Posted on 02/13/2018 1:28:12 PM PST by COUNTrecount
While the official portraits of Barack and Michelle Obama unveiled Monday were applauded by the art worldfor their intense visual impact as much as the choice of Kehinde Wiley and Amy Sherald, artists who are both critical darlings and the first African-Americans to paint presidential portraits commissioned by the National Portrait Gallerythere was plenty for the Twitterati to snark about. The wall of greenery behind President Obama was an obvious opening for jokes about his history with marijuana and Sean Spicer hiding in the White House bushes. Criticism of Michelle Obamas portrait centered around two points. The face didnt look much like her; some suggested it more closely resembles Kerry Washington, who plays a high-powered White House operative on Scandal. And the facewhoever it belonged towas overshadowed by the striking, floor-length dress.
But theres a reason for both of those criticisms: The dress is what says the most in this portrait, far more than the indistinct face.
First, the criticism about the lack of resemblance to the former first lady comes as no surprise to those of us familiar with the work of Sherald, a Baltimore-based artist. While she is best known for her stylized portraits of African-American women, they arent really portraits they depict anonymous subjects, under evocative titles contrasting grayscale skin tones against colorful clothing and a monochrome background. The neutral palette challenges racial stereotypes, while the flat plane evokes American folk art, At the unveiling, Sherald described the composition as the act of Michelle Obama being her authentic selfsuggesting that she was aiming for something more than a mere superficial resemblance.
Secondly, theres a reason why Obamas face is the least interesting element here: The dress is as much a window into the former first ladys identity as her face, and possibly a more accurate one.
(Excerpt) Read more at politico.com ...
But Obama and Smith share more than a first name. Few designers, especially those with Smiths mass-market appeal, have been as outspoken in their opposition to Trump as Smith. In November 2017, Smith told Teen Vogue: What I had felt to be an extraordinary triumph for equalitythe election of an African-American presidentwas my childrens normal.
Gay marriage and LGBTQ equality was their normal. Their generation, I had often thought, is where the real shift in equality and human rights will take place. I had easily assumed their next ultimate role model would be a female president. I was wrong. . . . All the rights I had sadly taken for granted . . . now felt threatened. I had to do something.
Why does Michelle have a tiny head?
Her dress looks like a Yes album cover.
The Bamster’s gigantic left hand has an extra finger, too.
“Why does Michelle have a tiny head?”
Who’s “Michelle”? As the article notes, the lady depicted is deliberately anonymous. Sure doesn’t look like Michelle Obama, at least beyond only the most vague & passing resemblance.
Are the other portraits in the gallery that large? Judging by the chairs off to the side, the portraits look about ten feet tall.
The comments, at link, require FB (of which I am not a member).
I’d like to ask these sycophants why do they suppose the author of this ‘glowing’ article failed to mention the fact that this Mooch artist is known for painting depicting BLACK women holding the decapitated heads of WHITE women.
Hmmmmm....I wonder why no one at Polutico is discussing that.
LOL, that’s not what I meant.
-PJ
There's a damning indictment of the "art world".
Right. She's incompetent, and you all know it. You're just too damned cowardly to say so. Instead, you spew endless torrents of bovine fecal matter, in a failed attempt to sound sophisticated.
- Why does nobama appear to have an extra finger on his left hand?
- Why does nobama appear to have a sperm on the side of his head?
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