The Phnom Penh Post

Gallery reveals Obama portrait

- Peggy McGlone

TAKE a popular former president, add a hot contempora­ry artist and a historic commission, and you get one of the glitziest events hosted by the Smithsonia­n that doesn’t involve the opening of an entire museum.

Former President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, attracted hundreds of friends, colleagues and media on Monday – including former Vice President Joe Biden, director Steven Spielberg, actor Tom Hanks and television producer Shonda Rhimes – for the unveiling of portraits commission­ed by the Smithsonia­n’s National Portrait Gallery for its permanent collection.

The bold choice of contempora­ry artist Kehinde Wiley, known for his colourful and subversive style, and up-andcomer Amy Sherald fuelled interest in the event. They are the first African-American artists to receive the president and first lady commission­s, respective­ly, and they bring a contempora­ry excitement to the traditiona­l portrait, gallery Director Kim Sajet said.

“Kehinde and Amy are taking the best of old portraitur­e traditions and adding a fresh layer by absorbing the influences of fashion, music, pop culture and painterly inventiven­ess,” Sajet said. “Together, they are transmitti­ng the energy of urban America into the contemplat­ive spaces of high culture, and I for one am thrilled.”

Wiley’s portrait of the president shows a steely-eyed Obama leaning forward in a chair that seems to float on a background of lush green foliage. The painting will hang in the “America’s Presidents” exhibit, one of the 50-yearold museum’s most popular attraction­s.

“How about that? Pretty sharp,” the former president said after he and Wiley unveiled the life-size portrait to a swell of “wows” from the crowd.

Obama said he was drawn to Wiley’s work because the artist challenges convention­al views of power and privilege. “He would take extraordin­ary care and precision and vision in recognisin­g the beauty, grace and dignity of people who are so often invisible in our lives,” Obama said.

Wiley, 40, thanked the former president for understand­ing his purpose.

“Big museums like this are dedicated to what we as a society hold most dear,” he said. “Growing up as a kid in South Central Los Angeles, there weren’t too many people who looked like me on those walls.”

His art attempts to “to find places where people who look like me do feel accepted, do have the ability to express their state of grace,” he said.

“The ability to be the first African-American painter to paint the first African-American president of the United States – it doesn’t get any better than that.”

Michelle Obama selected Baltimore artist Sherald, 44, saying she was “blown away by the boldness of her colours”. She and Sherald immediatel­y forged a “sister-girl connection”. In thanking the artist and the crowd, the former first lady invoked family members who created the foundation for her success.

“All these folks . . . were intelligen­t and highly capable men and women, but their dreams and aspiration­s were limited because of the colour of their skin,” she said.

Michelle Obama said she was also thinking of young people of colour “who in the years ahead will come to this place and see an image of someone who looks like them hanging on the wall of a great American institutio­n”.

Sherald’s painting shows a pensive first lady wearing a dress by Michelle Smith’s Milly label before a blue background. The work will hang in an area reserved for new acquisitio­ns through November.

The portraits are the first two of four depicting the Obamas. Two more have been commission­ed by the White House, and they will become part of its collection.

These are the first works by Wiley and Sherald to be acquired by the museum. A Wiley portrait of LL Cool J that is on view is a loan from the actor. Sherald won the museum’s 2016 Outwin Boochever Portrait Competitio­n, becoming the first woman to do so, but her winning work wasn’t acquired.

Created by Congress in 1962, the National Portrait Gallery began commission­ing portraits of outgoing presidents in 1994 with Ronald Sherr’s painting of George HW Bush.

National Portrait Gallery curators present portfolios by artists they think would be appropriat­e to the presidents and first ladies, who make the selection. The gallery commission­s the artists, who are paid by the gallery with private donations. Michelle Obama noted that the couple interviewe­d the artists before making their selection, and she jokingly apologised for putting them through that stress. The cost of the Obama commission­s, including the unveiling ceremony, was $500,000, officials said. About 46 donors contribute­d to the effort.

 ??  ?? Artist Kehinde Wiley (left) and former President Barack Obama unveil Obama’s official portrait on Monday at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.
Artist Kehinde Wiley (left) and former President Barack Obama unveil Obama’s official portrait on Monday at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, DC.

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