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Obama's Modern Art (PHOTOS): White House's New Art On Display

First Posted: 03/18/2010 5:12 am   Updated: 05/25/2011 2:15 pm

WASHINGTON (AP) You can't see it, but there's a quiet cultural revolution under way at the White House.

The Obamas are decorating their private spaces with more modern and abstract artwork than has ever hung on the White House walls. New pieces by contemporary African-American and Native American artists are on display. Bold colors, odd shapes, squiggly lines have arrived. So, too, have some obscure artifacts, such as patent models for a gear cutter and a steamboat paddlewheel, that now sit in the Oval Office.

Works by big names from the modern art world – Jasper Johns and Mark Rothko – are rubbing shoulders with lesser-known artists such as Alma Thomas, an African-American abstract painter of the 1960s and 1970s.

"I think I'll..." 1983, Ed Ruscha
 
Courtesy of Ed Ruscha
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Thomas' "Watusi (Hard Edge)" now hangs in the East Wing, where Michelle Obama has her offices. The acrylic on canvas, on loan from the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, shows a jumble of geometric shapes in bright reds, blues and greens.

Glenn Ligon's "Black Like Me No. 2," a Hirshhorn loan now hanging in the first family's living quarters, is a "text painting" that reproduces words from the 1961 book "Black Like Me," a nonfiction account by a white man who disguised himself as a black man and traveled through the South.

Ligon, a black artist from Brooklyn in New York, said in an interview that the painting's theme fits with President Barack Obama's efforts to create a dialogue between the races.

"It's a really important part of what he's about and symbolically what he's done," Ligon said, adding that it was "intensely flattering" for the Obamas to want his painting to hang in their private spaces.

The Obamas got to work selecting new artwork for the White House even before the inauguration and had the first pieces installed on Day One. Other pieces have arrived only in recent weeks. And there's a Rothko piece – "No. 17 (or) No. 15" – in limbo; they haven't quite decided what to do with it.

Working with California decorator Michael Smith and White House curator William Allman, the Obamas have borrowed dozens of works from various Washington museums and galleries, being sure to use only items that weren't already on display. Other recent first families hung a few modern pieces in their living quarters, but none approached the scope of the Obamas, Allman said.

Smith ferried lists back and forth between the White House and the galleries and museums as the Obamas narrowed down their choices.

"The first lady had clear ideas about what they were aiming for," Allman said. "They knew their tastes, and Michael Smith knew a lot about their tastes."

The new artwork is on display only in the first family's living quarters and office areas. Any changes to the historic public spaces – such as the Blue Room or the State Dining Room – must be approved by the Committee for the Preservation of the White House, which has yet to meet in the Obama administration.

Could more modern artwork be headed for public spaces at the White House?

"Undoubtedly, this will be a subject that will be raised," says Allman. There may be an opening, he said, to "collect something new and different and take a leap."

As for the private spaces, the first lady's office provided a list Tuesday of dozens of pieces of artwork-on-loan that now supplement the hundreds of more traditional landscapes, portraits and still life paintings that dominate the permanent White House collection.

Richard Feigen, a private art dealer in New York, scanned the list and pronounced it "highly sophisticated."

"We're encouraged as far as the art world," Feigen said. "We feel we have someone now in the White House who is saying that culture is an important part of this country."

Jeri Redcorn, a 69-year-old Native American artist from Norman, Okla., said she started jumping up and down and screaming when she found out last week that a piece of her pottery was on a bookshelf in the Oval Office.

Redcorn, who uses the same pottery techniques her Caddo ancestors relied on 500 years ago, says the Obamas' artwork selections represent "a bridge, and a reaching out to other cultures."

"To have this artwork in the Oval Office is like a beautiful tribute to the way that my ancestors did things," she said.

The Obamas' selections include an impressive assortment of modern and contemporary works from the National Gallery of Art. One of the most striking is Edward Ruscha's "I Think I'll ... ," which superimposes phrases such as "I think I'll ..." and "maybe ... no" and "wait a minute" on top of a blood red sunset. Others include Susan Rothenberg's "Butterfly," which shows a horse with an X through it, and Richard Diebenkorn's "Berkeley No. 52," an abstract oil on canvas in soft colors based on the landscape of Berkeley, Calif.

Harry Cooper, curator of modern and contemporary art at the National Gallery, said the Obama's selections are exciting the art world and should provide a significant boost to the arts in general.

"This is great art to live with," he said. "A lot of it is challenging. There are different styles: figurative art, abstract art. A lot of it is avant-garde: It was avant-garde, and a lot of it still is avant-garde."

The Obamas' list of borrowed items also includes an intriguing trio of patent models on loan from the National Museum of American History, including models for Samuel Morse's 1849 telegraph register, a gear-cutting machine and a paddlewheel for a steamboat.

Peter Liebhold, curator of the museum's Work and Industry Division, said the museum was both surprised and pleased by the White House choices, especially since two of them are from minor inventors. All three models, he said, are "intrinsically beautiful. They say a lot about American ingenuity."

They're also small enough to fit on the president's bookshelves, Allman said, and they make great conversation pieces.

