
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The “Men of Progress” painting, from 1862, shows the first Secretary of the Smithsonian surrounded by a group of scientists and inventors credited with “altering the course of contemporary civilization.” But what may be most remarkable about this tableau is who’s not there. To mark the 175th anniversary of the Smithsonian’s founding, the National Portrait Gallery’s Portraits podcast takes us back in time – to trace how the concept of progress has evolved, and who current Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch III would put in his “portrait of progress.”
By Smithsonian Institution4.6
21702,170 ratings
The “Men of Progress” painting, from 1862, shows the first Secretary of the Smithsonian surrounded by a group of scientists and inventors credited with “altering the course of contemporary civilization.” But what may be most remarkable about this tableau is who’s not there. To mark the 175th anniversary of the Smithsonian’s founding, the National Portrait Gallery’s Portraits podcast takes us back in time – to trace how the concept of progress has evolved, and who current Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie G. Bunch III would put in his “portrait of progress.”

90,994 Listeners

43,898 Listeners

26,197 Listeners

1,483 Listeners

6,892 Listeners

1,261 Listeners

1,285 Listeners

3,654 Listeners

4,196 Listeners

2,127 Listeners

16,399 Listeners

3,552 Listeners

5,120 Listeners

2,306 Listeners

1,736 Listeners