Washington, D.C., makes a clean breast of its nude artworks
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People joked that he was lunging for his clothes, on display at the Patent Office several blocks away.
Like that man of stone, some people at the Justice Department think no nudes are good nudes.
So they drew blue drapes over two scantily clad statues in the department's Great Hall. Now, Attorney General John Ashcroft can speak there without risk of a breast showing behind him on television or in photos.
That cover-up has not done much to change the flesh tone in Washington, however. This is a city of many exposed rear ends, bare breasts, what's-the-point fig leaves and even no fig leaves.
From barely wrapped bronze ladies by the Memorial Bridge to the revealing Discus Thrower outside the State Department, to writhing nudes on the National Cathedral and the starkly immodest fountain figures outside the Library of Congress, the capital is quite the tease.
Susan Lineberry of Hampton, Va., remembers strolling past a nude Washington statue with her son, then 5, some years ago.
"My son looked at it and looked at me and said, 'I see his butt.' "
"I said, 'Well, Kevin, that's art. Often the human body is used as art because the lines and curves are pretty.'
"And he said, 'I still see his butt.' "
There's more. Outside the White House Cabinet Room, paces from the Oval Office, there is full frontal male nudity in the painting "A Flathead Chief and His Family."
In the august chamber of the Supreme Court, reflective justices look upon the figure of a topless woman holding a mirror in one hand and a rose in the other. A robe is wrapped around her waist.
She represents Truth.
Even the U.S. Capitol, where art tends toward the tame, has an eye-popper or two.
A woman in nothing but a gown dropped to her waist looks out languidly from a wall of the committee room where House members carve up the budget.
This painting is called Good Government.
At the Library of Congress, the sizzling scene did not escape Billy Collins, America's poet laureate, who has an office there.
He wrote praying that Father Time, on the great clock inside, would set down his scythe and hourglass and check out the "two bare-breasted female figures who have always been there, waiting adoringly right by his side."
Collins took poetic license: One lady is merely provocatively clothed, the other is spilling out of her dress.
But the library is lined with the unveiled and thinly veiled.
"They almost look like showgirls," Capitol curator Barbara Wolanin observed. She said a committee in the late 1800s debated whether to allow nudity in the library's art and decided to go for it.
"They wanted it to be very classical and, of course, the nude figure is an important part of classical art."
The George Washington statue was moved to the Smithsonian in 1908 and can be seen now in its American history museum. The museum says people objected to the partial nudity when the statue resided at Congress.
There was no such outcry over the 12-foot, 6-inch aluminum Great Hall statues at the Justice Department — public art the public rarely saw.
Still, drapes rented occasionally for $2,000 per use were bought outright for $8,000 and have been left hanging.
The female Spirit of Justice and male Majesty of Law now are under indefinite wraps, her arms still raised in exultation, his left hand raised in tribute to the authority of God, now all in prim privacy.
"That a government official would do something like that, it seems partly comical and partly tragic," Arthur Danto, art critic of The Nation magazine, said in an interview. "I think it means we've reached a new stage in prudery."
Justice officials are so sensitive about the matter they stopped talking about it. They also denied permission to film or photograph the public art in the building.
Earlier, a spokesman said the curtains were hung "for aesthetics."
In high-traffic places such as Congress, Wolanin said, officials realize that citizens are not visiting an art gallery and don't expect to come across graphic material.
"When you look at it as pure art, it shouldn't be covered up," she said. "But you have to look at it in the context of how people are using it."
To be sure, nudes elsewhere in the Justice building are still in your face. Majesty's one exposed breast is screened off, but at least 32 others are not.
Many figures in Washington art represent social virtues and vices.
Above an entrance, there are three men wearing barely a stitch and a woman whose gown leaves her chest half exposed. Ms. Prosperity is gazing over and down at an underdressed Mr. Opportunity.
The nudity in that panel raised eyebrows in 1933, so sculptor C. Paul Jennewein added fig leaves to the men in his design.
The Commission of Fine Arts said that was nice, but "the fig leaves are not quite large enough."
Hidden treasures
Seeing historic art and artifacts in the federal buildings of Washington became tougher after Sept. 11, when some tours were suspended indefinitely. A look at some opportunities:
White House: Tours suspended except for school groups that book through a member of Congress.
Library of Congress: One of Washington's most impressive architectural wonders, it also has exhibits. Five public tours each weekday, four on Saturday. In addition, one-hour group lecture tours can be reserved weekdays for 10 to 60 people. People can wander on their own. Public tours: 202-707-9779. Group reservations: 202-707-0919. E-mail for all tours: vso@loc.gov
Interior Department: Tours available when booked two weeks in advance. Native and Western art, including Indian murals. A tour can be arranged for an individual, family or group. Assistant curator Anne James, 202-208-4659.
Justice Department: A trove of paintings, murals, sculptures and art deco design. Officials say public tours can be arranged 24 hours in advance. 202-616-8687.
State Department: Weekday tours three times a day, by reservation, which can be made up to 90 days in advance. Diplomatic reception rooms featuring traditional American craftsmanship and historically important collections from the 1740s to early 1800s. 202-647-3241.
Supreme Court: People can wander in and go wherever there are no barriers. Exhibits and portraits of justices on the ground floor. Public lectures in the courtroom every hour on the half-hour, 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m., weekdays when the court is not in session. Visitors also can sit in on sessions when seating is available. Visitor information 202-479-3030 and www.supremecourtus.gov.
Treasury Department: Tours of one of Washington's most historic buildings are suspended.
— The Associated Press