During 2004, 31 traveling exhibitions and 101 long-term exhibitions funded with NEH support appear in 50 states and the District of Columbia. To find out more about the exhibitions
near you, click on the name of a state on the map or browse
the alphabetical listing below. NEH also sponsors a number of
traveling exhibitions. To view a list of the exhibitions and
their itineraries for 2004 and beyond, click here.
If you would like to visit any of these exhibitions, please
contact the host institution to confirm times and dates.
Questions about NEH-supported exhibitions can be addressed
to the Division of Public Programs at publicpgms@neh.gov.
Alabama
Birmingham
Birmingham Civil Rights Institute
History Through Deaf Eyes
2004
A traveling exhibition on the historical development of a deaf community
within the United States.
Lister Hill Library Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
1/21/2004 to 3/5/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Jasper
Carl Elliott House Museum
Carl Elliott House
A long-term exhibition on the life and career of Carl Elliott who served as a U.S. Congressman from 1949 to
1965.
Alaska
Homer
Pratt Museum
Kachemak Bay, Alaska: An Exploration of People and Place
Summer 2004
Reinstallation of the Pratt Museum's main exhibitions, a catalog, and a traveling exhibition, all based on an
examination of the relationships between people and place in the region.
Arizona
Bisbee
Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum
Bisbee: Urban Outpost on the Frontier
A long-term exhibition and catalog on the history of urban development in
Bisbee from 1877 to 1917.
Fort Apache
Fort Apache Historic Park
Transitions in the Apache World: The Fort Apache Legacy
A long-term exhibition on the history of the White Mountain Apache, including both traditional culture and
the changes that took place after the establishment of Fort Apache by the
U.S. military.
Phoenix
Desert Botanical Garden
Plants and People of the Sonoran Desert
Implementation of an interpretive trail, which demonstrates how indigenous people in and adjacent to the Phoenix Valley intimately lived and depended upon various plants in their desert and riverine environments.
Heard Museum
Remembering Our Indian School Days: The Boarding School Experience
Closes 1/1/2005
A long-term exhibition and catalog on the social and cultural impact of the United States government's
boarding schools on Indian students.
Scottsdale
City of Scottsdale Public Library System
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
12/15/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Tucson
Arizona State Museum
Paths of Life: American Indians of the Southwest
A long-term exhibition, visitors' guide, book, and educational programs that explore the cultures of the Seri, Tarahumara, Yaqui, O'odham, Colorado River Yumans, Southern Paiute, Pai, Apache, Navajo, and Hopi peoples of Arizona and northwestern Mexico.
Arkansas
Little Rock
Arkansas Museum of Discovery
Arkansas Indians: Roots, Removal, Rebirth
A long-term exhibition and educational programs on the history of Arkansas Indians.
Quests: Human Priorities in Scientific Change
A long-term exhibition, publications, and public programs on the history of
scientific thought.
California
Arcadia
Ruth & Charles Gibb Arcadia Historical Museum
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
4/1/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical
context.
Colma
Cypress Lawn Cemetery
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
6/1/2004 to 6/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical
context.
Los Angeles
Fowler Museum of Cultural History, University of California, Los Angeles
The Art of Rice: Spirit and Sustenance in Asia
10/5/2003 to 4/25/2004
A traveling exhibition, catalog, website, educational materials, and programming on the art and cultural
context of rice cultivation in Asia.
J. Paul Getty Museum
Coming of Age in Ancient Greece: Images of Childhood from the Classical Past
9/14/2004 to 12/5/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, and related programs examining children's lives in
ancient Greece.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Beyond Geometry: Experiments in Form, 1940s-1970s
6/13/2004 to 10/10/2004
A traveling exhibition of American art from 1940 through the 1970s, including a catalog, symposium, and
extensive public and educational programs.
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
Times-Mirror Hall of Native American Cultures
A long-term exhibition and educational programs examining American Indian cultures
and their histories.
UCLA Powell Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
11/12/2003 to 1/9/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Napa
Copia: The American Center for Wine, Food & the Arts
The Art of Rice: Spirit and Sustenance in Asia
9/3/2004 to 11/29/2004
A traveling exhibition, catalog, website, educational materials, and programming on the art and cultural
context of rice cultivation in Asia.
Novato
Marin Museum of the American Indian
Precious Cargo: Childbirth and Cradle Baskets in California Indian Culture
2/20/2004 to tba
A traveling exhibition, a catalog, a short documentary video, and a website on the cultural context of woven
baskets among California Indians, especially the Pomo and western Mono.
Oakland
Oakland Museum of California
Next Stop Vietnam: California and the Nation Transformed
8/28/2004 to 2/27/2005
A traveling exhibition, audio guide, symposium, panel discussion, lectures, workshops, and educational programs interpreting the impact of the Vietnam conflict on the nation.
Ontario
Museum of History and Art, Ontario
Road Ways
A long-term exhibition, catalog, and public programs examining how roads have both reflected and shaped American life and culture.
San Francisco
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco
Permanent Collections Galleries
Educational and interpretive components to accompany the reinstallation of the permanent collection in the museum.
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya
9/4/2004 to 1/2/2005
A traveling exhibition, a publication, and interpretive programs examining the artistic world in the royal courts of ancient Maya city states during the Late Classic Period (A.D. 600-800) with particular attention to the court of Palenque in Mexico.
Sausalito
Bay Area Discovery Museum
My Place by the Bay
Interpretation of a historic site and children's museum.
