Welcome to the National Gallery of Art! If you are a first time visitor, Washington tourist, or just taking your lunch break to look at the exhibits, you are sure to enjoy the diverse art offered by this institute.
The entrance to the National Gallery of Art. The weather was slightly too hot to sit and eat a bag lunch, but would have been a lovely spot to enjoy a bag lunch or a hot dog in the spring or fall.
5017 views
|
The front atrium of the museum houses a large bronze fountain of the greek god Mars. Children on field trips use this central location to gather before their designated tours.
3876 views
|
A group of students take a break in front of Henry Moore's bronze work Knife Edge Mirror Two Pieces
3735 views
|
The older West Building (opened 1941) is based on foursquare, right-angled forms, while the newer structure interlocks complex, shifting triangular shapes. These shapes are located between the walkway that divide the East and the West Buildings of the Gallery.
4126 views
|
Through July 25, 2004 the National Gallery has a special exhibit on the Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya. This is a picture of the Mayan temples at Palenque, Mexico
4300 views
|
Roy Lichtenstein's Painting with Statue of Liberty, 1983
8654 views
|
Meadow by Alfred Sisley (French Impressionism located in the permanent collection)
5058 views
|
Mary Cassatt's Girl in Straw Hat (American Impressionism)
5084 views
|
Salem Cove by Maurice Brazil Prendergast (American) painted in 1916 *
4686 views
|
Martin Johnson Heade (American): Giant Magnolias on a Blue Velvet Cloth
3563 views
|
Breezing Up (A Fair Wind): Winslow Homer painted in 1876
3622 views
|
Peaceable Kingdom by Edward Hicks (American) 1834
3483 views
|
Willian Stanley Haseltine: Natural Arch at Capri, painted in 1871
3346 views
|
While viewing the galleries, one can find art easels throughout the National Gallery of Art. Modern artists find inspiration from past paintings such as this one of Miss Beatrix Lister orginially by Sir Joshua Reynolds.
3218 views
|
The Baptism of Christ painted by the Master of the Saint Bartholmew Altar. This Italian Gothic Painting shows the groundwork for the Rennaisance Era that would follow immediately after the Gothic period.
4279 views
|