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07:24 PM on 10/08/2009
He also has a magic 8 ball hidden in his desk.
09:06 AM on 10/08/2009
The collection is beautiful. The Jasper Johns painting "Numbers" (on Wash Post slide show) is beautiful.The Ruscha also gorgeous. Not your typical collection but definitely thoughtful and eclectic.
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02:47 AM on 10/08/2009
Very nice, I like what I see.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
11:03 PM on 10/07/2009
Modern Art is OK but its more like fashion than fine art most of the time. It's often too relative to the time and space in which is was made and does not age well. So much of it is trendy and poorly executed. I like some of it very well but most of it bores me to tears. It is often designed only to shock or be different from traditional art. Good art is timeless no matter what period it was created in.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
12:53 AM on 10/08/2009
POLE EEEZE!!!!

I understand one having an affinity for Kinkade and Paintings of children with big eyes, or even Elvis on black velvet, but to declare "Modern Art is OK but its more like fashion than fine art" shows a complete lack of understanding that "art" is a reflection of contemporary culture and by definition, the term "modern", is hung on the art being created NOW . . . at one time even the "Mona Lisa" was "modern art" . . . . and as history has shown "good art" is a transitory phrase as "fine" art is a phrase better left to the future to define . . .

As for the Obama selection/collection, Ed Rusha and Mark Rothko are EXCELLENT choices in ANY collection ANYWHERE in the World - and the other artists showcase the strength and creativity of "contemporary modern" America artists. And it is about time that modern America art be showcased in our nations White House . . . I personally have had enough of pious portraits of perfunctory politicians pasted end to end like a Victorian Rogues Gallery . . . .
09:09 PM on 10/07/2009
The O's have brought new life into what was once a stale executive mansion. They borrowed pieces with the help of their designer, Michael Smith, and various curators. Please note that they declinded the $100,000.00 allowance and re-decorated the private residence with their own funds.

I applaud the scope of the art they chose. Modern art rides high in their tastes and this is an automatic jolt for artists in that genre. Some of it serene. One in particular (Ligon) is bold and tantalizing. I must say that I am impressed with the art selected and the art world should be rejoicing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
11:04 PM on 10/07/2009
I have never found the Whitehouse to be stale in the least.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
12:54 AM on 10/08/2009
will you settle for "sedate" . . . .?
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07:04 PM on 10/07/2009
art is subjective, while not a big fan of modern art, i certainly see its value, it is art. the most important thing is the first family is choosing what makes them feel comfortable and at home. it would be interesting to see the different pieces they have choosen and its wonderful to see new artists getting recognition..
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LoveGuv
Git 'er Done!
09:28 PM on 10/07/2009
Style is also subjective. Once you accept that, you'll have half a clue.
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09:50 AM on 10/08/2009
I'm wondering why an innocuous comment drew such a snarky response.
06:19 PM on 10/07/2009
I have mixed feelings about modern art but I would certainly love to see pictures of all this art in context of the White House and where they are located!
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aNdYtm
05:07 PM on 10/07/2009
I loooooooooove the Ed Ruscha painting. Fits a politician to the "n". Most appropriate for the white house or for that matter in any politician's house. Could someone please do a painting in not too abstract art that says "The buck rules here". Oooh, I see some very interesting possibilities here.

Is anyone getting the hint or are we all very happy in our DENIALDOM.
04:41 PM on 10/07/2009
I don't like any of them.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
LoveGuv
Git 'er Done!
05:30 PM on 10/07/2009
Then it's a good thing they're not hanging on your walls, huh?

Run down to the Wal-Mart. The "dogs playing poker" and "hang in there, baby" prints are on sale.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Weirdwriter
07:10 PM on 10/07/2009
LoveGuv, I know you feel protective of the Obamas, and bully for you. I'm a big fan myself. But until someone actually shows bias toward the OBAMAS personally, why attack the free speech of someone regarding their choice of art?
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mombabytiger
Looking into the heart of an artichoke.
09:49 PM on 10/07/2009
She doesn't like any of them. That doesn't make her a target for your rudeness and stupidity. I don't know if you know this or not, but it's perfectly okay not to agree on something, particularly art.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JessWonderin
01:00 AM on 10/08/2009
I can accept your feelings . . . . although personally, I will take the Rothko off their hands and even drive to DC to pick it up . . . .
04:18 PM on 10/07/2009
I just do not get the majority of modern art, it is just weird to me.
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katieandtom
04:24 PM on 10/07/2009
gotta agree with you there pem.
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07:14 PM on 10/07/2009
katie
checked your profile and i had fanned you but didnt see it there. i re fanned you...
04:05 PM on 10/07/2009
They chose some really nice pieces, many of which aren't featured in Huffpost's slideshow. For a more complete slideshow . . .

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/gallery/2009/10/06/GA2009100602826.html?sid=ST2009100603682
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
katieandtom
04:00 PM on 10/07/2009
remember all of the strange, modern sculptures that hillary clinton put in the gardens? it is their home while they are living there, it is only temporary. to each their own.
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lacasarosada
03:34 PM on 10/07/2009
who ever is doing their buying has good taste. and i give the Obama's props for not spending thousands on new china like the Reagan's and Bush's did
03:49 PM on 10/07/2009
Can't stand either the Reagan's or the Bush's, but china breaks and it has to be replaced. I can't find fault for that.
03:22 PM on 10/07/2009
nothing inspiring here...move along
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1088
03:20 PM on 10/07/2009
More pictures!

http://mrs-o.org/