SECRETARY’S REPORT 125 
ers, Clay Pigeons Ceramic Workshop, Designer-Weavers, the Potomac Craftsmen, 
and the Kiln Club of Washington, consisting of 142 items. Craft demonstrations 
were given. A catalog was privately printed. 
October 12 through November 2, 1958.—Sculptures, Oils, Watercolors, and 
Drawings by Charles M. Russell, sponsored by the Montana State Society of 
Washington, D.C., consisting of 205 items. An illustrated catalog was privately 
printed. 
October 26 through November 23, 1958.—Profiles of the Time of James Monroe, 
under the auspices of the James Monroe Memorial Foundation, consisting of 
178 objects including paintings, sculpture, silhouettes, and memorabilia, was 
held in the rotunda. A catalog was printed. 
December 3, 1958, through January 4, 1959.—The 21st Anniversary of the 
Metropolitan Art Exhibition, sponsored by the American Art League, consisting 
of 68 paintings and 12 seulptures, was held in the rotunda. 
December 8, 1958, through January 4, 1959—Henry Ward Ranger Centennial 
Exhibition consisting of 380 paintings from the National Collection of Fine 
Arts permanent collection that had been exhibited at the National Academy of 
Design, September 25 through October 12, 1958, in its commemoration of this 
artist’s birth, was held in the rotunda. A catalog was printed. 
Following the National Collection of Fine Arts showing, these 30 paintings 
were circulated from January through June 1959 to the following museums: 
Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, N.C.; Art League of Manatee County, Braden- 
ton, Fla.; Jacksonville Art Museum, Jacksonville, Fla.; Gibbes Art Gallery, 
Charleston, 8.C.; and North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, N.C. 
January 10 through February 1, 1959.—British Artist-Craftsmen, sponsored 
by the Ambassador of Great Britain and Lady Caccia, and later cireulated by 
the Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Service, consisting of 178 objects, altar 
sculpture, stained glass, ceramics, glass, silver, ete. The Rose Book was lent 
by the Churchill family for special showing during this exhibition. A catalog 
was privately printed. 
February 7 through 27, 1959.—The 66th Annual Exhibition of the Society of 
Washington Artists, consisting of 66 paintings and 18 seulptures. A catalog 
was privately printed. 
February 28 through March 22, 1959.—Fulbright Painters and Designers, 
under the sponsorship of the Honorable J. W. Fulbright, Senator from Arkansas 
(circulated by the Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Service), consisting of 
60 paintings and approximately 200 objects, including furniture, textiles, silver, 
ceramics, stained glass, ete. A catalog was privately printed. 
March 29 through April 26, 1959.—Contemporary Glass and Textiles by Lu- 
erecia Moyano de Muniz, sponsored by the Ambassador of Argentina, Dr. César 
Barros Hurtado, consisting of 49 glass objects and 12 rugs. 
March 29 through April 26, 1959.—Photographs of Argentina by Gustavo 
Thorlichen, sponsored by the Ambassador of Argentina, Dr. César Barros Hur- 
tado, consisting of 58 prints. 
April 19 through May 3, 1959—Stone Rubbings from Angkor Wat (circulated 
by the Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Service), consisting of 23 rubbings 
made from the 12th-century sandstone reliefs. 
April 19 through May 8, 1959.—Photographs of Angkor Wat (circulated by 
the Smithsonian Traveling Exhibition Service), consisting of 100 photographs 
stressing architecture of monuments built by Khmer King, Suryavarman II. 
April 23 through June 1, 1959.—Turn-of-the-Century Paintings from the Wil- 
liam T. Evans Collection, consisting of 57 paintings exhibited for the 50th 
Anniversary American Federation of Arts Convention, was held in the first- 
floor galleries. A catalog was printed. 
