| Smithsonian
Moves
Arctic Exhibit
Charlotte
Observer
Posted May 1, 2003
WASHINGTON
-Subhankar Banerjee spent a grueling 14 months in the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge taking photographs of nuzzling polar
bears and slain whales, of graceful icebergs and vibrant Northern
Lights, chronicling the remote region in all seasons.
Some
of his photos, which have been compiled in a book, found their
way to the Smithsonian Institution.
It
was so impressed that it scheduled a show of his photos in
a prime location for special exhibits -- next to the soaring
rotunda on the first floor of the National Museum of Natural
History.
Banerjee
was working with museum staff members on captions quoting
him and famous visitors to the Arctic plain on the region's
grandeur.
That
was as recently as last month. Just weeks before the exhibit's
scheduled opening Friday, the Smithsonian moved it downstairs
to a room behind the cafeteria.
What
happened? Smithsonian officials say they decided the photos
would be displayed better downstairs. Banerjee believes his
book, published this month, got caught up in the deadly crosscurrents
of Washington politics.
The
Bush administration and Alaska's congressional delegation
have been vigorously pressing Congress for authority to drill
for oil and gas in the Arctic refuge.
Last
month, Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., stood on the Senate floor
in front of an enlargement of a Banerjee photo of a polar
bear as she made the case against drilling. She held up his
photos, referred to their "breathtaking" beauty
and urged a visit to the Smithsonian exhibit.
Within
weeks, Banerjee learned his exhibit was moving downstairs,
the captions replaced by simple one-line descriptions of the
photo subjects. He said he was told by a senior museum official
that after Boxer used his book, "there was pressure to
even cancel the show, but the show was saved."
"I
was not told who applied the pressure or where it came from,"
said Banerjee, a 35-year-old freelance photographer and former
physicist for Boeing Co.
Banerjee
said his exhibit traded places with a photo essay of South
Korean immigrants that had already opened downstairs.
Banerjee
said he had spent a great deal of time in the museum and believed
many more people would have seen his photos if they had been
exhibited on the first floor.
Randall
Kremer, spokesman for the museum, said no pressure had been
put on the museum to change the location of the exhibit. He
added the new location was a high-traffic area with good lighting.
"Any
changes made were part of the normal review process,"
Kremer said. "The exhibition is being presented in the
way we now decided because we think it's the most effective
way to show these photographs."
The
decision to change the captions, however, reflected the museum's
policy of staying out of politics, Kremer said.
Banerjee,
who grew up in India and came to the United States after graduate
school, survived temperatures of 50 degrees below zero and
blinding blizzards while in the Arctic.
The
March 20 draft of the exhibit's introduction, written by Banerjee
and the Smithsonian's staff, included a quote from former
President Carter: "It will be a grand triumph for America
if we can preserve the Arctic Refuge in its pure, untrammeled
state." By April 3, a new introduction omitted Carter's
remark.
Kremer
explained that the museum decided against the lengthier captions
because "they were a lot more wordy and detailed than
we normally prefer for a fine-art photography exhibition,
and some of the texts did appear to be bordering on advocacy,
which is something we don't do."
Charlotte
Observer
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