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Sunday, June 29
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42nd Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Annual Event |
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The Smithsonian's annual Folklife Festival brings together hundreds of performers, artists, storytellers, craftspeople, cooks, and workers to explain, demonstrate, and celebrate their cultural traditions. This year's themes include: Bhutan: Land of the Thunder Dragon: Situated in the eastern Himalayas and bordered by China and India, Bhutan is an agrarian society where approximately 95% of its people practice traditional farming. To celebrate their special approach to life in the 21st century, more than 100 Bhutanese artists, dancers, craftspeople, cooks, carpenters, farmers, weavers, and representatives of monastic life demonstrate their living traditions that define and sustain their culture. NASA: Fifty Years and Beyond: To showcase the role NASA has played in broadening the horizons of American science and culture, a cross-section of its 18,000 employees and 40,000 contractors -- astronomers, astronauts, astrophysicists, educators, and engineers -- provide living presentations; hands-on educational activities; demonstrations of skills, techniques, and knowledge; narrative "oral history" sessions; and exhibits that explore the agency's spirit of innovation, discovery, and service. Texas: A Celebration of Music, Food, and Wine: The Lone Star State shares its proud history and contemporary traditions through its music, dance, and food. Hear presentations of Texas blues, swing, country and western, gospel, and tejano music; see demonstrations of wine making; and enjoy diverse culinary traditions from barbeque to Vietnamese specialties. Sponsored by the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage Program.
Free
Repeats July 2-6
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Special Smithsonian Sponsored
Location: National Mall near Smithsonian Museums
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 | 12 Noon
The Art of Chinese Dim Sum
Food Event |
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Dim sum brunch at the Mandarin Oriental hotels in Asia is something very special, and now Smithsonian participants can experience it at the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in Washington, D.C. This afternoon, executive chef Anthony Reynolds and Naris Pukpongsuk (master dim sum chef of the Fujian restaurant at the Mandarin Oriental in Chiang Mai, Thailand) prepare a variety of dim sum delicacies, served with some of the finest Cantonese teas, including orchid oolong, jasmine downy pearls, and white lotus.
$130, general; $95, members; call 202-633-3030

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Resident Associate Program
Location: Mandarin Oriental Hotel, 1330 Maryland Ave., SW
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 | 1-4 PM
Jane Gardner Birch: They Flew Proud
Book Signing |
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Jane Gardner Birch signs copies of her book They Flew Proud.
Books available for sale in Museum Store
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National Air and Space Museum
Location: Outside Museum Store
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 | 1-2 PM
Homer Hickam: Children's Books
Book Signing |
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Homer Hickam signs copies of his children's books Rocket Boys, Sky of Stone, Coalwood Way, Red Helmet, and We are not Afraid.
Books available for sale in Museum Store
Last day
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National Air and Space Museum
Location: Outside Museum Store
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 | 1:30 PM
Art + Coffee
Luce Foundation Center Activity |
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Discover the treasures of the Luce Foundation Center for American Art during a tour or talk. Afterwards, enjoy a complimentary coffee or tea.
Free
Repeats Wednesday through Sunday
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Smithsonian American Art Museum
Location: Meet in the F Street Lobby
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 | 2 PM
Kagemusha
Tatsuya Nakadai: Icon of Japanese Cinema Series |
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(1980, 162 min., Japanese with English subtitles, directed by Akira Kurosawa) An epic evocation of 16th-century Japan, as well as an ironic tale of loyalty and illusion, this film stars Nakadai in a double role as a thief and the dying lord he impersonates.
Free, tickets (2 per person) distributed 1 hour before
Last in series
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Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art
Location: Freer, Meyer Auditorium
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 | 2 PM
Extraordinary Tales of China's Yellow Mountain
Tour and Stories |
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Follow award-winning storyteller Linda Fang through the exhibition Yellow Mountain: China's Ever-Changing Landscape as she introduces paintings and prints of one of China's most beautiful mountains and presents incredible stories of the most breathtaking locations.
Free; first come, first served
Last program
Related Exhibition: Yellow Mountain: China's Ever-Changing Landscape
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Arthur M. Sackler Gallery and Freer Gallery of Art
Location: Sackler, Sublevel 1
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 | 3 PM
Garden of Dreams
Lecture |
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Husband-and-wife team David and Roberta Williamson discuss their collaborative process as jewelry artists. They incorporate found objects from their garden with precious metals to fabricate jewelry that expresses the beauty of the natural world.
Free
Related Exhibition: Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry
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Renwick Gallery
Location: Grand Salon
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 | 5 PM
2001: A Space Odyssey
Film Series, with discussion |
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In conjunction with the 2008 Folklife Festival celebrating NASA's 50th anniversary, the museum presents a series of three classic films about space exploration. Today's film is introduced by Jeannie Kranz (United Space Alliance, Houston, Texas), with additional remarks by astronaut Garrett Reisman, who will speak via taped message from the International Space Station to mark the film's 40th anniversary: 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, 2 hr. 20 min, rated G, directed by Stanely Kubrick, screenplay by Arthur C. Clarke) A monolith -- similar to one on Earth -- is found on the Moon; it's origins are traced to Jupiter. When astronaut David Bowman (Keir Dullea) and 4 colleagues set off for Jupiter, they must fight the ship's computer HAL 9000 for their own survival.
Free; first come, first served
Last in series
See related Folklife Festival programs
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National Museum of Natural History
Location: Baird Auditorium (enter Constitution Ave.)
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 | 6 PM ***New Time***
Summer Camp: Earth vs. The Flying Saucers
Independent Film Series |
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Note: Scholar David Wilt introduces this program. Unless otherwise noted, programs run approximately 80 minutes. Programs are unrated but may contain adult content. (1956, directed by Fred Sears) Potentially peace-seeking aliens are mistakenly fired upon by the U.S. army and retaliate by attacking London, Paris, and Moscow before the climactic showdown in Washington, D.C., just blocks from the Hirshhorn. In this nail-biter, scientists race to develop a super weapon to repel the saucers' mega death rays!
Free; first come, first served
Last in series
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Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Location: Ring Auditorium
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Last update: July 1, 2008, 08:44 |
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