I'm sure you are all familiar with the children's story of the Emperor's new clothes. Well I feel like I'm about to emulate the whistle blower.
This review of the new portrait of Oprah Winfrey in the Smithsonian comes in two parts:
- a list of the unfortunately high number of things I can find wrong with the portrait; and
- some straight facts about the commission, the sitter and the artist - because when all said and done somebody did go to a lot of effort - even if I really don't like it.
As a global media leader, philanthropist, producer, actor, author, and entrepreneur, Winfrey has made significant contributions to American popular culture, which earned her a place in the National Portrait Gallery.
Oprah Winfrey (2023) by Shawn Michael Warren,
oil on linen, 6 feet 10 inches by 5 feet 8 inches
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution.
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The painting depicts a self-assured and joyful Winfrey holding a sprig from an olive tree. Smithsonian press release
1. Let me count the problems.....
My post on my Making A Mark Facebook Page. |
Technical
- The subject is smiling. NOBODY ever smiles for a portrait. It's far too difficult to hold a smile and it becomes a rictus grin.
- White teeth might be a symbol of health and wealth and wellbeing in the USA - but not in traditional portraiture and portrait paintings!
it’s an object lesson in why portrait sitters are rarely painted smiling. Ian Dugdale
Style
Oooh very Disney princess.... Feeling slightly queasy now Sarah Wimperis
I thought it was a photoshopped photograph Diana Bonas
- my post Taking aim at art world patrons - Sherman, Perry and Pohida)
- an article which considers why Cindy Sherman did what she did The truth about Cindy Sherman's society portraits
Lighting
The Face
- Maybe Oprah goes in for glaringly obvious lip liner - but to me it just looked crude.
- The teeth I've covered above
- overall, the painting would have benefited from the face being more modulated and refined
My biggest gripe is with how the face is rendered. It looks too plastic, as if it’s a painting of a Disney figurine…
Must try harder or actually, NOT as hard! It’s overworked and tacky…
The Dress
When I looked at the complete painting I barely noticed anything but the dress. It dominates everything. Alison Jackson-Bass
I have lots of issues with the dress.
- Do people seriously want to be portrayed in this sort of dress when recording the impact they had on American life? Really? Compare it for example with the iconic design of Michelle Obama's dress in Amy Sherald's portrait for the Smithsonian which spoke of metaphor and character.
- Next I get that the colour relates to her performance in the film of The Color Purple. The latter being from the novel by American author Alice Walker which won the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award.
- Also that Oprah likes purple - as per the recent photos of her in a gown demonstrating her weight loss (which just made me wonder whether she wished she waited to have the portrait done until after she had lost the weight!). I'm very inclined to think that maybe her recent weight loss (which I applaud - knowing how difficult it can be) might have resulted from having seen how the portrait was progressing....
- However the colour is very "in your face".
- BUT most of all - put bluntly - this dress does NOT win any prizes for making a lady who is somewhat larger than life from appearing VERY BIG indeed. This is not the sort of dress I'd use for somebody who has issues with weight. All that fabric just makes her look even larger.
The rendering of the purple fabric is very good. It seems symbolic of wealth and status, hence so much of it which takes away attention from the subject herself, which could have done with a bit more time and consideration. Claudette Holmes
The Pose / Stance - and THAT TREE!
She looks as though she has had one drink too many...lol Kim Perman
it looks as though she saw that branch at the last minute and is arching back to avoid it. John Cooney
The tree on the left hand side makes no sort of sense to me. There's enough of it to represent a serious distraction. Its angle makes it look as if she's going to be knocked out by it as soon as she becomes upright from that extraordinary leaning back pose.
The tree branch is also painted very flat. There is no form to it - it is not rotund.The Olive Branch
It is very difficult to work out what the artist intended through the use of
the olive branch. Symbolically it can mean:
- a sacred symbol of peace in Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
- peaceful power - when used as a symbol for an organisation
- you want to end a disagreement
The Garden
What a lost opportunity. Oprah’s achievements are considerable and she is therefore a really interesting person. Yet all I get here is an uncomfortable pose and irritation from that blasted tree. Fiona Carvell
2. Facts about the Portrait of Oprah Winfrey, National Gallery of Art, Smithsonian
Subject: Oprah Winfrey
The commissioned painting was unveiled a month before Oprah Winfrey's 70th birthday (I didn't know we were born in the same year!)
She has developed a media and business empire worth $2.8 billion. Some of her very considerable achievements are:- her award-winning network TV talk show The Oprah Winfrey Show ran for more than 25 years (1986–2011)
- 1986: established Harpo Productions
- 1996: launched Oprah's Book Club
- 2000: launched O the Oprah Magazine
- 2011: became chairman and CEO of the cable network OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network
- 2013, Winfrey was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor.
- 2018: she was the first African American woman to receive the Golden Globes’ Cecil B. DeMille Award.
- 2021: digital advancement for O, The Oprah Magazine which became OprahDaily.com and Oprah Insider, a subscription site.
Commission: by the National Portrait Gallery / Smithsonian
Winfrey’s portrait is the latest example of the Portrait Gallery’s commitment to commissioning portraits of living sitters by contemporary artists. Smithsonian press release
Acquisition: aided by sponsors
Acquired through the generosity of Tommie L. Pegues and Donald A. Capoccia; Taylor and Wemimo Abbey; Anonymous; Deon Jones and Cameron J. Ross; Lisa Opoku and Loki Muthu; Mack Wilbourn; Charles Young and Andrea Wishom Young.Artist: Shawn Michael Warren
- website: https://www.shawnmichaelwarren.com/
- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/warrenart/
He describes himself as a fine artist, muralist and sculptor
Some facts:
- born in Chicago (unclear when)
- attended the American Academy of Art and the Florence Academy of Art (intensive drawing program) where he studied the work of master Renaissance painters and their approaches to narrative painting
- He has created critically acclaimed works, notably of prominent African Americans
“I wanted to carefully represent her, but I also thought about how she would be depicted to the generations that aren’t here yet—who will see it long after we’re gone, 100 years from now, when it starts to cross over into a piece of art history,” he says. The entire process took 10 months, starting with a drawing and progressing to paint. No detail was too small for deep consideration: He even did a series of sketches of just her hands.Having looked at some of his work, I have to say I think I prefer some of his larger narrative paintings / murals and his pencil drawings.
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