Ventura
Ventura College Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
1/21/2004 to 3/5/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Ventura County Museum of History & Art
Ventura County in the New West
A long-term exhibition, catalog, and programs on the history of Ventura County, California.
Connecticut
Shelton
Shelton Historical Society
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
5/1/2004 to 5/31/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Washington
Institute for American Indian Studies
As We Tell Our Stories: Living Traditions and the Algonkian Peoples of Southern New England
A long-term exhibition on the history and contemporary traditions of Algonkian Indians in southern New England.
Interpreting the Native American Landscape: The Long House Room
An archaeology exhibition and outdoor interpretive site that includes trails and a
recreated Algonkian village.
Willimantic
Eastern Connecticut State University
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
3/17/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Delaware
Wilmington
Delaware Museum of Natural History
Hunters of the Sky (small version)
1/24/2004 to 5/2/2004
A traveling version of a larger exhibition which examines how birds of prey symbolize different cultures'
understandings of the natural world.
District of Columbia
National Gallery of Art, Smithsonian Institution
Courtly Art of the Ancient Maya
4/4/2004 to 7/25/2004
A traveling exhibition, a publication, and interpretive programs examining the artistic world in the royal courts
of ancient Maya city states during the Late Classic Period (A.D. 600-800) with particular attention to the court
of Palenque in Mexico.
National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution
From Field to Factory: Afro-American Migration, 1915-40
An exhibition, catalog, and educational resource kit about the migration of southern rural blacks to northern urban areas and the resulting social, economic, and cultural changes. One version of this exhibition is a long-term installation at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. The Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service organized two smaller versions of the show that traveled nationwide from 1988 to 1994.
National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution
Looking Both Ways: Heritage and Identity of the Alutiiq People
12/6/2003 to tba
A traveling exhibition, educational programs, CD-ROM, and catalog on the Alutiiq people of south coastal Alaska, featuring prehistoric and contemporary materials.
Florida
Daytona Beach
Museum of Arts & Sciences
A Slave Ship Speaks: The Wreck of the Henrietta Marie
10/30/2003 to 5/17/2004
A traveling exhibition and publication featuring artifacts recovered from an English merchant slave ship that
sank in the Florida Keys in 1701. The current tour is sponsored by the General
Motors Corporation.
Fort Lauderdale
Nova Southeastern University
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
1/21/2004 to 3/5/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Florida Atlantic University
Assimilating America: The Life and Stories of Isaac Bashevis Singer
8/15/2004 to 9/30/2004
A traveling exhibition, a website, and public programs examining the work of writer Isaac Bashevis Singer and the immigrant literary tradition in America.
Gainesville
Florida Museum of Natural History
South Florida Hall: People of the Estuary: 6,000 Years in South Florida
A long-term exhibition on the prehistoric Calusa Indians of Florida.
Hunters of the Sky
9/27/2003 to 2/22/2004
A traveling exhibition examining how birds of prey symbolize different cultures' understandings of the natural world.
Orlando
Orange County Library System, Orlando Public Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
12/15/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her
nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
University of Central Florida
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
10/22/2004 to 12/10/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Paltaka
Putnam County Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
12/22/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Tallahassee
Mission San Luis
San Luis de Apalachee: Interpretation of a 17th-Century Spanish Mission
Indoor and outdoor interpretive elements at San Luis de Apalachee, the capital of Spain's West Florida
mission chain.
Georgia
Atlanta
Atlanta Historical Society
Native Lands: Indians and Georgia
Closes 4/17/2004
An exhibition, interpretive garden, and related programs, including a smaller traveling exhibition, concerned with Americans Indians in the Southeastern United States and Oklahoma.
Atlanta History Center
Metropolitan Frontiers: Atlanta, 1835-2000
A long-term exhibition, publications, and public programs on the history of Atlanta.
Turning Point: The American Civil War
A long-term exhibition, publications, and public programs on the Civil War.
Georgia Institute of Technology
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
3/17/2004 to 12/31/2005
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Brunswick
Three Rivers Regional Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
3/17/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Carrollton
West Georgia Regional Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
6/23/2004 to 8/6/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Jesup
Wayne County Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
8/18/2004 to 10/1/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Hawaii
Captain Cook
Kona Coffee Farm
Conservation and living history interpretation of an early twentieth-century coffee farm that was once owned and operated by an immigrant Japanese family. In addition, The Kona Coffee Story: Along the Hawai'i Belt Road, an NEH-funded exhibition through the Japanese American National Museum, will be installed at the Kona History Center as the permanent orientation exhibition for the farm.
Illinois
Barrington
Barrington High School
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
4/1/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Charleston
Booth Library, Eastern Illinois University
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
3/3/2004 to 4/16/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Chicago
Adler Planetarium & Astronomy Museum
The Universe in Your Hands
A long-term exhibition of the planetarium's permanent collection of astronomical and scientific instruments
and their role in the history of science.
Bringing the Heavens to Earth: Cultural Astronomies Around the World
A long-term exhibition and public programs on astronomical practices, architecture, and knowledge from various world cultures, past and present.
Art Institute of Chicago
The Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand: American Indian Art of the Ancient Midwest
11/20/2004 to 1/30/2005
A traveling exhibition, catalog, and public programs on the prehistoric arts and cultures of the midwestern and southern United States, with special emphasis on the role of art in communicating shared cultural messages.
Chicago Historical Society
A House Divided: America in the Age of Lincoln
A long-term exhibition, publication, and public programs on slavery and the American Civil War.
