary is currently on view in our exhibition, Off the Beaten Track: A Road Trip through the Archives of American Art, on view through June 3 in our Lawrence A. Fleischman Gallery in Washington, D.C.
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