I recently started a new series on LandLopers, the Interactive Travel Guide. The idea is to highlight one city or country every week and then get the best recommendations from you all. By the end of the week, we hopefully will have created the best tips not from guide books, but from real people.
To continue this social media experiment, this week I want to highlight Washington, DC.
I may be a bit biased since I live in our nation’s capital, but Washington is one of my favorite cities in the country. There are few metropolitan areas that retain a sense of individuality without losing their identity to endless rows of skyscrapers, but DC is one of them. There are countless things to do and see in Washington, but my favorite is a little known Smithsonian.
If you have ever walked down the National Mall in Washington, D.C., then no doubt you have noticed some of the most famous museums in the world. The Smithsonian Museums of American History, Air and Space, Natural History and so on. However, there are two Smithsonian institutions that most people seem to ignore.
The Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery are partner museums and proud members of the Smithsonian system. Contained within their walls are some of the most amazing and unique collections certainly in the city and probably in the country.
Both galleries highlight special collections of art and artifacts from Asia and the Near East. The Freer Gallery owes its existence to Charles Lang Freer, a railroad-car manufacturer from Detroit who gave to the United States his collections and funds for a building to house them.
The gallery houses a world-renowned collection of art from China, Japan, Korea, South and Southeast Asia, and the Near East. Visitor favorites include Chinese paintings, Japanese folding screens, Korean ceramics, Indian and Persian manuscripts, and Buddhist sculpture. A highlight is the Peacock Room, a dining room that was once part of a London townhouse. In 1876, Whistler lavishly decorated the room with a blue and gold peacock design. After the owner’s death, the room was brought to the United States and permanently installed in the Freer Gallery.
The Sackler Gallery is unique in that it is almost entirely below ground and connects to the Freer through this underground exhibition space. This gallery is a result of a gift of some 1,000 works of Asian art from Dr. Arthur M. Sackler, a research physician and medical publisher from New York City.
Something the guidebooks won’t tell you is that the Sackler gift shop is without doubt the best in the city. I always head there in late November in order to find unique holiday presents for friends and family.
One of my fondest memories of the Sackler is right after September, 11 2001. A few weeks after the national tragedy, a group of Tibetan monks made their way to the Sackler where they spent the better part of two weeks constructing an elaborate mandala.
The Tibetan mandala is a tool for gaining wisdom and compassion and generally is depicted as a tightly balanced, geometric composition wherein deities reside.. As a meditation on impermanence, after days or weeks of creating the intricate pattern of a sand mandala, the sand is brushed together and placed in a body of running water to spread the blessings of the mandala.
It was an amazing thing to witness and I was personally touched that they took the time to construct such an elaborate masterpiece.
So, when you find yourself in Washington, do not make the mistake that millions make every year. Spend an afternoon at the Freer|Sackler Galleries and consider yourself a Washington insider.
NOW it’s your turn. Please comment and tell us your favorite thing to do, see or eat in Washington. If you haven’t been yet, please let us know what you would most like to do.
In under a minute, 10 restaurant recommendations for the LandLopers Traveler:
Oyamel (Penn Quarter) – ridiculously amazing Mexican tapas. Get the Ceviche and home made guac.
Kushi (NOMA/Penn Quarter) – Japanese tapas, grilled meats and shish-kabob, izakaya style. Get the pork belly.
Komi (Dupont Circle) – Contemporary American. Book in advance. Very expensive, but very worth it.
Belga Cafe (Barracks Row) – Superb Belgian food and beer list. You will need to be rolled out. No question: Steak frites; Mussels.
The Old Siam (Barracks Row) – One of the best Thai restaurants in DC. Can’t ever go wrong with the Penang Curry.
The Tabard Inn (Dupont Circle/Logan Circle) – Good American food; menu changes every day. Best Eggs Benedict in the city.
Cafe Atlantico (Penn Quarter) – Molecular gastronomy. Fun food.
Tomate (Dupont Circle) – awesome Italian; homemade everything. Piano bar.
Mini Bar (Penn Quarter in Cafe Atlantico) – No joke, call a month in advance at 9:00 AM to reserve a seat (if you’re lucky). If you make it, then you’re one of the few who have.
Teaism (Dupont Circle) – Fast, healthy, delicious Asian-influenced food. Best veggie burger in DC (put the slaw ON the burger).
There’s an area northeast of downtown called Hyattsville. They are reconstructing the whole area into an arts district. There are a few attractions already, but it’s going to boom within the year.
I also highly recommend this place we stayed: http://www.airbnb.com/rooms/4726