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John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Since opening in 1971, the Kennedy Center has continued its efforts
to fulfill his vision—presenting the greatest performers
and performances from across America and around the world, nurturing
new works and young artists, and serving the nation as a leader
in arts education. |
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Signature Theatre
Signature Theatre broadens and brightens the region’s cultural
landscape with its bold productions of challenging new and established
works. Musical Theater is Signature's "signature," and
the Theatre is renowned for its definitive Sondheim productions,
inventive adaptations of overlooked or forgotten works, and investment
in fresh new projects. |
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Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company
Woolly Mammoth is acknowledged as “WASHINGTON’S MOST
DARING THEATRE COMPANY” (The New York Times), as a regional
and national leader in the development of new plays, and as one
of the best known and most influential theatres in America. Woolly
Mammoth has gained this reputation by holding fast to its unique
mission: . . to ignite an explosive engagement between
theatre artists and the community by developing, producing and
promoting new plays that explore the edges of theatrical style
and human experience, and by implementing new ways to use the artistry
of theatre to serve the people of Greater Washington, DC. |
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Addison/Ripley Fine Art Museum
Established
in 1981 by partners Sylvia Ripley and Christopher Addison, Addison/Ripley
has become one of Washington's foremost contemporary galleries,
featuring changing exhibitions of the work of leading area and
of internationally recognized artists. Painting, sculpture, photography
and fine arts prints are among the disciplines presented. |
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The Anacostia Community Museum
As the Smithsonian Institution's museum of African American history
and culture, the Museum explores American history, society, and
creative expression from an African American perspective. The museum
encourages the collection, protection, and preservation of materials
that reflect the history and traditions of families, organizations,
individuals, and communities. |
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Arlington National Cemetery
Arlington National Cemetery is a military
cemetery in the United States, established during the American
Civil War on the grounds of Arlington House. The cemetery is situated
directly across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C., near The
Pentagon. More than 290,000 people
are buried in an area of 624 acres. Veterans and military
casualties from every one of the nation's wars are interred in
the cemetery, from the American Revolution through the military
actions in Afghanistan and Iraq. |
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Arthur
M. Sackler & Freer Galleries
Asian art is the focus of this museum and the neighboring Freer
(together, they form the National Museum of Asian Art in the United
States). The Sackler opened in 1987, thanks to Arthur M. Sackler's
gift of 1,000 priceless works. Since then, the museum has received
11th- to 19th-century Persian and Indian paintings, manuscripts,
calligraphies, miniatures, and book bindings from the collection
of Henri Vever. In spring 2003, art collector Robert O. Muller
bequeathed the museum his entire collection of 4,000 Japanese prints
and archival materials. |
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Corcoran Gallery of Art
Only a block
from the White House and just a short walk from the historic National
Mall, the Corcoran Gallery of Art stands as a major center of American
and European art. It is simultaneously one of America's most distinguished
museums and colleges of art and design. |
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Dumbarton Oaks
Dumbarton Oaks Research
Library and Collection, in Washington, DC, is an institute of Harvard
University dedicated to supporting scholarship internationally
in Byzantine, Garden and Landscape, and Pre-Columbian studies through
fellowships, meetings, exhibitions, and publications. Located in
Georgetown and bequeathed by Robert Woods Bliss and Mildred Barnes
Bliss, Dumbarton Oaks welcomes scholars to consult its books, images,
and objects, and the public to visit its garden, museum, and music
room for lectures and concerts. |
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Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial
The
FDR Memorial has proven to be one of the most popular of the presidential
memorials since it opened in 1997. Its popularity has to do as
much with its design as the man it honors. This 7 1/2-acre outdoor
memorial stretches out, rather than rising up, across the stone-paved
floor. Granite walls define the four "galleries," each
representing a different term in FDR's presidency from 1933 to
1945. Architect Lawrence Halprin's design includes waterfalls,
sculptures (by Leonard Baskin, John Benson, Neil Estern, Robert
Graham, Thomas Hardy, and George Segal), and Roosevelt's own words
carved into the stone. |
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The George Mason Memorial
The George
Mason Memorial, dedicated on April 9, 2002, honors the little known
but widely felt contributions of an important Founding Father.