Field Museum of Natural History
Peoples of the Pacific: Traveling the Pacific and Pacific Spirits
A long-term, two-part exhibition on the cultures and history of the Pacific Islands. Part One, Traveling the Pacific, opened in November 1989. Part Two, Pacific Spirits, opened in November 1990.
Africa
A long-term, multidisciplinary exhibition with educational programs on Africa's human and ecological diversity and the roles people of African descent have played in world history and culture, including the African diaspora in the Americas.
Machu Picchu: Unveiling the Mystery of the Incas
10/8/2004 to 2/1/2005
A traveling exhibition, public programs, and publication on new scholarly interpretations of the history of Machu Picchu and its place within Inca society.
Newberry Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
Closes 1/17/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
The Houston Museum of Natural Science
Machu Picchu: Unveiling the Mystery of the Incas
6/12/2004 to 8/29/2004
A traveling exhibition, public programs, and publication on new scholarly interpretations of the history of Machu Picchu and its place within Inca society.
Decatur
Decatur Public Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
11/12/2003 to 1/9/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Highland Park
Highland Park Public Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
5/12/2004 to 6/25/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Palos Hill
Moraine Valley Country Club
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
3/17/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Springfield
Illinois State Museum
At Home in the Heartland
A long-term exhibition and public programs interpreting the history of domestic life in Illinois over the past
three centuries.
Indiana
Lafayette
Tippecanoe County Public Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
9/1/2004 to 10/15/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Vincennes
Knox County Public Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
12/17/2003 to 2/20/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Iowa
Ames
Ames Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
12/22/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Council Bluffs
Council Bluffs Public Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
4/28/2004 to 6/11/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her
nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Dubuque
Mississippi River Museum
Make Me a River: Visions and Revisions of the Upper Mississippi
A long-term exhibition on the social and environmental history of the Upper Mississippi River region.
National Mississippi River Museum and Aquarium
A permanent interpretive exhibition about human relationships with the Mississippi River, including an
exhibition, living history presentations, an outdoor boat building demonstration, and public and educational
programs.
Kansas
Elkhart
Morton County Historical Museum
Produce for Victory: Posters on the American Homefront, 1941-45
12/19/2003 to 1/30/2004
A traveling exhibition about America mobilizing its human and natural resources for the war overseas; organized in cooperation with several state humanities councils and the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Originally funded through an NEH grant to the Arizona Humanities Council, it is currently being circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service.
Goodland
Carnegie Arts Center
Produce for Victory: Posters on the American Homefront, 1941-45
3/26/2004 to 5/7/2004
A traveling exhibition about America mobilizing its human and natural resources for the war overseas;
organized in cooperation with several state humanities councils and the National Museum of American History,
Smithsonian Institution. Originally funded through an NEH grant to the Arizona Humanities Council, it is currently being circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service.
Lincoln
Lincoln Art Center
Produce for Victory: Posters on the American Homefront, 1941-45
2/5/2004 to 3/19/2004
A traveling exhibition about America mobilizing its human and natural resources for the war overseas; organized in cooperation with several state humanities councils and the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Originally funded through an NEH grant to the Arizona Humanities Council, it is currently being circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service.
Kentucky
Bowling Green
Kentucky Library & Museum
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
10/27/2004 to 12/10/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Western Kentucky University
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
1/21/2004 to 3/5/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Maine
Portland
Portland Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
7/7/2004 to 8/20/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Searsport
Penobscot Marine Museum
Working the Bay
A long-term exhibition of life and industries, including fishing, ice harvesting, and logging around Penobscot Bay during the nineteenth century.
An Ocean-Going Community: The Childhood Sea Adventures of Lincoln and Joanna Colcord
A long-term exhibition based on the photographs and childhood memories of Joanna Colcord, whose family went to sea.
Maryland
Annapolis
Mitchell Gallery, St. John's College
The Book of Kings: Art, War, and the Morgan Medieval Picture Book
11/15/2004 to 12/26/2004
A traveling exhibition, catalog, audio tour, kiosk, and educational and public programs interpreting a rare thirteenth-century illuminated Bible.
Baltimore
Baltimore Museum of Industry
The Industrial History of Baltimore: An Educational Activity Center for Youth
A re-creation of an 1883 oyster cannery in which children role-play various jobs to appreciate the industrial
history of Baltimore.
Baltimore Clothing Company
A long-term exhibition and educational programs on the history of Baltimore's garment industry.
Jewish Museum of Maryland
Entertaining America: Jewish Roles in Film, Radio, and Television
10/26/2003 to 1/18/2004
A traveling multimedia exhibition, catalog, and public programs examining the role of American Jews in shaping American popular entertainment in the twentieth century.
Maryland Historical Society
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
9/1/2004 to 9/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Walters Art Museum
Asian Art Collections
A long-term installation of the museum's Asian art collection in Hackerman House.
Wondrous Journeys: The Walters Collection from Egyptian Tombs to Medieval Castles
Reinstallation of the Egyptian and Medieval collections and implementation of accompanying public and
educational programs.
Sharpsburg
Antietam National Battlefield
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
10/1/2004 to 10/31/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Massachusetts
Amherst
National Yiddish Book Center
A Portable Homeland: The Story of Modern Yiddish Literature
A long-term exhibition on Yiddish language and culture.
Assimilating America: The Life and Stories of Isaac Bashevis Singer
7/1/2004 to 7/18/2004
A traveling exhibition, a website, and public programs examining the work of writer Isaac Bashevis Singer and the immigrant literary tradition in America.
