This criticism was echoed for his 1980 exhibit of ten portraits at the Jewish Museum (New York) in New York, entitled 'Jewish Geniuses', which Warhol, who exhibited no interest in Judaism or matters of interest to Jews, had described in his diary as "They're going to sell."
Mason Klein, curator of a Man Ray exhibition at the Jewish Museum entitled Alias Man Ray: The Art of Reinvention, suggests that the artist may have been "the first Jewish avant-garde artist."
The first museum exhibition devoted to Westcott's work was organized by the Children's Museum of Oak Ridge in 1981, entitled "Oak Ridge Seen 1943-1947: 20 Photographs by Edward Westcott."
The results of this research have been presented to the public in an exhibition at the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History entitled "Written in Bone: Forensic Files of the 17th-Century Chesapeake".
The Museum of Science built and designed its own film-based exhibit, entitled Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination.
The case was dramatized on a 1951 episode of Orson Welles' radio drama The Black Museum entitled "The Mallet"