Artist Kehinde Wiley explains his portrayal of President Obama for the Smithsonian Gallery.

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Last Monday, President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama’s portraits were unveiled for the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, along side their distiguished predecessors and other great Americans of history.
The portrait of the first African-American President was painted by the first African American artist to paint any portrait for the Smithsonian national portraiy gallery- Kehinde Wiley.

In a letter released to the press, he , Kehinde Wiley explains his potrayal of President of Obama’s potrait painting.

He wrote, Over the course of the past year, I have had the life-changing honor of painting President Obama’s portrait for the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery.

I’d like to tell you a bit about it.

In choosing the composition and colors for this painting, I sought to create an allegorical index to President Obama’s life story — using key botanicals that reference his personal presence in the world. Jasmine from Hawaii. Chrysanthemums from Chicago. Blue African Lilies from Kenya.

And the nature of the president’s pose is not sword-wielding or swashbuckling. It’s contemplative. Humble. Open to the world in its possibilities. A man of the people.

As an artist, my practice is the contemporary reinterpretation of painting. I’m inspired by its history, by its mechanical act, and the human stories that can unfold on a physical plane. And what drives me is this notion of a history that is at once welcoming of those human stories — while being dismissive of those that don’t correspond to some accepted notion of respectability.

And my aim was to use the universal language of painting to arrive at a much more inclusive commentary of our own collective potential.

The particular honor of being the first African-American painter to paint the first African-American president has been, for me, beyond any individual recognition.

It is bigger than me, and anything I could gain out of this. It presents a whole field of potential for young people — particularly young black and brown kids who might see these paintings on museum walls and see their own potential.

Art can function in practical, descriptive ways — but it can also inspire in so many resounding multiplicities.

That is my hope for this painting.

Thank you.

– Kehinde Wiley

Faustina Anyanwu
Faustina Anyanwu
Faustina Anyanwu is a features writer focusing on people's stories, entrepreneurship, start-ups, social media marketing, and profiling. Follow her on Twitter - @fauntee Official Website: www.faunteebon.com Mantra: Real Women Think Legacy.

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