Boston
Children's Museum
Boston Black
Opens July 2004
A long-term, interactive exhibition for children exploring the historical and geographic diversity of Boston's black communities.
Cambridge
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology
From Nation to Nation: Examining Lewis and Clark's Indian Collection
Closes 12/31/2005
An exhibition examining Lewis and Clark's Indian Collection in commemoration of the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Mount Auburn Cemetery
Mount Auburn Cemetery: A New American Landscape
A long-term exhibition at Mount Auburn Cemetery on the cultural history and influence of America's first professionally landscaped garden cemetery, with video components, outdoor interpretive stations, and self-guided audio walking and driving tours.
Concord
Concord Museum
"Why Concord?" The History of Concord, Massachusetts
A long-term exhibition, educational programs, and film examining the history of Concord, Massachusetts, from precontact to the present.
Jamaica Plain
Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University
Science in the Pleasure Ground: An Exploration of Arboretum History
A long-term exhibition and catalog exploring the history and cultural significance of the Arnold Arboretum.
Lexington
National Heritage Museum
Coming Up on the Season: Migrant Farmworkers in the Northeast
8/23/2003 to 2/1/2004
A traveling exhibition on the history of migrant farm labor in the northeastern U.S. and on the lives and backgrounds of migrant workers in the region.
Plymouth
Plimoth Plantation
Thanksgiving: Memory, Myth, and Meaning
A long-term exhibition, two traveling exhibitions, website, dramatic performance, children's publications, public programs, and teacher workshops on the changing perceptions of the 1621 harvest feast over time.
Michigan
Clinton Township
Clinton-Macomb Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
7/7/2004 to 8/20/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Dearborn
Henry Ford Museum
Made in America: The History of the American Industrial System
A long-term exhibition on the history of American manufacturing and power-generating systems from the eighteenth century to the present.
Your Place in Time: 20th-Century America
A long-term exhibition, brochure, and online programming about the interaction of people and technologies in everyday life in the twentieth century.
Heroes of the Sky
A long-term exhibition, website, educational and public programming on the development of flight in American culture. A related panel exhibition traveled to air shows across the nation in 2003.
Grand Rapids
Public Museum of Grand Rapids
Furniture City
A long-term exhibition and school programs on the history of the furniture industry in Grand Rapids.
Anishinabek: The People of this Place
A long-term exhibition interpreting the culture and history of the Anishinabek (Odawa, Potawatomi, and Chippewa tribes) of western Michigan.
Kinross
Kinross Heritage Festival
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
6/16/2004 to 6/19/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Maple City
Port Oneida District Schoolhouse
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
6/28/2004 to 8/9/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Morenci
Stair Public Library
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
10/3/2004 to 11/14/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Munising
Alger County Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
5/2/2004 to 6/12/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Novi
Preservation Novi
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
1/23/2004 to 3/7/2004
AA traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Sidney
Montcalm Community College
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
3/15/2004 to 4/24/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Southfield
Southfield Public Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
7/7/2004 to 8/20/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Standish
Northeast Michigan Arts Council
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
8/15/2004 to 9/25/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Ypsilanti
Eastern Michigan University
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
5/12/2004 to 6/25/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Minnesota
Buffalo
Right County Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
7/3/2004 to 8/15/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Ely
International Wolf Center
Wolves and Humans: Coexistence, Competition, and Conflict
A long-term exhibition that explores the interaction of wolves and humans through the centuries, including the
use of the wolf as a symbol in art, literature, and religion as well as in mythology and folklore.
Minneapolis
Mill City Museum
A long-term exhibition, including media presentations, interactives, and learning centers, on the urban, industrial, commercial, and environmental history of the Upper Midwest.
University of Minnesota, Elmer L. Andersen Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
3/17/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Morris Stevens County Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
5/1/2004 to 6/27/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Onamia
Mille Lacs Indian Museum
Learn About Our Past: The Story of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe
A long-term exhibition, in collaboration with the Mille Lacs Indian Museum, on the history of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe.
Red Wing
Goodhue County Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
9/18/2004 to 10/31/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Rochester
Olmsted County Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
3/13/2004 to 4/26/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
St. Paul
Minnesota State Fair
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
8/23/2004 to 9/6/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Waseca
Waseca County Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
1/17/2004 to 3/7/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Mississippi
Hattiesburg
Library of Hattiesburg, Petal, & Forrest County
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
11/12/2003 to 1/9/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Jackson
Old Capitol Museum of Mississippi History
Mississippi 1500-1800
A long-term exhibition exploring the convergence and interactions of Indian, African, and European cultures in
Mississippi from 1500 to 1800.
Smith Robertson Museum & Cultural Center
From Field to Factory: Afro-American Migration, 1915-40
An exhibition, catalog, and educational resource kit about the migration of southern rural blacks to northern urban areas and the resulting social, economic, and cultural changes. One version of this exhibition is a long-term installation at the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. The Smithsonian Institution traveling Exhibition Service organized two smaller versions of the show that traveled nationwide from 1988 to 1994.
Missouri
St. Louis
Missouri History Museum
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
1/14/2004 to 9/6/2004
A traveling exhibition, a catalog, and associated programming, on the cross-cultural dynamics associated with the transcontinental journey of the Corps of Discovery.
St. Louis Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
11/12/2003 to 1/9/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Montana
Billings
Western Heritage Center
Our Place in the West: The History of the Yellowstone Valley, 1880-1940
A long-term exhibition, publication, and public programs depicting the history of
the Yellowstone Valley.
