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Susan Miller-Havens, artist interview
Publisher |
Smithsonian
Media Type |
video
Categories Via RSS |
Arts
History
Society & Culture
Visual Arts
Publication Date |
Jun 03, 2009
Episode Duration |
00:24:48
Interview with artist Susan Miller-Havens, creator of the portrait of Carlton Fisk on view at the National Portrait Gallery, in the "Champions" exhibition. Interview by NPG senior historian Sid Hart
A tenacious competitor with an impressive work ethic, Carlton Fisk was one of major league baseball's most capable and durable catchers. During twenty-four seasons in the American League (first with the Boston Red Sox and later with the Chicago White Sox), Fisk caught a record-setting 2,226 games and posted home-run tallies that ranked him among the top-hitting catchers of all time. Fisk's accomplishments were all the more remarkable because he repeatedly overcame career-threatening injuries. In 1975, after battling back from reconstructive knee surgery and a broken arm, Fisk gave Red Sox fans a never-to-be-forgotten thrill in the sixth game of the World Series when he drilled a twelfth-inning home run to win the game. Fisk always demanded the best, not only of himself but of his teammates. As he once observed, "You don't play baseball. . . . You work at it." This portrait of Fisk by artist Susan Miller-Havens is on display in the National Portrait Gallery's "Champions" exhibition, on the third-floor mezzanine. Recorded at NPG, May 8, 2009. Image info: Carlton Fisk / Susan Miller-Havens / Oil on cotton duck, 1993/ gift of Peter C. Aldrich, in memory of Duane C. Aldrich of Atlanta, Georgia/ copyright Susan Miller-Havens

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