Bangkok Post

An Artist’s Big Break

Amy Sherald’s star is on the rise after being commission­ed to paint Michelle Obama

- Story by Robin Pogrebin/NYT

‘I’m just going to pretend it’s not a big deal,” said artist Amy Sherald, speaking in her spare studio in the Station North neighbourh­ood. “I paint paintings of people. And I’m painting a painting of another person.”

But it is a big deal because the person Sherald happens to be painting is Michelle Obama. This month, the Smithsonia­n’s National Portrait Gallery announced that it had commission­ed Sherald, 44, for the official portrait of the former first lady, and tapped Kehinde Wiley, 40, for the likeness of former President Barack Obama. These are the first black artists to be commission­ed to paint a presidenti­al couple for the National Portrait Gallery.

Wiley already has internatio­nal renown — a painting of his sold for US$143,000 (4.7 million baht) at auction and his work is in major institutio­ns like the Metropolit­an Museum of Art.

After a late start, Sherald is just taking off. The Smithsonia­n’s new National Museum of African American History and Culture has acquired one of her pieces, as has the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Her work is featured in the Studio Museum in Harlem’s influentia­l “Fictions” exhibition of emerging artists. And in May, she will open her first major solo show, at the Contempora­ry Art Museum St Louis.

The Obama commission is likely to catapult her into another league. “There is going to be a spotlight on her,” said Paul Staiti, a professor at Mount Holyoke College who is an expert on portraitur­e. “She should fasten her seat belt.”

A tall, athletic woman in white-framed glasses who lives with her Pekingese-Jack Russell terrier, named August Wilson, Sherald said she was not allowed to speak about the commission until it is unveiled at the National Portrait Gallery early next year. Nor would Michelle Obama comment.

Kim Sajet, the National Portrait Gallery’s director, would divulge only that Obama and Sherald have already met about the portrait, that the paintings typically involve multiple sittings and that this year’s subjects chose the artists from about 20 portfolios submitted by the curators. The first lady has to personally

approve the finished work, as does the Portrait Gallery’s advisory board.

The Smithsonia­n plans to pay for both works with $500,000 in private donations, of which $300,000 has been raised so far. This amount covers everything, including each artist’s fees, which Sajet would not specify. Sherald’s paintings typically sell for $15,000 to $25,000.

The selection of Sherald, who typically depicts African-Americans doing everyday things — two women in bathing suits, a man holding a child — has historical significan­ce. “It’s as if she’s saying, ‘Let’s be clear: the president and I are African Americans and proudly so’,” Staiti said. “And these portraits are going to have an AfricanAme­rican vibe — they’re going to break out of that rather staid tradition. I think it’s important and I think it’s political,” he added, referring to Michelle Obama’s choice.

While Sherald could not discuss her interactio­ns with Obama, the way she generally works offers clear insights into her likely process with the former first lady. She invites her subjects to her studio here, where she photograph­s them in an outfit she has selected for them. Or, she said, she may go to their homes to “shop from their closets” and photograph them there.

Sherald always shoots her subjects outdoors with natural light. “I like the way it highlights the textures of the skin,” she said.

The commission represents something of a departure for Sherald; she usually chooses subjects who arrest her attention on the street, in an airport. She literally approaches strangers.

“I would wonder how she’d feel about this leading to commission­s of other prominent people,” Staiti said. “She’s interested in the exact opposite; she’s interested in ordinarine­ss.”

Sherald said how much the selection means to her, how Obama loomed large in her life, though they had not previously met. “We’ve been on a first-name basis for eight years,” she said jokingly. “Seeing her made my world better.”

“She’s an archetype that a lot of women can relate to — no matter shape, size, race or colour,” Sherald added. “We see our best selves in her.”

Sherald has yet to start the Obama portrait, although it is due to be finished by year’s end. “I’m not going home for the holidays,” she said with a laugh.

Yet sitting among her paint tubes — their colours smeared on paper plates — with three canvases-in-progress leaning against the walls, Sherald seemed remarkably calm in the face of such a daunting deadline, perhaps because she has confronted far tougher challenges.

Sherald is a survivor of congestive heart failure, diagnosed at age 30 just as she was earning her master’s degree at the Maryland Institute College of Art and was training for a triathlon. She received a transplant at 39.

She interrupte­d her career again, taking a four-year break to care for two ailing relatives back in her hometown Columbus, Georgia. She lost her father, a dentist, to Parkinson’s in 2000; her brother to lung cancer in 2012.

But she does not think of herself as unlucky. In fact, she said she is keenly aware of those less fortunate around her — like children in her own community who are ageing out of foster care. (One block from her studio, she said she “can see 10 addicts at any given time.”) Sherald, who has taught art in the Baltimore City Detention Center, hopes to give back financiall­y as soon as she pays off her school loans and can more easily afford her extensive medication: 13 different pills a day.

“When I look at those people I see myself,” she said.

Sherald isn’t very far from the days when she waited tables and worked in a studio without heat or air-conditioni­ng.

Her parents wanted her to go to medical school, but Sherald knew that she was an artist. “I don’t feel like I chose to do it,” she said. “I don’t know what else I’m good at.”

She began with bald self-portraits — she shaved her own head for a time — and then moved into more fantastica­l work that explored the idea of circus, and fantasy.

Sherald’s cultural influences range from science fiction writer Octavia Butler to Surrealist painter Salvador Dalí and Tim Burton’s quirky movie, Big Fish. Names that come up in conversati­on include poet David Whyte, public radio host Krista Tippett — and Ralph Waldo Emerson.

Over the years, Sherald’s figurative painting has evolved into a stylised realism — a grey skin palette punctuated by colourful pieces of clothing on a flat plane. She makes only about 13 paintings a year. “It’s hard for me to find people to paint,” she said. “There has got to be something about them that only I can see.”

“They exist in a place of the past, the present and the future,” she added. “It’s like something I sense with my spirit more than my mind.”

Sherald paints only African-Americans. Having studied European art history, she is keenly aware of the scarcity of black faces. “There’s not enough images of us,” she said.

Last year she had her first solo show at Monique Meloche’s Chicago gallery and became the first woman to win the Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever competitio­n. Now there are waiting lists for her work.

“Everybody responds to her paintings,” Meloche said. “There is something that’s so alive in these characters; they’re very calm — but they’re still very confrontat­ional.”

Sherald paints only AfricanAme­ricans — she is keenly aware of the scarcity of black faces

 ??  ?? Artist Amy Sherald at her Baltimore studio.
Artist Amy Sherald at her Baltimore studio.
 ??  ?? Amy Sherald’s studio in Baltimore.
Amy Sherald’s studio in Baltimore.
 ??  ?? 8
8
 ??  ?? by Amy Sherald. What’s precious inside of him does not care to be known by the mind in ways that diminish its presence (All American)
by Amy Sherald. What’s precious inside of him does not care to be known by the mind in ways that diminish its presence (All American)
 ??  ?? by Amy Sherald. A Clear Unspoken Granted Magic
by Amy Sherald. A Clear Unspoken Granted Magic
 ??  ?? A portrait by Amy Sherald.
A portrait by Amy Sherald.

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