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Bill Clinton portrait by Chuck Close, Face-to-Face talk
Publisher |
Smithsonian
Media Type |
video
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
History
Society & Culture
Visual Arts
Publication Date |
Jul 12, 2010
Episode Duration |
00:18:14
Wendy Wick Reaves, curator at NPG, discusses Chuck Close's portrait of Bill Clinton
Chuck Close's portrait of Bill Clinton, Face-to-Face talk. A key to Bill Clinton's successes as president, along with his resilience and personal affability, was his determination to govern through consensus. Major accomplishments, such as welfare reform, the first budget surplus since the late 1960s, and successful U.S. intervention in the Balkans stemmed from this pragmatic viewpoint. Other proposals, such as universal health care, failed. His administration was plagued by several scandals, such as Whitewater and the consequences of his affair with a White House intern. His denial under oath about this relationship led to his impeachment. He was not convicted in the Senate trial, however, and his popularity actually increased as Americans continued to admire Clinton for his political talents, quick intelligence, and determination. Chuck Close begins all his paintings by taking a photograph of the subject, in this case a 2005 image made as a cover for New York Magazine. He then creates grids on both the canvas and the original image to replicate the information contained in the photograph with a series of abstract modules. The portrait is on loan to the National Portrait Gallery from Ian and Annette Cumming, and is now on view in the "America's Presidents" exhibition on the second floor. Recorded at NPG, June 24, 2010. Image: William Jefferson Clinton / Chuck Close / Oil on canvas, 2006 / Ian and Annette Cumming

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