Through an ambitious program of collection, conservation, exhibitions, programming, and research, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art serves as a global and national resource for understanding the arts and cultures of Asia and their interaction with America, past and present. By presenting the arts and cultures of Asia in their extraordinary diversity, we aim to exemplify foundational ideals of curiosity, creativity, and respect. In a world growing ever more interdependent, we believe that cross-cultural understanding is crucial to personal and collective well-being. NMAA opened in 1923 as America’s first national art museum and the first Asian art museum in the United States. The museum now stewards one of the world’s most important collections of Asian art, with works dating from antiquity to the present, from China, Japan, Korea, South Asia, Southeast Asia, the pre-Islamic Near East, and the Islamic world (inclusive of Central Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa). The museum also stewards an important collection of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American art. Today, NMAA is emerging as a leading national and global resource for understanding the arts, cultures, and societies of Asia, especially at their intersection with America. Guided by the belief that the future of art museums lies in collaboration, increased access, and transparency, NMAA is fostering new ways to engage with its audiences while maintaining its commitment to excellence. NMAA celebrated its centennial in 2023 and is determined to make the museum’s second century as accomplished as its first. The museum is building on its core strengths—the quality and depth of our collections, scholarship, and conservation—while embracing experimentation and new approaches to its work. The museum is transforming digitally, physically, and programmatically to draw in new audiences to celebrate, learn, and connect with Asian and American art and cultures, past and present. Located on the National Mall in Washington, DC, the museum is free and open 364 days a year. The Smithsonian, which is the world’s largest museum complex, welcomes twenty to thirty million visitors yearly. For more information about the National Museum of Asian Art, please visit asia.si.edu The Opportunity The Freer Research Center (FRC) Intermittent Administrative Assistant plays a pivotal role in providing support for our library services. This versatile role offers exposure to diverse library functions including cataloging, acquisition, interlibrary loan, patron services, and collection management. The incumbent will work closely with the NMAA team while helping to steward a world-class collection of Asian art resources. The National Museum of Asian Art Library is regarded as one of the premier repositories of Asian art resources in North America. It supports the activities of the museum and the broader Smithsonian, including collection development, exhibition planning, publications, and other scholarly and educational projects. Additionally, this library serves as a vital resource for visiting fellows and international researchers, who utilize the library's non-circulating core collections through an active schedule of in-person appointments. Approximately half of the collection comprises works in Chinese or Japanese. While the library primarily focuses on Asian art and archaeology, it also includes publications about American artists active in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries whose works are housed in the Freer Gallery of Art.
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