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ERIC ED610061: Big Ideas. Smithsonian 2019 PDF

2020·6.6 MB·English
by  ERIC
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SSMMIITTHHSSOONNIIAANN 22001199 33 FROM THE SECRETARY have never forgotten the moment when I frst the hurdles inherent in our “new normal,” they have not visited the Smithsonian. It was the mid-1960s prevented us from fnding new ways to engage and inspire. and we were driving back to New Jersey after We will never replace our tangible objects that tell a a family vacation. I was too young to understand why we story when you see them up close. But for the millions of couldn’t stop at many historic sites I wanted to visit in people who cannot visit our museums, a virtual Smithsonian the still-segregated South. But when we drove through can be at their fngertips no matter where they are. The Washington, D.C., we made a detour to the Smithsonian. value of being a more digital institution has been made My dad explained that I could visit the Smithsonian clear during this time of isolation. We are uniting people by and not worry about being turned away because of race. It hosting online events, providing invaluable Smithsonian was then that I frst understood the power of this institution digital assets, and staying connected through social media. where anyone, regardless of who they were, could become One of the ways we are able to inspire creativity among something more than who they had been. all socially distant learners is through our new Open Access Since its inception, the Smithsonian has been a gift to initiative. By releasing an unprecedented amount of free America, telling the nation’s stories through our collections, Smithsonian digital resources into the public domain—more scholarship and educational initiatives. Our scientific than 3 million 2-D and 3-D images—we are ushering in a new research—examining everything from Earth’s prolific era of educational and research endeavors, creative reuse, biodiversity to distant galaxies—also tells stories about the computational analysis and innovative exploration. human condition, our place in the universe, and where we As we continue to make new discoveries, produce might be headed next. groundbreaking exhibitions, and initiate thought-provoking Now, as an institution, we are working to become more discussions, we must share them with future generations. than we have been. That entails more fully occupying the Already, we create educational materials based on our science digital realm, more robustly enhancing our educational and scholarship that enhance student and teacher engagement FRONT COVER capabilities, and more deeply examining the world’s most in 21st-century learning. Smithsonian education materials are The Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) linked eight telescopes around the globe to form an Earth-sized virtual telescope with unprecedented sensitivity and resolution. At the pressing challenges. All are goals that have become more used by teachers in all 50 states, but we can do more. helm of the effort, the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory captured the frst-ever urgent with the advent of dual pandemics: the deadly novel To that end, I plan to bolster the Smithsonian’s role in image of a black hole. Albert Einstein’s century-old theory of general relativity helped coronavirus contagion and the persistent virulent racism lifelong learning by working to transform it into a national predict that a black hole casts a circular shadow on the bright, superheated material that may have fnally galvanized a nation into confronting leader in pre-K–12 education. That is why we are developing around it—and this image reveals the shadow. its tortured racial past. a model for the future of education by working with the For us to be the institution Americans need and deserve, Washington, D.C., public school system. In time, we plan we must use our reputation and expertise to stimulate dialogue to share that model on a national and international stage. about some of the most important collective challenges we As an educational organization, we have an obligation to face. Clearly one of those is the challenge of race in all its make education a priority, no matter if learners get their dimensions. In the wake of the horrifc killing of George Floyd education in classrooms or online. and the unifed outcry for change, the Smithsonian is leading The crises we are facing have reinforced the importance the discussion with a couple of new initiatives. of what we hold most dear, starting with the health and safety The frst, Race, Community and Our Shared Future, is of our families and loved ones. But they also have reminded a Smithsonian-wide project that will examine the impact us that our human connection extends beyond the walls of our of racial inequality in our communities and nation and homes, beyond the color of our skin, and beyond the borders of inspire conversation about how Americans understand and our nations. We long for the comfort of culture, the perspective experience race. And the new digital platform Talking About of history, the beauty of art, and the answers to questions about Race by the National Museum of African American History our universe and ourselves that science provides. These, too, and Culture is helping diverse audiences better understand are more precious than ever, and the Smithsonian is unique and discuss the lived realities