There is a building in the heart of Penn Quarter that stops you cold the moment you walk through its doors. The Smithsonian American Art Museum, tucked inside the jaw-dropping Greek Revival landmark it shares with the National Portrait Gallery, holds what I consider one of the most underrated art collections on the entire East Coast. And the best part? Admission is completely free.
The museum occupies the Old Patent Office Building, a structure so historically significant that Abraham Lincoln held his second inaugural ball here in 1865. Walt Whitman called it “the noblest of Washington buildings,” and once you step into the soaring, column-lined galleries, you’ll understand exactly what he meant. The architecture alone is worth the trip — but then you start looking at the art, and you completely lose track of time.
The collection spans four centuries of American creativity, from colonial portraits to monumental landscapes of the Hudson River School to dazzling modernist canvases that feel shockingly alive. The third-floor Lincoln Gallery is particularly breathtaking — a vast, light-filled hall where massive works by artists like Albert Bierstadt and Thomas Moran hang alongside contemporary pieces, creating a conversation between eras that you won’t find anywhere else. Bierstadt’s “Among the Sierra Nevada, California” alone will make your jaw drop. It’s enormous, luminous, and almost unbearably beautiful.
One of my favorite corners of the museum is the folk and self-taught art section, where works by artists like James Hampton and Bill Traylor reveal a side of American creativity that rarely gets the spotlight it deserves. Hampton’s “Throne of the Third Heaven of the Nations’ Millennium General Assembly” — an entire environment built from foil, cardboard, and furniture scraps — is one of the most astonishing things you will ever see in a museum setting. It’s visionary, obsessive, and deeply moving.
The museum is located at 8th and F Streets NW, right in the vibrant Penn Quarter neighborhood, which means you’re never far from a great lunch or a pre-dinner cocktail. The area is walkable and well-connected by Metro, with the Gallery Place-Chinatown station just steps away. Plan to arrive in the morning when the galleries are quieter and the light through those tall neoclassical windows is at its most golden.
There’s a lovely courtyard café tucked inside the building — the Kogod Courtyard — covered by a stunning Norman Foster-designed glass canopy. It’s a wonderful place to recharge between galleries with a coffee or a light lunch, surrounded by the murmur of other visitors who all seem pleasantly surprised they ended up somewhere this good.
Washington D.C. is full of world-class museums, and it’s easy to stick to the blockbuster names. But the Smithsonian American Art Museum rewards those willing to wander off the beaten path just slightly. Give it a full morning, let yourself get lost in the galleries, and you’ll leave feeling like you’ve discovered something genuinely extraordinary — even though it’s been here all along.