National Gallery of Art
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The collections at this immense gallery rival those of any art museum in the world, displaying milestones of western art from the Middle Ages through to the 20th century, including Italian Renaissance works, Dutch Masters, French Impressionists, and all ages of American art. John Russell Pope designed the harmonious Neo-Classical West Building in 1941. The newer East Building is the work of architect IM Pei and it is often considered a work of art in itself.
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1. Ginevra de’ Benci
The careful modeling of lustrous flesh against juniper foliage make this Leonardo da Vinci canvas of 1474, his only one in the US, a lively but composed work.
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2. The Adoration of the Magi
This festive view of the Magi at Christ’s birthplace was painted in tempura on a circular panel by Fra Angelico and Filippo Lippi in about 1445.
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3. Girl with the Red Hat
This 1665 portrait shows off Johannes Vermeer’s striking use of color: yellow highlights in the blue robe, purple under the hat, turquoise in the eyes. The luminosity is enhanced by the smooth panel base.
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4. The Alba Madonna
Unusually, the Madonna in Raphael’s 1510 work is shown seated on the ground. The composition is serene, but it shows Christ accepting the cross from St John the Baptist, a precursor of events to come.
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5. Watson and the Shark
The sensational subject matter, muscular painting, and expressions of dread and anxiety made this John Singleton Copley painting shocking when it was first displayed in 1778.
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6. Portraits of the First Five Presidents
This is the only complete set of Gilbert Stuart’s paintings of the first five presidents (1817–21), including George Washington, still in existence. Sadly another set was partially destroyed by fire in 1851 at the Library of Congress.
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7. Wivenhoe Park, Essex
Light and shade, the perception of calm, and clarity of detail create an absorbing and soothing landscape. In this 1816 work John Constable demonstrates his love of the English countryside.
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8. Symphony in White, No. 1: The White Girl
This 1862 work by James McNeill Whistler is a precursor of Modernism, emphasizing abstract forms over the sensuous recreation of the model, the artist’s mistress, Joanna Heffernan.
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9. Woman with a Parasol – Madame Monet and Her Son
The human figures are part of nature here, fully integrated with the landscape. Curators believe this 1875 Claude Monet portrait was painted in a single session.
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10. Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist)
This Jackson Pollock composition is a monument of America’s emergence as a center of art innovation (1950).
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