**The Spirit of Washington: 1842
60" x 60", oil on canvas
The spirit of George Washington pervades the Rotunda, capped on the outside by Charles Bullfinch's original
wood and copper dome. The interior dome - like that of the Pantheon in Rome, a perfect hemisphere with oculus
- shelters the Rotunda. Peter Waddell recreated this 1842 interior based on written accounts and two
surviving drawings.
Horation Greenough's statue of Washington is shown in the room for which it was intended. When it became
clear that Washington's remains would not be interred in the Capitol as planned, Congress commissioned a
statue instead. As a member wrote, "The way to cement the Union was to imitate the virtues of Washington
. . . to transfer this spirit to these Halls."
Carved in Italy, the statue was installed on December 1, 1841. The heroic figure affected women in
different ways. One sits in quiet contemplation, others view it from the doorway, and still others avert
their eyes, offended by the sight of their partially clothed hero. Greenough explained that he sought
timeless garb and pose, and declined "to pay homage in marble and bronze to the ephemeral legislation of
the tailor and haberdasher."
**The Supreme Court Chamber
30" x 24", oil on canvas
Morning sunlight streams through B. Henry Latrobe's architectural tour de force, illuminating its arches,
ribs, semicircles, and semiellipses. The room's elegance, however, contrasts with its darker history.
Latrobe's assistant was killed during an earlier phase of the room's construction when the main vault
collapsed.
When the Supreme Court met here, this chamber was described as dark, dank, and gloomy. The untimely deaths
of several justices were blamed on the dampness of this space, and the Court moved upstairs in 1859 in to
what had been the Senate Chamber.
**The Marble Room: An Evening's Work, 1871
48" x 48", oil on canvas
Beyond the Senate Chamber lies the Marble Room, a grand space affording a private lounge for senators. It
is one of the most beautiful in the new Senate wing. Brown Tennessee marble walls provide a dramatic
contrast to white Italian marble columns, and tall pier mirrors reflect an endless row of chandeliers.
Against this backdrop, the youngest Senate employees had special duties on warm summer evenings when the
tall windows were usually open. Bats, possibly attracted by the chandeliers glittering in the sunset, flew
about the room and into the nearby Senate Chamber. Pages happily scrambled to chase the bats back out the
windows.
**The Speaker's Office in Summer Dress
36" x 48", oil on canvas
An imposing icon of our nation's political principles, the Capitol played a gentler, sheltering role during
the Civil War. Many of these young soldiers had never traveled before, and the grand interiors of the
Capitol were as impressive to them as the most exotic foreign locale. They explored the elegant spaces in
what was, however briefly, their home.
**Library of the Whole American People
36" x 60", oil on canvas
By 1821, workmen had nearly completed the exterior of the Capitol's center section. In March of that year,
126 men were carving sandstone for the Corinthian capitals, cutting stone for the walls and columns on the
west portico, and hauling and hoisting stone.
**Samuel F.B. Morse - Scientist: 1864 32" x 32", oil on canvas
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Senate Naval Affairs Committee Room: 1858 48" x 30", oil on canvas
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**Walt Whitman's Solace: 1865 48" x 24", oil on canvas
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Ladie's Reception Room: 1869 40" x 30", oil on canvas
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Freedom 84" x 36", oil on canvas
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The Young Nation 18" x 24", oil on canvas
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