of race with a variety of digital in its ability to bring these endeavors to people everywhere. tools, instructional videos and multimedia resources. I have been so fortunate to be a part of this remarkable Also, at the top of our minds right now is the uncertainty institution for the better part of my career. I am honored to of a global pandemic. As of June 2020, more than 2 million lead it as we approach the Smithsonian’s 175th anniversary people have contracted COVID-19 in the United States. in 2021. In this time that feels so fragile, so precarious, we Many in our communities face unprecedented hardships: must heed what one of my favorite authors, James Baldwin, dealing with illness or the loss of loved ones, balancing the said: “The challenge is in the moment; the time is always care of others with the unfamiliarity of working from home, now.” I believe there is no better time than now to make the feeling isolated from friends and families, or dealing with Smithsonian the best version of the institution it can be. economic anxiety. The Smithsonian is preparing for what comes next with Thank you for your continued commitment and support. two task forces and a COVID-19 response team working to identify how we can gradually reopen, guided foremost by Lonnie G. Bunch III the safety and health of our employees and the public. Despite Secretary of the Smithsonian SMITHSONIAN 2019 4 SMITHSONIAN 2019 5 An international team of scientists including Katie Bouman, who is a former Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory computer scientist, created a set of algorithms to piece together the puzzle of data taken by eight telescopes around the world, creating the first image of a black hole. This is an early equation Bouman developed and presented in a TED Talk. 1 Shep Doeleman has been chasing black holes for years. More than a decade ago, this Smithsonian astronomer and other visionary scientists asked: Was it possible to capture an image of one? Black holes by their very nature are invisible, predicted by Albert Einstein but never directly observed. And the resolution required to record such a distant object—fearsome Wy in mass but tiny in size, invisible or not— would necessitate a lens the size of the entire Earth. Doeleman likened the endeavor to photographing the date on a quarter in Los Angeles while standing in New York City. Wx SMITHSONIAN 2019 6 SMITHSONIAN 2019 7 The frst-ever image of a black hole was front-page news across the planet in 2019. Science magazine called it one of the most important breakthroughs of the year. The team was awarded the Einstein Medal 2020 from the Albert Einstein Society and the NSF Diamond Achievement Award from the National Science Foundation. 2 Incredibly, that is what the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) team he directs—an international consortium that has grown to involve more than 200 scientists at 13 research institutes around the world— accomplished. The EHT linked eight radio telescopes on four continents to swivel in perfect synchrony and train their sights on a luminous swirl of hot gases and debris orbiting a supermassive black hole 55 million light years away in the center of the galaxy called Messier 87. SSMMIITTHHSSOONNIIAANN 22001199 86 SMITHSONIAN 2019 9 TThhee SSmm iitthhssoonniiaann’’ss AAgguuaa SSaalluudd PPrr oojjeecctt iinn tthhee PPaannaammaa CCaannaall WWaa tteerrsshheedd pprroo vviiddeess aa mmooddeell ffoorr rreessttoorriinngg ddeeggrraaddeedd llaannddssccaappeess,, rree vveeaalliinngg hhooww wwaatteerr ffooww iiss iinnff uueenncceedd bbyy llaanndd uussee.. TThhee ddeeccaaddeess--lloonngg rree sseeaarrcchh pprroojjeecctt iiss aa ccoollllaabboorraattiioonn aammoonngg tthhee SSmm iitthhssoonniiaann TTrrooppiiccaall RRee sseeaarrcchh IInn ssttiittuuttee,, tthhee PPaannaammaa CCaannaall AAuutthhoorriittyy aanndd tthhee NNaa ttiioonnaall EEnnvviirroonnmmeenntt AAuutthhoorriittyy ooff PPaannaammaa.. LLoonngg--tteerrmm rree sseeaarrcchh oonn hhooww hhuummaannss aanndd aanniimmaallss iimmppaacctt eeccoo ssyysstteemmss iiss mmoorree aanndd mmoorree rreelleevvaanntt ttoo eeffffoorrttss ttoo ssuussttaaiinn oouurr ppllaanneett.. PPHHOOTTOO MMAARRCCOOSS GGUUEERRRRAA 3 This is a unique strength of the Smithsonian: the ability to convene partners around the globe to create a virtual observatory the size of the planet in pursuit of what was once thought impossible. For Doeleman and his colleagues it was the discovery of a lifetime. Their research opens new windows into our understanding of space-time, the origins of galaxies, and the very workings of the universe. For the rest of us, that image shared around the world is a discovery that brings us together as human beings— an awe-inspiring reminder that we are all here together on this small blue sphere looking out at a vast and mysterious cosmos. SMITHSONIAN 2019 10 SSMMIITTHHSSOONNIIAANN 22001199 1111 Martha, the last descendant of the once-abundant passenger pigeon population, is one of the most famous Panel from Hokusai: Mad about Painting (on view November 2019–January 2021) at the Freer Gallery of birds in the world. Her death helped inspire the modern conservation movement. Today, her 100-year-old remains have been Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, the National Museum of Asian Art, which is home to one of the largest collections of digitized and rendered in 3-D for viewers to study, download, reuse or remix. Martha is one of nearly 3 million digital