Dame Jillian Sackler, House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, and Judith Terra at the Sackler Gallery 25th-anniversary gala. Photograph by Ben Droz.
It’s felt like the Sackler Gallery’s 25th anniversary has been celebrated for at least
the past year, with two big parties, but the actual grand gala happened Thursday night,
and Dame Jillian Sackler herself was there to greet guests for the luxe affair. It’s
not every evening in Washington that one is welcomed to a party by the host and promptly
offered a glass of chilled Moet & Chandon Champagne.
The Asian-inspired dinner menu began with a bento box containing curry-coconut shrimp
with rice noodles, tofu-eggplant salad, poached lobster with dill, and orange segments
with endive and hearts of palm. The second course was five-spice short ribs with wasabi
mashed potatoes and knotted Asian long beans, followed by a dessert of traditional
Indian kulfi, a confection of milk, cream, sugar, and vanilla bean.
The Sackler was done up in its very best party finery, matched only by the finery
of guests, including imports such as Princess Michael of Kent and Baroness Aziza Allard from England, Prince and Princess Johannes von Auesperg from Austria, and business mogul Shafik Gabr of Egypt. But it was an evening for Washingtonians, especially those who have an
interest in the Asian arts. The Sackler was founded by the late Arthur M. Sackler,
who endowed the mostly underground gallery with 1,000 objects from India, China, Japan,
and other parts of Asia, as well as $4 million to build the museum. It is part of
the Smithsonian Institution.
The familiar faces on hand included House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, Sachiko Kuno, Catherine Reynolds, Susan and Michael Pillsbury, Mary and Mandy Ourisman, Bonnie McElveen-Hunter, Karni Singh, Lucky Roosevelt, John and Joann Mason, Greek ambassador Alexander Philon, Mark Ein, Phillipa Hughes, Winston Bao Lord, Amanda Downes, Calvin Cafritz, Raul Fernandez, former empress of Iran Farah Pahlavi, Adrienne Arsht, and British ambassador Sir Peter Westmacott and his wife, Susie.
Following the dinner there was dancing for the dinner guests as well as others who
were invited only for dessert.
The Sackler, and the conjoined Freer Gallery, are open every day except Christmas
from 10 to 5:30. Admission is free.
The Sackler Gallery Celebrates Its 25th With an Anniversary Gala (Photos)
The event featured an Asian-inspired menu and an international guest list.
It’s felt like the Sackler Gallery’s 25th anniversary has been celebrated for at least
the past year, with two big parties, but the actual grand gala happened Thursday night,
and Dame Jillian Sackler herself was there to greet guests for the luxe affair. It’s
not every evening in Washington that one is welcomed to a party by the host and promptly
offered a glass of chilled Moet & Chandon Champagne.
The Asian-inspired dinner menu began with a bento box containing curry-coconut shrimp
with rice noodles, tofu-eggplant salad, poached lobster with dill, and orange segments
with endive and hearts of palm. The second course was five-spice short ribs with wasabi
mashed potatoes and knotted Asian long beans, followed by a dessert of traditional
Indian
kulfi, a confection of milk, cream, sugar, and vanilla bean.
The Sackler was done up in its very best party finery, matched only by the finery
of guests, including imports such as
Princess Michael of Kent and
Baroness Aziza Allard from England,
Prince and Princess Johannes von Auesperg from Austria, and business mogul
Shafik Gabr of Egypt. But it was an evening for Washingtonians, especially those who have an
interest in the Asian arts. The Sackler was founded by the late Arthur M. Sackler,
who endowed the mostly underground gallery with 1,000 objects from India, China, Japan,
and other parts of Asia, as well as $4 million to build the museum. It is part of
the Smithsonian Institution.
The familiar faces on hand included House minority leader
Nancy Pelosi,
Sachiko Kuno,
Catherine Reynolds,
Susan and Michael Pillsbury,
Mary and Mandy Ourisman,
Bonnie McElveen-Hunter,
Karni Singh,
Lucky Roosevelt,
John and Joann Mason, Greek ambassador
Alexander Philon,
Mark Ein,
Phillipa Hughes,
Winston Bao Lord,
Amanda Downes,
Calvin Cafritz,
Raul Fernandez, former empress of Iran
Farah Pahlavi,
Adrienne Arsht, and British ambassador Sir
Peter Westmacott and his wife,
Susie.
Following the dinner there was dancing for the dinner guests as well as others who
were invited only for dessert.
The Sackler, and the conjoined Freer Gallery, are open every day except Christmas
from 10 to 5:30. Admission is free.
Most Popular in News & Politics
What It Felt Like for a Virginia Marching Band to Win Metallica’s Contest
Meet the 2023 Washingtonians of the Year
What’s IN and OUT in DC Restaurant Trends for 2024
Introducing 8 of DC’s Most Stylish
Washingtonian Magazine
May 2024: Great Getaways
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
13 Major Concerts and Music Festivals in the DC Area This Spring
Mary Timony on Her Emotional New Album, “Untame the Tiger”
The Beatles in DC: A New Exhibit in Maryland Looks Back on Early Beatlemania
Northern Virginia High School Wins Metallica’s Marching Band Competition
More from News & Politics
Former Fiola GM Convicted of Murder Is Now in a Netflix Docuseries
These 5 DC Traffic Cams Are Issuing the Most Tickets Right Now
Farewell to Crystal City Underground, the DC Area’s Strangest Mall
Washington DC’s 500 Most Influential People of 2024
Inside the Urgent Effort to Preserve Black Newspapers
Maryland Has Renamed an Invasive Fish. Will It Matter?
Meet the 2024 Washington Women in Journalism Award Winners
In the Doghouse: Kristi Noem and 5 Other Canine Political Scandals