Nebraska
Lincoln
Museum of Nebraska History
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
1/1/2004 to 1/31/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Omaha
Gerald R. Ford Conservation Center
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
2/1/2004 to 2/28/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
New Hampshire
Concord
Museum of New Hampshire History
New Hampshire Through Many Eyes
A long-term exhibition and programs on the history of New Hampshire.
Keene
Keene Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
5/12/2004 to 6/25/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Portsmouth
Strawbery Banke
Crossroads of Neighborhood in Change: The Corner Grocery Store at Strawbery Banke During WWII
Site interpretation, long-term exhibition, catalog, and school programs interpreting the WWII homefront experience in an urban neighborhood.
Becoming Americans: The Shapiro Story, 1898-1928
Through interpretation, educational programs, and audio-visual presentations, the Shapiro House offers a look at immigration, cultural diversity, and community in the small, coastal city of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, at the turn of the century.
New Jersey
Blackwood
Camden County College
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
10/22/2004 to 12/10/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Jersey City
Jersey City Free Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
11/12/2003 to 1/9/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Newark
Newark Museum
Picturing America
Reinstallation of the American art collection with video, audio, website, and other public and educational
programs, placing American art in its social and cultural contexts.
Princeton
Princeton University Art Museum
The Book of Kings: Art, War, and the Morgan Medieval Picture Book
3/6/2004 to 6/6/2004
A traveling exhibition, catalog, audio tour, kiosk, and educational and public programs interpreting a rare thirteenth-century illuminated Bible.
New Mexico
Albuquerque
Maxwell Museum of Anthropology
Ancestors
A long-term exhibition on four million years of human evolution, human cultural development, the biobehavioral complexes underlying it, and the processes of archaeological discovery, with an emphasis on human evolution.
People of the Southwest
A long-term exhibition on 11,000 years of human cultural development, the biobehavioral complexes underlying it, and the processes of archaeological discovery, with an emphasis on cultural history.
Las Cruces
New Mexico State University
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
2/1/2004 to 2/28/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Santa Fe
Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
Here, Now, and Always
A long-term exhibition from prehistory to the contemporary world of the Indians of the Southwest.
Museum of International Folk Art
CARNAVAL!
November 2004 to August 2005
A traveling exhibition on the changing social meaning and dynamics of the carnival festival, based on case studies from nine communities in Europe and the Americas.
Silver City
J. Cloyd Miller Library, Western New Mexico University
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
10/13/2004 to 12/3/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Zuni
A:shiwi A:wan Museum and Heritage Center
Hawikku: Echoes from Our Past
A long-term exhibition featuring archaeological materials from the site of Hawikku encompassing the history of the Zuni from prehistory through the present.
New York
Albany
Albany Institute of History and Art
Byrdcliffe: An American Arts and Crafts Colony
12/18/2004 to 2/28/2005
A traveling exhibition, a publication, and public programs on the subject of the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony in Woodstock, New York.
New York State Museum
A Mohawk-Iroquois Village
A long-term exhibition within the Native Peoples of New York Hall that explores everyday life among the Mohawk on the eve of contact with Europeans, circa 1600.
SUNY Albany Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
12/22/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Blue Mountain Lake
Adirondack Museum
Living with Wilderness
A long-term exhibition, publications, and public programs on the environmental and social history of the Adirondack region from Native American use to the present.
Brooklyn
Brooklyn Children's Museum
Together in the City!
A long-term exhibition investigating the way in which social gatherings contribute to the formation of identity in contemporary urban youth.
Brooklyn Historical Society
Brooklyn Works: 400 Years of Making a Living in Brooklyn
A long-term exhibition, catalog, and public programs that explore work in Brooklyn since the mid-nineteenth century.
Brooklyn Museum of Art
Temples, Tombs, and the Egyptian Universe
A long-term exhibition on ancient Egyptian art from the Old Kingdom to the end of the Ptolemaic period.
Egypt Reborn: Art for Eternity
Reinstallation of the Egyptian art collection circa 2040-1350 B.C., including gallery guides, CD-ROM stations, and public and educational programming.
Buffalo
Buffalo & Erie County Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
1/21/2004 to 3/5/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Cooperstown
Farmers' Museum
Iroquois Log House
Site interpretation and related educational programming of an Iroquois homestead, circa 1845.
Fenimore Art Museum
Mohawk Bark House
Site interpretation and related educational programming of an Iroquois fishing camp, circa 1750.
Ithaca
Herbert F. Johnson, Museum of Art, Cornell University
Byrdcliffe: An American Arts and Crafts Colony
10/16/2004 to 12/5/2004
A traveling exhibition, a publication, and public programs on the subject of the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony in Woodstock, New York.
Long Island City
Museum for African Art
Beauty for the Gods: Urhobo Art in a Modern World
April 2004 to August 2004
A traveling exhibition with a catalog and public programs on traditional and contemporary art of the Urhobo people of the Niger River Delta.
New York
American Museum of Natural History
Vietnam: Journeys of Body, Mind, and Spirit
3/15/2003 to 1/4/2004
A traveling exhibition on contemporary Vietnam.
Asia Society
Asian Games: The Art of Contest
10/14/2004 to 1/30/2005
A traveling exhibition with interactive games spaces, a catalog, a website, and public programs, examining the roles of games from various traditional Asian cultures as transmitters of social values.