items the artist’s work. The Katsushika Hokusai-painted panel features a crane perched on a snowy limb. Detail from Twelve in the Smithsonian collection now available copyright-free through our Open Access initiative. PHOT O DONALD E. HURLBERT Months, a pair of folding screens. his idea of our shared place in the universe—our The challenges we face today, as a nation and as a planet, shared history—was embodied in 2019. The heft of the call for creative and collaborative interdisciplinary solutions—big Smithsonian—its unparalleled collections, its diverse ideas. The Smithsonian, a place that belongs to all of us, has the and deep-rooted expertise, and its outsized ability to capacity to unite us by drawing on the material legacy of the past connect with millions of people—is being brought to bear on the to imagine a brighter and more just and sustainable future. This most critical issues of our time: conversations about democracy, is what drives the institution forward to be, as Secretary Lonnie identity, climate change and more. G. Bunch III explains, “the glue that helps to hold us together.” SMITHSONIAN 2019 12 SMITHSONIAN 2019 13 Astronaut Neil Armstrong wore this glove during the historic 1969 Apollo 11 mission, which landed the frst In July 2019, more than 500,000 people gathered on the National Mall to celebrate the 50th anniversary person on the moon. His gloves and spacesuit were conserved and digitized thanks to the frst-ever Kickstarter campaign of the moon landing. Commissioned by the National Air and Space Museum, Apollo 50: Go for the Moon re-created the by a museum, Reboot the Suit. They were displayed at the National Air and Space Museum for the 50th anniversary of launch of Apollo 11 in a 20-minute video projected on the Washington Monument as part of a three-day celebration. the lunar landing. PHOTO MARCO GROB / TRUNK ARCHIVE PHOTO ERIC LONG Fifty years ago another image captivated the world and The National Air and Space Museum, whose frst director, galvanized our faith in human ingenuity and wonder at the Michael Collins, was also one of the three Apollo 11 astronauts, universe around us: the extraordinary sight of astronaut Neil spearheaded the production. And now the museum is embarking Armstrong setting foot on the moon. This past summer the on the most substantial renovation in Smithsonian history in order Smithsonian helped lead the nation in commemorating that to redouble its capacity to inspire new generations to reach for the historic achievement, bringing half a million people to the stars. This is the power of the Smithsonian: to spark wonder and National Mall to relive the Apollo 11 mission with a spectacular lifelong learning, make accessible the artifacts of history, and multimedia broadcast on the Washington Monument. bring us together around a shared culture. SMITHSONIAN 2019 14 SMITHSONIAN 2019 15 This ca. 1850 portrait of Rhoda Phillips, born into slavery and freed by the Emancipation Proclamation, Wayde McIntosh’s Legacy, a portrait of his friend, artist Jordan Casteel, explores social issues in the United depicts a personal story of enslavement. National Museum of African American History and Culture curator Mary Elliott States that have been a part of the country since its birth. Legacy was chosen as the third-place winner in The Outwin 2019: included the daguerreotype, along with other museum objects, in her history of slavery essay for The 1619 Project in American Portraiture Today, a triennial competition at the National Portrait Gallery on view October 2019 – August 2020. The New York Times. The museum that Secretary Bunch shepherded into being, The 1619 Project marks the 400th anniversary of the arrival the National Museum of African American History and Culture, of the frst enslaved Africans in British North America. Curator has already become a treasured place of pilgrimage in the Mary Elliott selected objects from the museum collection for a almost four years since its opening. It is an indispensable source special broadsheet section of the newspaper, sharing the powerful of excellence and expertise, helping direct the nation in a vital stories they represent to tell a fuller, more truthful story of slavery discussion about race and American history. Naturally, The New and freedom. “This is a shared history, everyone inherited the York Times partnered with the Smithsonian as it embarked upon legacies of slavery,” Elliott says. “This project—like the museum a major examination of the pervasive legacy of slavery and the itself —enables each of us to confront this history and seek to learn ways it has shaped American society. more, to be thoughtful about moving forward as a nation.” SMITHSONIAN 2019 16 SSMMIITTHHSSOONNIIAANN 22001199 1177 The bilingual exhibition Dolores Huerta: Revolution in the Fields / Revolución en los Campos explores Huerta’s The Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative is a paradigm shift at the institution, placing women infuence on and fght for agricultural labor rights in the 1960s and 1970s. This Smithsonian Institution Traveling at the center of the American story and uncovering their hidden narratives to reveal a more diverse and complete history. Exhibition Service (SITES) exhibition was created in collaboration with the National Portrait Gallery and is based on the The National Portrait Gallery’s Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence (on view March 2019 — January 2020) launched exhibition One Life: