O Street Museum Foundation


The O Street Museum Foundation is a museum which focuses on exploring the creative process. Located in Washington, D.C., O Street Museum Foundation is housed in five interconnected town houses that include over 100 rooms and 32 secret doors.

Collection

The collection contains 15,000 pieces of art, 20,000 books, architecture, manuscripts, music, and memorabilia. Visitors can listen to unique music, leaf through manuscripts and rare books, touch and explore art and sculpture, and tour through different architectural styles.
The museum houses both permanent and rotating exhibits. Pieces represented in the collection are works by sculptors Frederic Hart and Frederic Remington, paintings by Kurt Wenner, architecture by Edward Clark, signed scripts of the Academy Award winning trilogy Lord of the Rings, letters and drawings by John Lennon which were featured in the book, The John Lennon Letters by Hunter Davies, and 60 signed Gibson guitars. The signed guitar collection includes guitars from Les Paul, inventor of the electric guitar, The Eagles, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, Arlo Guthrie, Emmylou Harris, Paul Williams, The Rolling Stones, U2, Sean Lennon, and J.D. Souther.
Several exhibits are on rotation at the museum including Women Who Rock by Gerald Johnson, Rhythmic Rebels by photographer Sandrine Lee, and Faces of Hope, a photography retrospective of Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Darfur by Chip Duncan. Faces of Hope debuted at The 2011 World Peace Festival and is featured in the book, Enough to Go Around—Searching for Hope in Afghanistan, Pakistan & Darfur.

Building history

Designed in 1892 by the architect who designed the Capitol, Edward Clark. The building served as a home for himself, Champ Clark, a brother known only as "the artist", and a sister.
Originally spanning three row houses, the residence was connected through the basement and main floor and contained separate sleeping quarters for each brother upstairs. It has been suggested that Clark incorporated leftover tiles and wood from the Capitol into his new home.
In the 1930s the home was converted into three separate rooming houses for FBI Director, J. Edgar Hoover's G-men.
On February 14, 1980, H.H. Leonards purchased 2020 O Street, the first row house in the series of connected brownstones. Leonards renovated the townhouse as a bed-and-breakfast and private club. After renovations were completed, Leonards designed and built a new brownstone on the adjacent vacant lot at 2022 O Street. Leonards subsequently acquired three adjacent row houses, each incorporated into the single property.
In 1998, Leonards opened the O Street Museum inside The Mansion on O Street. The museum includes art, sculpture, music, memorabilia and written manuscripts in the collection. The museum hosts concerts, book signing talks, film screenings and tours throughout the year.
Today, the property consists of more than 100 rooms of varying architectural, artistic and design periods with hand-painted ceilings, original Tiffany stained glass windows, a two-story Log Cabin, and an Art Deco penthouse. The unique decor and architecture of the building has been chronicled in books including Four Blind Mice by James Patterson, Afterburn by Zane and in the young adult series by Jennifer Allison

Public programs

O Street Museum hosts educational programs for all age groups to learn about and participate in the creative process. Programs include artist-in-residence programs, jammin’, songwriters’ workshops, book signings, film screenings and live performances from artists of diverse genres including; Emmylou Harris, Los Texmaniacs, Esperanza Spalding, and Jason Isbell.

Current Artists-in-Residence

The O Street Museum Foundation is tax-exempt under section 501 of the Internal Revenue Code, and it is a private operating foundation under section 4942. It operates without any paid employees or paid board members; everyone that works there is a volunteer.

Hours of operation

The museum is located at 2020 O Street NW, between 20th and 21st streets, in Washington, D.C.. The museum is less than a block from the south exit of the Dupont Circle station on the Red Line.
The museum is open daily from 11:00 am to 4:00 pm, by reservation only.