AJ Logo an ARTSJOURNAL weblog | ArtsJournal Home | AJ Blog Central

« RUSSIAN ROULETTE | Main | PUNDIT ADVICE »

September 08, 2004

AMERICAN DREAMER

He's not the only "impoverished Caribbean orphan who immigrated to the United States," as the flack for the New York Historical Society describes him in a press release. But I'd bet he's the only one ever to be given an exhibition by the society. The reason, of course, is that this particular impoverished Caribbean orphan immigrant was Alexander Hamilton.

"Alexander Hamilton: The Man Who Made Modern America" explores his life and times, and offers what is described as "an unprecedented array of more than 150 original documents, letters, paintings and artifacts -- many of which have not previously been publicly displayed." The exhibition is to include:

+ The pistols used in the duel with Vice President Aaron Burr, who killed him.
+ A rare version of the Declaration of Independence printed in Boston in July 1776.
+ Benjamin Franklin's signed, personal copy of the Constitution of the United States.
+ The Federalist Papers.
+ More than 30 portraits of leading figures from the founding era, including iconic portraits of Jefferson and Washington by Rembrandt Peale.
+ Minutes from the New York Manumission Society, which remain unpublished to this day.
+ Hamilton's handwritten drafts for Washington's Farewell Address, which he ghostwrote.

Some of them would make me go "Ooooh!" So if you'd like to see them and learn more about 1) "the force behind the ratification of the Constitution"; 2) the "financial genius" who founded the Bank of the United States"; 3) "an ardent opponent of slavery and a founding member of the New York Manumission Society"; and 4) the "hard-hitting journalist who founded the New York Post" a couple of centuries before Rupert Murdoch tucked it like a toy whistle into his pocket, get thee to 170 Central Park West (between 76th and 77th Streets). The exhibition opens Friday and runs through Feb. 28, 2005.

Don't have the time? Don't live in New York and can't get here for it? You'll have to settle for a virtual tour of the exhibition, or you could settle in at home with either Ron Chernow's recent biography or Robert Brookhiser's earlier biography. Fair warning: Chernow's the liberal, Brookhiser's the conservative.

Posted by at September 8, 2004 03:10 AM

Tell A Friend

Email this entry to:


Your email address:


Message (optional):














 

Site Meter