The memorial is located in East Potomac Park near the Thomas Jefferson
Memorial. Born in 1725 George Mason wrote the Virginia Declaration
of Rights and later attended the Constitutional Convention in 1787. |
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Hirshhorn
Museum & Sculpture Garden
The Smithsonian’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
is a leading voice for contemporary art and culture and provides
a national platform for the art and artists of our time. The museum
seeks to share the transformative power of modern and contemporary
art with audiences at all levels of awareness and understanding
by creating meaningful, personal experiences in which art, artists,
audiences and ideas converge. It enhances public understanding
and appreciation of contemporary art through acquisition, exhibitions,
education and public programs, conservation, and research. |
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International Spy Museum
The International Spy Museum is the first and only public museum
in the United States solely dedicated to espionage and the only
one in the world to provide a global perspective on this all-but-invisible
profession. It features the largest collection of international
spy-related artifacts ever placed on public display. The stories
of individual spies, told through film, interactives, and state-of-the-art
exhibits, provide a dynamic context to foster an understanding
of espionage and its impact on current and historic events. |
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The Kreeger Museum
The Kreeger Museum is a private, non-profit art museum located
in the former residence of David and Carmen Kreeger. Highlights
of the collection include works by Monet, van Gogh, Picasso, Renoir,
Cezanne, Chagall, Rodin, Miro, Moore, Kandinsky and Washington
artists Gene Davis, Sam Gilliam, William Christenberry and Kendall
Buster as well as examples of traditional African and Asian Art. |
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National Air and Space Museum
The Smithsonian
Institution's National Air and Space Museum maintains the largest
collection of historic air and spacecraft in the world. It is also
a vital center for research into the history, science, and technology
of aviation and space flight, as well as planetary science and
terrestrial geology and geophysics. |
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National Building Museum
Created by an act of Congress in 1980, the National Building Museum
has become one of the world’s most prominent and vital venues
for informed, reasoned debate about the built environment and its
impact on people’s lives. Our exhibitions, educational programs,
and publications are well regarded not only for their capacity
to enlighten and entertain, but also as vehicles for fostering
lively discussion about a wide range of topics related to development,
architecture, construction and engineering, interior design, landscape
architecture, and urban planning.
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National Gallery of Art
Permanent collection of European and American paintings, sculpture,
decorative arts and works on paper, plus changing exhibitions of
art from around the world. |
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National Museum of African Art
The National Museum of African Art is home to the largest publicly
held collection of contemporary African art in the United States,
as well as the famous Walt Disney- Tishman African Art Collection
of more than 525 pieces of the finest traditional African sculpture.
The three-level underground museum on the National Mall features
textiles, household objects, architectural elements, decorative
arts and musical instruments. Its diverse collection is drawn from
many of Africa's more than 900 cultures. |
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National Museum of American History
The National Museum of American History dedicates its collections
and scholarship to inspiring a broader understanding of our nation
and its many peoples. The museum creates learning opportunities,
stimulate imaginations, and presents challenging ideas about our
country’s
past.
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National Museum of Natural History
The National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) is part of the Smithsonian
Institution, the world’s preeminent museum and research complex.
The Museum is dedicated to inspiring curiosity, discovery, and
learning about the natural world through its unparalleled research,
collections, exhibitions, and education outreach programs. Opened
in 1910, the green-domed museum on the National Mall was among
the first Smithsonian building constructed exclusively to house
the national collections and research facilities. |
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National Museum of Women in the Arts
Welcome to the National Museum of Women in the Arts, the only
museum in the world dedicated exclusively to recognizing the contributions
of women artists. The museum houses a collection of more than 2,500
works by women artists from around the world including Cassatt,
O'Keeffe, Kahlo and Nevelson. |
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National
Portrait Gallery
The Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery tells the story of
America through the individuals who have shaped U.S. culture. Through
the visual arts, performing arts, and new media, the Portrait Gallery
portrays poets and presidents, visionaries and villains, actors
and activists who speak American history. |
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National Postal Museum
The National Postal Museum, a Smithsonian Institution museum,
is located in the old Post Office building next to Union Station
in Washington, D.C. The Museum was created by an agreement between
the Smithsonian Institution and the United States Postal Service
in 1990 and opened to the public in 1993.