Dolores Huerta. Supported by the Smithsonian Latino Center, the exhibition will travel to 14 cities the initiative and was a major exhibition, shedding light on the diversity of women who played a role in the fght for through 2023, bringing the stories of this infuential woman to audiences nationwide. women’s suffrage. New partnerships and platforms propel the Smithsonian for Women: A Portrait of Persistence have been viewed hundreds toward the goal of reaching as broad an audience as possible, of thousands of times. Curator Kate Clarke Lemay dug deep to taking the institution beyond the National Mall. The American tell the history of women’s struggles for equality, highlighting Women’s History Initiative is a digital-frst project for precisely activists from the 1830s through the 1960s, and shining new this reason. The Smithsonian has teamed up with Wikipedia to light in particular on African American women’s fght for full bring unsung stories of women in American history to people all citizenship. over the world who might not ever come to the nation’s capital. In conducting her research, she asked, “When I read Facilitated by a new open knowledge coordinator partly funded the accounts of women’s sufrage, I wondered where are the by the Wikimedia Foundation, the initiative is hosting a series African American women in what arguably is one of the longest of Wikipedia edit-a-thons alongside exhibition openings and reform movements in American history? What of Latinx, Native CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: Mary E. Church Terrell, digital image releases. American or Asian American women? Why has women’s history Sara Jane Clarke Lippincott, Susan B. Anthony, Anna Julia Haywood (Cooper), Anna Elizabeth Dickinson, Already, for instance, images and biographies of women never been recognized as the needle on the barometer of Ida B. Wells-Barnett, Mary Ashton Rice Livermore. uploaded from the National Portrait Gallery’s exhibition Votes American history?” CENTER: Alice Dunbar Nelson. SSMMIITTHHSSOONNIIAANN 22001199 1188 SSMMIITTHHSSOONNIIAANN 22001199 1199 The Smithsonian’s mission to educate and inspire is more important than ever in moments of crisis and The Smithsonian is bringing more diverse perspectives to education programs and adopting new approaches change. The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic closed our doors, but the Smithsonian remained open, active and responding to ensure that learners can access Smithsonian resources anytime, anywhere. Native Knowledge 360°—the National to learners and visitors through our distance learning resources and interactive virtual tours. The Smithsonian American Museum of the American Indian’s signature education initiative—provides K–12 materials online to enlighten and inform Art Museum is one of many museums that offer 360° images of art, objects and full exhibitions online. Whether you are education about Native American history and culture. NK360° is one of the Smithsonian’s robust distance learning at home, at school, across the world or across the country, Smithsonian resources, expertise and experiences are just resources that became essential for educators and students learning from home during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. a click away. IMAGE FROM GOOGLE EARTH As the institution sets a course to tell a fuller story, the most culturally diverse, and builds on the premise that this is a vital arena in which we can do that work is with K – 12 education. personal history we all share. The Smithsonian seeks to inspire a generation of confdent, The institution has entered into a two-year partnership creative problem solvers who connect their knowledge to with the Washington, D.C., public school system, aligning complex challenges. Establishing a more inclusive and expansive Smithsonian content with the schools’ existing curricula to understanding of what it means to be American opens up support the social and emotional needs of students. This efort possibilities of deeper engagement. It’s an investment in the to strive for equity and access by reaching students who have the nation’s children and their capacity to see themselves in history least access to resources will empower learners with experiences and imagine a better future. that aid in their academic work and overall development. This At the National Museum of the American Indian, a new comprehensive education initiative begun in 2019 was put to Native Knowledge 360° education initiative seeks to inspire the test in 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. When an expanded understanding of Native American cultures the Smithsonian closed its museums and research centers to past and present and inform the ways American history mitigate the spread of the virus, the institution quickly adapted is taught. Through online materials and teacher training to create an easy-to-use library of learning resources for various opportunities held around the country, the platform offers age levels and those with access to high-tech, low-tech or no- students and teachers a new K – 12 framework to modernize tech tools. The impact was immediate, as teachers already the teaching of history, social studies, arts, culture and comfortable with our digital teaching tools such as Learning Lab more—one that centers Native voices, is geographically and focked to our sites, as did students and caregivers.

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