Center for Jewish History, Yeshiva University Museum
Assimilating America: The Life and Stories of Isaac Bashevis Singer
11/15/2004 to 12/30/2004
A traveling exhibition, a website, and public programs examining the work of writer Isaac Bashevis Singer and the immigrant literary tradition in America.
City College of New York
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
9/1/2004 to 10/15/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Lower East Side Tenement Museum
1863 Tenement House Tour
A long-term exhibition, living history tours, period installations, and audiovisual programs interpreting a
surviving Lower East Side tenement and its residents from 1863 to 1935.
Piecing It Together: Immigrants in the Garment Industry
A permanent installation, audio tour, website, and school and public programs interpreting a nineteenth-
century sweatshop.
Mount Vernon Hotel Museum & Garden
Reinterpretation of the Abigail Adams Smith Museum as the Mount Vernon Hotel (1826-1833)
The reinstallation of the permanent collection and public programs to interpret the Mount Vernon Hotel.
Museum of American Financial History
Coming Up on the Season: Migrant Farmworkers in the Northeast
6/15/2004 to 12/31/2004
A traveling exhibition on the history of migrant farm labor in the northeastern U.S. and on the lives and
backgrounds of migrant workers in the region.
Museum of Chinese in the Americas
Where Is Home? Chinese in the Americas
Reinstallation of the museum's core permanent exhibition, an interpretation of New York's Chinatown.
New York Botanical Garden
Nature and Culture in the Garden
An outdoor, long-term exhibition examining the aesthetic, cultural, and historical significance of landscapes at the New York Botanical Garden.
New York Public Library
Russia Engages the World: 1453-1825
10/2/2003 to 1/31/2004
An exhibition, catalog, online exhibition, and educational materials on Russia's evolution from an insular medieval state to a multiethnic world power and its impact on other cultures.
Onassis Cultural Center
Coming of Age in Ancient Greece: Images of Childhood from the Classical Past
1/20/2004 to 4/15/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, and related programs examining children's lives in ancient Greece. A selection of objects from the collection will be on view.
South Street Seaport Museum
All Available Boats: Harbor Voices & Images 9.11.01
An exhibition of photographs and oral histories that introduces visitors to the port workers who assisted in the evacuation of tens of thousands from lower Manhattan and who continued to aid the rescue efforts in ensuing days and weeks.
Captive Passage: The Transatlantic Slave Trade and the Making of the Americas
10/1/2003 to 2/29/2004
A traveling exhibition, catalog and publications, website and virtual tour, and public programs on the slave
trade and its impact on American society today.
World Port, New York
A long-term exhibition, publications, and public programs on the history of New York City as a world port.
Sleepy Hollow
Philipsburg Manor
The reinterpretation of Philipsburg Manor with new emphasis on enslaved African Americans, including public programs, interpreters, interactive stations, concerts, museum theater, demonstrations, and education programs.
Stony Brook
Long Island Museum of Art, History, and Carriages
Coming Up on the Season: Migrant Farmworkers in the Northeast
2/9/2004 to 5/15/2004
A traveling exhibition on the history of migrant farm labor in the northeastern U.S. and on the lives and backgrounds of migrant workers in the region.
North Carolina
Charlotte
Levine Museum of the New South
Cottonfields to Skyscrapers: Charlotte and the Carolina Piedmont in the New South
A long-term exhibition, publications, and related public and educational programming on Charlotte, North Carolina, as a case study of the New South regional city.
Gastonia
Gaston County Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
9/1/2004 to 10/15/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Hendersonville
Henderson County Public Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
3/3/2004 to 4/16/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
North Dakota
Devils Lake
Lake Region Heritage Center
Produce for Victory: Posters on the American Homefront, 1941-45
1/4/2004 to 2/13/2004
A traveling exhibition about America mobilizing its human and natural resources for the war overseas;
organized in cooperation with several state humanities councils and the National Museum of American History,
Smithsonian Institution. Originally funded through an NEH grant to the Arizona Humanities Council, it is
currently being circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service.
Ohio
Cincinnati
Cincinnati Art Museum
The Cincinnati Wing: The Story of Art in the Queen City
A long-term exhibition examining the city's pivotal role in the history of American art.
Coming of Age in Ancient Greece: Images of Childhood from the Classical Past
5/21/2004 to 8/1/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, and related programs examining children's lives in ancient Greece.
Hamilton
Pyramid Hill Sculpture Park
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
6/1/2004 to 6/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Oregon
Bend
High Desert Museum
By Hand Through Memory: Native People of the Columbia River Plateau in the Twentieth Century
A long-term exhibition on the American Indian cultures of the Plateau region, with special emphasis on post-reservation cultural change and maintenance.
Portland
Multnomah County Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
10/27/2004 to 12/10/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Oregon Museum of Science and Industry
More Power to You!
A long-term exhibition and programs on the social and cultural history of electrification in Portland.
Salem
Salem Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
9/1/2004 to 10/15/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Pennsylvania
Ambridge
Old Economy Village
Harmony Society Natural History Museum
A reinterpretation of the 1827 natural history museum of the nineteenth-century Christian communal group, the Harmony Society.
Gettysburg
Gettysburg College, Musselman Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
12/22/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Northumberland
Joseph Priestley Home
Joseph Priestley: Reason, Order, and Plainness
A long-term exhibition with video components plus outdoor interpretive stations and self-guided audio
walking and driving tours about the cultural history and influence of America's first professionally landscaped
garden cemetery.