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Newseum
The Newseum — a 250,000-square-foot museum of news — offers
visitors an experience that blends five centuries of news history
with up-to-the-second technology and hands-on exhibits. |
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The Phillips Collection
The Phillips Collection, opened in 1921, is America’s first
museum of modern art. Featuring a renowned permanent collection
of nearly 2,500 works by American and European impressionist and
modern artists, the Phillips is internationally recognized for
both its incomparable art and its intimate atmosphere. Housed in
founder Duncan Phillips’ 1897 Georgian Revival home and similarly
scaled additions in Washington, D.C.’s Dupont Circle neighborhood,
The Phillips Collection is widely regarded as one of the world’s
finest small museums. |
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Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American
Art Museum
The Smithsonian American Art Museum's Renwick Gallery collects,
exhibits, studies, and preserves American crafts and decorative
arts from the nineteenth to twenty-first centuries. Housed in a
historic architectural
landmark across the street from the White House, the Renwick
features one-of-a-kind pieces created from clay, fiber, glass,
metal, and wood. |
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Smithsonian American Art Museum
The Smithsonian American Art Museum, the nation's first art collection,
is an unparalleled record of the American experience from the colonial
period to today. Highlights are images of the west, impressionism,
WPA murals, folk art, modern art. |
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United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
A
living memorial to the Holocaust, the United States Holocaust Memorial
Museum stimulates leaders and citizens to confront hatred, prevent
genocide, promote human dignity, and strengthen democracy. A public-private
partnership, federal support guarantees the Museum’s permanence,
and donors nationwide make possible its educational activities and
global outreach. |
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Kenilworth Park and Aquatic Gardens
Thousands
of water plants, waterlilies, lotuses, water hyacinths and bamboo
grow in ponds along the Anacostia River. In an age old dance
land, water, and wind combine at Kenilworth Park, Aquatic Gardens,
and Marsh. Sparkling in the sun on a breezy day, this natural
area of Anacostia Park has origins in a 1926 act authorizing
parks to preserve forests and natural scenery. The park reflects
the history of the nation's rivers and wetlands. |
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National Arboretum
A 446 acre living museum two miles from
the Capitol: gardens, collections, bonsai museum, herb garden,
azaleas, flowering cherry trees, and the original columns from
the Capitol. |
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DC Ducks
See Washington DC on the land
and water with this most unusual tour. Traveling in original WW
II DUKW amphibious vehicles, this 90 minute tour will take you
through the city of Washington DC before splashing down into the
Potomac River for the most unique ride and tour of your vacation! |
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Lincoln Memorial
“In this temple,
as in the hearts of the people for whom he saved the Union, the memory
of Abraham Lincoln is enshrined forever.” Beneath these words,
the 16th President of the United States—the Great Emancipator
and preserver of the nation during the Civil War—sits immortalized
in marble. As an enduring symbol of Freedom, the Lincoln Memorial
attracts anyone who seeks inspiration and hope. |
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Washington Walks
Since 1999, Washington
Walks guides have been escorting visitors and locals alike through
quaint neighborhoods, along hip urban thoroughfares, and past Washington,
D.C.’s
instantly recognizable landmarks and memorials. Whether you’re
a first-time visitor or long-time resident, the same holds true:
if you haven’t been on a Washington Walk, you haven’t
been to Washington, D.C.! |
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National Aquarium
Through transforming experiences, the National Aquarium inspires
people to enjoy, respect and protect the aquatic world. Vision
The National Aquarium’s leadership will inspire people to
celebrate and nurture the world’s aquatic habitats from tropical
rain forests to coral reefs; from the Chesapeake Bay to the world’s
oceans. |
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Smithsonian's National Zoo
The Nation’s Zoo demonstrates leadership in animal care,
science, education and sustainability. The Zoo provides the highest
quality animal care; advances research and scientific knowledge
in conserving wildlife; teaches and inspires people to protect
wildlife, natural resources and habitats; and practices
conservation leadership in all that it does. |
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