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US Capitol Building Washington DC - Washington DC Stock Photography

The United States Capitol Building is located on Capitol Hill at the east end of the National Mall in Washington DC. The US Capitol is among the most symbollically important and architecturally impressive buildings in the United States. It has housed the meeting chambers of the US House of Representatives and US Senate for two centuries. An example of 19 century neo-claccical architecture. Architectural details include columns, porticos, arches, steps, the US Capitol dome and rotunda. A washington D.C. landmark and national icon it is a popular tourist attraction and travel destination in Washington DC.

 

All images on this site copyright Randy Santos 2007 - 2010

No unauthorized use of any image without written permission

 

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www.dcstockimages.com

 

All images are very high quality image files available for license in various media. Please contact for license or visit:

 

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2011 International Pillow Fight Day by Capitol Improv

The Capitol Dome inspires men to greed and to greatness. We hope for the latter, and remove the former. Liberty does still ring; we just need to listen more carefully.

Frieze of American History

 

The Frieze of American History in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol contains a painted panorama depicting significant events in American history. The frieze’s nineteen scenes are the work of three artists: Constantino Brumidi, Filippo Costaggini and Allyn Cox. The frieze is painted in grisaille, a monochrome of whites and browns that resembles sculpture. It measures eight feet and four inches in height and approximately three hundred feet in circumference. It starts fifty-eight feet above the floor.

 

•Artist: Constantino Brumidi, Filippo Costaggini and Allyn Cox

•Location: Rotunda, U.S. Capitol

 

Thomas U. Walter’s 1859 cross-section drawing of the new Dome (constructed 1855-1863) shows a recessed belt atop the Rotunda walls with relief sculpture. Eventually it was painted in true fresco, a difficult and exacting technique in which the pigments are applied directly onto wet plaster. As the plaster cures the colors become part of the wall. Consequently, each section of plaster must be painted the day it is laid.

 

In 1877 the Architect of the Capitol reported, “The belt of the Rotunda intended to be enriched with basso relievos [low relief] is being embellished in real fresco representing in light and shadow events in our history arranged in chronological order, beginning with the Landing of Columbus…”

 

The frieze is the work of three artists. It was designed by Constantino Brumidi, an Italian artist who studied in Rome before emigrating to America. He worked at the Capitol over a period of twenty-five years, decorating numerous committee rooms and the areas known as the Brumidi Corridors; he also painted the Rotunda canopy fresco, The Apotheosis of Washington. Brumidi created a sketch for the Rotunda frieze in 1859 but was not authorized to begin work until 1877. After enlarging the sketches for the first scenes, Brumidi began painting the frieze in 1878, at the age of seventy-three. His design traces America’s history from the landing of Columbus to the discovery of gold in California. As was common in the history books of the day, the Spanish explorers and the Revolutionary War are emphasized. While working on the figure of William Penn in the scene “William Penn and the Indians,” Brumidi’s chair slipped on the scaffold platform. He saved himself from falling only by clinging to the rung of a ladder for fifteen minutes until he was rescued. He returned to the scaffold once more but then worked on enlarging his remaining sketches until his death a few months later in February 1880.

 

Filippo Costaggini, who had also been trained in Rome, was selected to complete the remaining eight scenes using Brumidi’s sketches. When he finished in 1889 there was a gap of over thirty-one feet because of early miscalculations about the height of the frieze. Costaggini hoped to fill it with three of his own scenes, but Congress failed to approve his designs before his death in 1904. In 1918 Charles Ayer Whipple painted a trial scene in the blank section; it was later removed.

 

In 1951 Allyn Cox was commissioned to paint the last three panels tracing the growth of the nation from the Civil War through the birth of aviation. Cox also cleaned and retouched the frieze. The frieze was completed in 1953 and dedicated the next year. In 1986 Congress appropriated funds for a careful cleaning and restoration of the frieze to remove accumulated grime, overpaint, and streaks caused by leaking water. The conservation treatment, completed early in 1987, restored the original details and vividly brought out the illusion of relief sculpture. Minor repairs were made in 1994.

 

The sequence of nineteen scenes begins over the west door and moves clockwise around the Rotunda.

 

1.“America and History”

2.“Landing of Columbus” (1492)

3.“Cortez and Montezuma at Mexican Temple” (1520)

4.“Pizarro Going to Peru” (1533)

5.“Burial of DeSoto” (1542)

6.“Captain Smith and Pocahontas” (1607)

7.“Landing of the Pilgrims” (1620)

8.“William Penn and the Indians” (1682)

9.“Colonization of New England”

10.“Oglethorpe and the Indians” (1732)

11.“Battle of Lexington” (1775)

12.“Declaration of Independence” (1776)

13.“Surrender of Cornwallis” (1781)

14.“Death of Tecumseh” (1813)

15.“American Army Entering the City of Mexico” (1847)

16.“Discovery of Gold in California” (1848)

17.“Peace at the End of the Civil War” (1865)

18.“Naval Gun Crew in the Spanish-American War” (1898)

19.“The Birth of Aviation” (1903)

Detail, U.S. Capitol Building, Washington, D.C.