Philadelphia
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
Lewis & Clark: The National Bicentennial Exhibition
11/6/2004 to 3/5/2005
A traveling exhibition, a catalog, and associated programming, on the cross-cultural dynamics associated with the transcontinental journey of the Corps of Discovery.
African American Museum
A Slave Ship Speaks: The Wreck of the Henrietta Marie
6/2/2004 to 12/4/2004
A traveling exhibition and publication featuring artifacts recovered from an English merchant slave ship that sank in the Florida Keys in 1701. The current tour is sponsored by the General Motors Corporation.
Independence Seaport Museum
Home Port Philadelphia
A long-term exhibition and educational programs on the maritime history of the Philadelphia area.
Morris Arboretum of the University of Pennsylvania
Healing Plants: Medicines Across Time and Cultures
An outdoor long-term exhibition with educational programs on the medicinal uses of plants in several world cultures.
Philadelphia Museum of Art
European Collections
Reinstallations of the museum's permanent collection of European paintings, decorative arts, sculpture, and architectural environments, covering the period 1200 to 1900. The galleries include the John G. Johnson Collection.
Please Touch Museum�
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
A long-term children's exhibition and related educational programs based on the characters and experiences in Lewis Carroll's book.
University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
Living in Balance: The Universe of the Hopi, Zuni, Navajo, and Apache
A long-term exhibition and a catalog on southwestern American Indian cultures.
Pittsburgh
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Walton Hall of Ancient Egypt
An exhibition and a publication on cultural continuity and change in ancient Egypt.
Alcoa Foundation Hall of American Indians
A permanent exhibition hall on North American Indian cultures.
Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Machu Picchu: Unveiling the Mystery of the Incas
10/18/2003 to 1/4/2004
A traveling exhibition, public programs, and publication on new scholarly interpretations of the history of Machu Picchu and its place within Inca society.
Community College of Allegheny County, Allegheny Campus Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
10/27/2004 to 12/10/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Senator John Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center
Points in Time: Building a Life in Western Pennsylvania, 1750-Today
A long-term exhibition and programs on the history of the Pittsburgh metropolitan area.
Rhode Island
Newport
Museum of Newport History
Museum of Newport History at the Brick Market
A long-term exhibition on the history and culture of Newport.
Woonsocket
Museum of Work and Culture
La Survivance: French-Canadians in Woonsocket, Rhode Island--From Immigrants to Americans
A long-term exhibition on the history of the French Canadians in Woonsocket, in collaboration with the Woonsocket Industrial Corporation.
South Carolina
Blackville
Agricultural Heritage Museum
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
3/13/2004 to 4/24/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Charleston
Charleston County Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
5/12/2004 to 6/25/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Columbia
Columbia Museum of Art
Beauty for the Gods: Urhobo Art in a Modern World
10/16/2004 to 1/16/2005
A traveling exhibition with a catalog and public programs on traditional and contemporary art of the Urhobo
people of the Niger River Delta.
J. Drake Edens Library, Columbia College
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
10/13/2004 to 12/3/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her
nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Georgetown
Georgetown County Public Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
7/7/2004 to 8/20/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Greenville
Greenville County Public Library
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
4/28/2004 to 6/11/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her
nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Hartsville
Hartsville Museum
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
9/1/2004 to 9/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Kingstree
Williamsburgh Historical Museum
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
1/23/2004 to 3/6/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Pickens
Pickens County Museum of Art and History
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
8/7/2004 to 9/18/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
St. Matthews
Calhoun County museum and Cultural Center
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
9/25/2004 to 11/6/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Walterboro
Colleton County Memorial Library
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
6/19/2004 to 7/31/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Winnsboro
Fairfield County Museum
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
5/1/2004 to 6/12/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
South Dakota
Pierre
Cultural Heritage Center
Produce for Victory: Posters on the American Homefront, 1941-45
12/22/2003 to 1/23/2004
A traveling exhibition about America mobilizing its human and natural resources for the war overseas; organized in cooperation with several state humanities councils and the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Originally funded through an NEH grant to the Arizona Humanities Council, it is currently being circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service.
Produce for Victory: Posters on the American Homefront, 1941-45
12/22/2003 to 1/23/2004
A traveling exhibition about America mobilizing its human and natural resources for the war overseas; organized in cooperation with several state humanities councils and the National Museum of American History, Smithsonian Institution. Originally funded through an NEH grant to the Arizona Humanities Council, it is currently being circulated by the Smithsonian Institution Exhibition Service.
South Dakota State Historical Society, Cultural Heritage Center
Proving Up
A long-term exhibition chronicling the experiences of immigrants to a remote territory-how they interacted with native peoples and developed a booming state.
Tennessee
Memphis
Memphis Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
5/12/2004 to 8/20/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Nashville
Fisk University, John Hope & Aurelia Elizabeth Franklin Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
12/22/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Texas
Dallas
Museum of Natural History
Hunters of the Sky (small version)
9/20/2003 to 1/11/2004
A traveling version of a larger exhibition which examines how birds of prey symbolize different cultures'
understandings of the natural world.
Kingsville
Conner Museum at Texas A&M;
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
3/1/2004 to 3/31/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Richmond
George Ranch Historical Park
1830 Jones Stock Farm
A living history interpretation, orientation exhibition, audiovisual program, and school programs that depict a
farm family in Austin's colony of 1830.
Sam Ryon Farm
Interpretation of a working 1890s African American sharecropper's cotton farm.
