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  1. Seeing America is a multimedia learning resource for American history that makes key works of art accessible for the American History and Socials Studies student. Seeing America is a free resource and includes no advertising.

    • About Seeing America. What is Seeing America? : About Seeing America.
    • Theme: National Identity. Introduction: Theme: National Identity 1200-1870: Theme: National Identity 1870-1945: Theme: National Identity. 1945-1980: Theme: National Identity 1980-now: Theme: National Identity For teachers: learning resources: Theme: National Identity.
    • Theme: Work, Exchange, and Technology. Introduction: Theme: Work, Exchange, and Technology 1700-1870: Theme: Work, Exchange, and Technology 1870-1939: Theme: Work, Exchange, and Technology.
    • Theme: Geography and the Environment. Introduction: Theme: Geography and the Environment 1000-1875: Theme: Geography and the Environment 1875-1980: Theme: Geography and the Environment.
  2. Dec 6, 2023 · Seeing America was created by Smarthistory with 22 leading museum collections and examines the long history of the United States, from before European settlers to the modern era.

  3. Dec 6, 2023 · A portal to American art and history. Seeing America was created by Smarthistory with 22 leading museum collections. Together we examine the long history of the United States, from before European settlers to the 21st century.

  4. Seeing America is a learning resource that makes key works of art accessible for the U.S. History and Socials Studies student. Seeing America was created wit...

  5. The Art. 870s by Thomas Ridgeway Gould at his studio in Florence, Italy. One of these seven neo-classical statues—all gleaming white marble, larger than life size—was promi. ic ideal, casting the body in a classical counterbalanced pose. The figure’s head is turned in one direction, the left arm and right foot in another, and the le.

  6. Seeing America encourages an expanded view of American art that looks beyond geographical boundaries and conventional approaches to American art. Ten thematic galleries place Latin American, Latinx, Asian American, African American, and Indigenous art within the context of major schools and movements of the 20th and 21st century.