The dome of the U.S. Capitol building, framed by a plant at the U.S. Botanic Garden in Washington, DC, USA.

An anti-war protester (center) discusses the Iraq war with a counter-protester at a barricade erected along Pennsylvania Ave during the September 15, 2007, march on Washington, DC, to end the Iraq war.

US Capitol Building - Capitol Hill Washington DC, USA

A marcher with Iraq Veterans Against the War at the September 15, 2007, march on Washington, DC, to end the Iraq war

US Capitol Building from the north in Washington, DC in August 2008

Probably one of the best trips I've had at this airline. Definitely the best crew. Me, Heidi, and Cristian (Kristi taking the photo) touring around some great layover spots doing some easy flights. Here we are in front of the Capitol building in DC.

© 2013 Brian Mosley - All Rights Reserved

 

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Outside the Capitol with the crew

US Capitol Building Washington DC - Washington DC Stock Photography

The United States Capitol Building is located on Capitol Hill at the east end of the National Mall in Washington DC. The US Capitol is among the most symbollically important and architecturally impressive buildings in the United States. It has housed the meeting chambers of the US House of Representatives and US Senate for two centuries. An example of 19 century neo-claccical architecture. Architectural details include columns, porticos, arches, steps, the US Capitol dome and rotunda. A washington D.C. landmark and national icon it is a popular tourist attraction and travel destination in Washington DC.

 

All images on this site copyright Randy Santos 2007 - 2010

No unauthorized use of any image without written permission

 

www.dcstockphotos.com

www.dcstockimages.com

 

All images are very high quality image files available for license in various media. Please contact for license or visit:

 

www.dcstockphotos.com

www.randysantosphoto.com

www.randysantos.blogspot.com

   

Doric Columns

 

Doric columns typically have a simple, rounded capital at the top; a heavy, fluted or smooth column shaft; and no base. Flutes are vertical, parallel channels that run the length of a column. Columns in this style can be found throughout Capitol Hill, including the U.S. Capitol, the Supreme Court Building, the Russell Senate Office Building and the Cannon House Office Building.

 

The Crypt in the U.S. Capitol Building contains forty smooth Doric columns of sandstone, which support the arches holding up the floor of the Rotunda. Also in the Capitol, Doric columns can be found in the Old Supreme Court Chamber, designed by Benjamin Latrobe. These columns are modeled on the Temple of Poseidon, which were the shortest and the strongest columns that survive from classical Greece.

 

The Supreme Court Building’s main corridor is known as the Great Hall, a grand rectangular vestibule that is thirty feet high and lined on both sides with double rows of fluted Doric columns. The columns rise to a coffered ceiling.

 

The Cannon House Office Building and Russell Senate Office Building, which are nearly identical, contain thirty-four fluted Doric columns each along their colonnades, facing the United States Capitol. Pilasters continue the Doric order along secondary elevations.

US Capitol Building Washington DC - Washington DC Stock Photography

The United States Capitol Building is located on Capitol Hill at the east end of the National Mall in Washington DC. The US Capitol is among the most symbollically important and architecturally impressive buildings in the United States. It has housed the meeting chambers of the US House of Representatives and US Senate for two centuries. An example of 19 century neo-claccical architecture. Architectural details include columns, porticos, arches, steps, the US Capitol dome and rotunda. A washington D.C. landmark and national icon it is a popular tourist attraction and travel destination in Washington DC.

 

All images on this site copyright Randy Santos 2007 - 2010

No unauthorized use of any image without written permission

 

www.dcstockphotos.com

www.dcstockimages.com

 

All images are very high quality image files available for license in various media. Please contact for license or visit:

 

www.dcstockphotos.com

www.randysantosphoto.com

www.randysantos.blogspot.com

   

View to the Capitol from South Capitol Metro Station

US Capitol Building Washington DC - Washington DC Stock Photography

The United States Capitol Building is located on Capitol Hill at the east end of the National Mall in Washington DC. The US Capitol is among the most symbollically important and architecturally impressive buildings in the United States. It has housed the meeting chambers of the US House of Representatives and US Senate for two centuries. An example of 19 century neo-claccical architecture. Architectural details include columns, porticos, arches, steps, the US Capitol dome and rotunda. A washington D.C. landmark and national icon it is a popular tourist attraction and travel destination in Washington DC.

 

All images on this site copyright Randy Santos 2007 - 2010

No unauthorized use of any image without written permission

 

www.dcstockphotos.com

www.dcstockimages.com

 

All images are very high quality image files available for license in various media. Please contact for license or visit:

 

www.dcstockphotos.com

www.randysantosphoto.com

www.randysantos.blogspot.com

   

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