Utah
Brigham City
Brigham City Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
5/12/2004 to 6/25/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Orem
Utah Valley State College
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
3/17/2004 to 4/30/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
7/7/2004 to 8/20/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Vermont
Burlington
Echo at the Leahy Center for Lake Champlain
Hunters of the Sky (small version)
6/5/2004 to 9/6/2004
A traveling version of a larger exhibition which examines how birds of prey symbolize different cultures'
understandings of the natural world.
University of Vermont
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
9/1/2004 to 9/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Virginia
Charlottesville
Monticello Museum
Domestic Life and the Plantation Community at Jefferson's Monticello
Public interpretation of thirteen domestic activity spaces at Monticello in order to expand understanding of the plantation's economic, social, and cultural activities.
Richmond
Library of Virginia
Elizabeth I: Ruler and Legend
12/17/2003 to 2/20/2004
A traveling exhibition, website, public programs, and educational material on Elizabeth I, her court, her nation, and her world, using rare, visually spectacular print and manuscript materials.
Valentine Richmond History Center
Creating History: The Valentine Family and the Valentine Museum
A long-term exhibition and public programs on the history of three generations of the Valentine family of Richmond and their museum.
Virginia Historical Society
American Visions of Liberty and Freedom
10/16/2004 to 5/30/2005
A traveling exhibition, a website, publications, and public and educational programs about changing representations of the ideals of liberty and freedom in American history.
Williamsburg
Williamsburg Regional Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
9/1/2004 to 10/15/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Winthrop Rockefeller Archaeology Museum at Carter's Grove
Martin's Hundred: Exhibition at Carter's Grove
A long-term exhibition presenting the archaeology and history of Martin's Hundred, the earliest permanent
English settlement fully excavated in America.
Washington
Seattle
Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, University of Washington
Pacific Voices
A long-term exhibition on the shared sources of cultural identity of indigenous peoples of the Pacific Rim
living in the greater Seattle area.
Seattle Art Museum
Galleries of Africa, Oceania, and Native American Art
A long-term installation, educational materials, and public programs of the museum's African, Oceanic, and
American Indian art collections.
Seattle Art Museum
Asian Collections
A long-term interpretive installation of the museum's Asian collections and educational materials, programs,
and conservation treatments.
Tacoma
Tacoma Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
12/22/2004 to 2/18/2005
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
West Virginia
Martinsburg
Boarman Art Center
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
1/1/2004 to 1/31/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Wheeling
West Virginia Independence Hall Museum
Preserving Memory: America's Monumental Legacy
6/1/2004 to 6/30/2004
A traveling panel exhibition with educational and public programs, including a website for use by classrooms
and scout troops, focused on public sculpture in its social and historical context.
Wisconsin
Appleton
Lawrence University, Seeley G. Mudd Library
Forever Free: Abraham Lincoln's Journey to Emancipation
1/21/2004 to 3/5/2004
A traveling panel exhibition incorporating over 60 rare documents and drawings on Lincoln's role in the
emancipation of slaves during the Civil War.
Eau Claire
Chippewa Valley Museum
Settlement and Survival: Building Towns in the Chippewa Valley, 1850-1925
A long-term exhibition on the history of the Chippewa Valley from the beginning of the lumber boom in 1850 through the economic redevelopment in the 1920s.
Chippewa Valley Museum
Country Places: Making a Way of Life
Late summer 2004
A long-term exhibition, traveling panel exhibition, catalog, and related educational and public programs on rural heritage as a context for understanding contemporary farms.
Green Bay
Neville Public Museum
Hunters of the Sky
3/20/2004 to 1/2/2005
A traveling exhibition examining how birds of prey symbolize different cultures' understandings of the natural
world.
Madison
University of Wisconsin
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
9/1/2004 to 10/15/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Milwaukee
Milwaukee Art Museum
Byrdcliffe: An American Arts and Crafts Colony
6/25/2004 to 9/19/2004
A traveling exhibition, a publication, and public programs on the subject of the Byrdcliffe Arts Colony in Woodstock, New York.
Milwaukee Public Library
Frankenstein: Penetrating the Secrets of Nature
10/22/2004 to 12/10/2004
A traveling exhibition on Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, examining its use of scientific experimentation
as a metaphor to comment on cultural values and how the creature created by Frankenstein has become a
cultural icon over the past two centuries.
Milwaukee Public Museum
A Tribute to Survival
A long-term exhibition featuring a contemporary Wisconsin Indian powwow scene with thirty-seven life-size
figures and other segments emphasizing the adaptive changes of Native American peoples and cultures over the
past 500 years.
Wyoming
Afton
Star Valley Historical Society
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
5/1/2004 to 6/11/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Cody
Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Plains Indian Museum
Plains Indian Museum
Reinterpretation of the Plains Indian Museum at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center.
Gillette
Campbell County Rockpile Museum
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
10/4/2004 to 11/13/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Powell
Homesteader Museum
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
3/19/2004 to 4/21/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Rawlins
Central Rawlins Association
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
8/13/2004 to 9/24/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Riverton
Robert A. Peck Gallery, Central Wyoming College
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
1/17/2004 to 2/28/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol
of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in
cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the
exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
Torrington
Eastern Wyoming College
Barn Again!: Celebrating An American Icon
6/21/2004 to 7/21/2004
A traveling exhibition and public programs examining the barn as an adaptable agricultural structure, symbol of community and country life, and monument on the American landscape. The current tour is organized in cooperation with state humanities councils across the country. The Endowment originally funded the exhibition through a grant to the Utah Humanities Council.
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