The Sentinel-Record

Smithsonia­n explores ‘ cool’ from Whitman to Jay- Z

- BRETT ZONGKER

WASHINGTON — Flashback to a 1940s jazz club. A saxophonis­t performs on stage wearing his sunglasses at night. “I’m cool,” he says, relaxed in the moment.

Lester Young, the lead saxophonis­t in Count Basie’s orchestra and soul mate to Billie Holiday, was giving voice to what would become an American and global obsession for cool with a phrase rooted in jazz slang. But what does it mean to say someone is cool?

Over the past five years, curators at the National Portrait Gallery set out to examine how that idea of cool has shaped American culture. A new exhibit opening Friday gives the concept an entertaini­ng yet scholarly treatment with 100 photograph­s of people who defined cool as a word for rebellion, self- expression, charisma, edge and mystery.

“American Cool” traces the idea further back to the “granddaddi­es of cool,” Walt Whitman and Frederick Douglass, and unfolds through the generation­s, leading to Jay- Z, Johnny Depp and Madonna.

The exhibit idea was born out of the 2008 presidenti­al election when the buzz was about a new type of political candidate who exuded a cool, relaxed intensity, appealing to a new generation, said co- curator Frank Goodyear III, who is co- director of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art in Maine. No presidents past or present fit the criteria for defining cool, though curators considered Obama, Clinton, Reagan and Kennedy.

What might seem like an arbitrary list of 100 celebritie­s was actually a much- debated roster whittled down from 500 names, the curators said. They devised a four- point rubric to define cool on a national scale. To be included, a person had to have an original artistic vision with a signature style, represent cultural rebellion or transgress­ion, have instant visual recognitio­n, and have a recognized and lasting cultural legacy.

The 100 who made the cut include musicians, actors, athletes, comedians, activists and writers. At the roots of cool, there’s Fred Astaire, Ernest Hemingway and Georgia O’Keeffe, followed by the birth of cool in the jazz era with Young, Holiday, Muddy Waters and Duke Ellington, as well as Audrey Hepburn, Elvis Presley and Frank Sinatra. Music from 10 jazz, blues and rock- androll artists plays throughout the galleries.

In the 1960s and 1970s, cool was tied to the countercul­ture. To be cool was to be anti- authoritar­ian and open to new ideas, curators said, with figures like Bob Dylan, Muhammad Ali, Angela Davis and Andy Warhol.

“Cool was very much a masculine aesthetic until very recently,” Dinerstein said. “This notion of sort of having edge and charisma and mystery and detachment really was not applied to women, except in negative ways, for quite a while..”

There are some who thought that cool died in the ’ 80s,” Goodyear said. “It was Reagan’s America and increasing materialis­m and the growth of sort of corporate power and its influence.”

Being cool was more important than being rich in the decades before. But more recently being cool has been validated by being rich. Someone like Jay- Z is “selling in” to have more power in the culture, rather than selling out, Dinerstein said.

It was so difficult to choose just 100 people, the exhibit also includes an alternate list of 100 names at the end who the curators argued about the longest.

“We want nothing more than for this to cause inter- generation­al debates,” Dinerstein said.

“American Cool” will be on view through Sept. 7 in Washington.

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