Current Portrait
Reviews


Artist: Richard Whitney
Stoddard, New Hampshire.
Subject: James Webb
U.S. Secretary of the Navy
Oil on canvas
Collection, Department of the Navy, Washington, DC
his strikingly unconventional
portrait rewards prolonged study. This is not the kind of image that can be digested in a single glance. In
fact, the longer the study, the greater the reward. We are perhaps first - as painters - arrested by the highly
complex and rigorously finished background. Our first instinct is to question the aggressively detailed background
elements. Then, as we begin to realize the powerful message that is contained in those elements, and as we begin
to relate that message to the thoughtful expression on the subject's face - the entire portrait begins to assume
genuine power. This interaction between the subject and the images he knows are there behind him generates an
unforgettable total impression. Secretary Webb is a portrait that eventually grips you.
It takes a highly skilled artist to combine so rich a background with his principal subject, and achieve a
cohesive, meaningful result. The background elements in this painting all reflect the intensity and drama of
the Viet Nam war. After we study these very sobering items, our gaze shifts to the thoughtful face of the young
Secretary, who shows in his expression that he has internalized the emotions of the war (he was himself a combat
marine in Viet Nam), and that those emotions are engraved on his face. The result is a dramatic and very powerful
portrait.
Richard Whitney has been, for many years, one of the leaders of
contemporary American portraiture. This extraordinary painting demonstrates
again his mastery. Every portion of the painting rewards study;
we call your attention to two areas in particular: the superlative
rendering of the sculpture group at lower right, and the exquisite
tonalities in the wall and moldings at lower left. J.H.S.
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