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We have portraits of people in our galleries. But what if you’re a natural science museum? How do you portray a dinosaur?
We talk with Kirk Johnson, Sant Director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, about the ways our portrayals of dinosaurs have evolved, from sluggish and lizard-like to warm-blooded, colorful and spry. Then Matthew Carrano, curator of dinosauria, explains how the museum put T. rex into a striking new pose. The trick, he says, is to convey how cool dinosaurs were, without making them seem alien.
We also tie in a couple portraits from the National Portrait Gallery's collection: an image of the first person to describe an American dinosaur, and a photograph of the first person to give them the Hollywood treatment.
See the portraits we discussed:
Joseph Leidy, by Frederick Gutekunst
Steven Spielberg, by Gregory Heisler
The Nation's T. rex, the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History
Also recommended:
Visions of Lost Worlds: The Paleoart of Jay Matternes, by Matthew T. Carrano and Kirk R. Johnson
By National Portrait Gallery4.8
201201 ratings
We have portraits of people in our galleries. But what if you’re a natural science museum? How do you portray a dinosaur?
We talk with Kirk Johnson, Sant Director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History, about the ways our portrayals of dinosaurs have evolved, from sluggish and lizard-like to warm-blooded, colorful and spry. Then Matthew Carrano, curator of dinosauria, explains how the museum put T. rex into a striking new pose. The trick, he says, is to convey how cool dinosaurs were, without making them seem alien.
We also tie in a couple portraits from the National Portrait Gallery's collection: an image of the first person to describe an American dinosaur, and a photograph of the first person to give them the Hollywood treatment.
See the portraits we discussed:
Joseph Leidy, by Frederick Gutekunst
Steven Spielberg, by Gregory Heisler
The Nation's T. rex, the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History
Also recommended:
Visions of Lost Worlds: The Paleoart of Jay Matternes, by Matthew T. Carrano and Kirk R. Johnson

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