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Official White House portraits of Nancy and Ronald Reagan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paintings by Aaron Shikler and Everett Kinstler

There have been two official White House portraits of PresidentRonald Reagan and a single official portrait ofNancy Reagan. The first portrait of Ronald Reagan was painted byAaron Shikler in 1989 but was rejected as being an insufficient likeness and put into storage in 1991. A second portrait, painted byEverett Kinstler in 1991, was deemed more successful and currently hangs in the White House. Shikler's 1989 portrait of Nancy Reagan is also currently part of the White House collection.

Shikler portraits

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Official White House portraits byAaron Shikler

Aaron Shikler's portraits of Nancy and Ronald Reagan were unveiled on November 15, 1989 in a ceremony at theWhite House.[1] The ceremony was attended by an audience of 100 former Reagan administration officials and VIPs.[1] The Shikler portrait was subsequently deemed by Reagan's friends and supporters as being an insufficient likeness of him, and it was moved from the lobby of the White House to storage in April 1991.[2][3]

Ronald Reagan is depicted standing in the portrait wearing a blue suit with a red tie. His fingers rest on the Oval Office desk.[1] A bronze statue of a cowboy stands behind him.[1] Shikler had destroyed his original portrait of Reagan and repainted it after Nancy expressed her disapproval.[3][1] Reagan's facial expression was described a "somewhat odd grin" byAssociated Press in 1991.[4] In Nancy Reagan's portrait she wears a red dress and stands in front of the closed doors of theState Dining Room.[1] Shikler had previously painted an oil on paper portrait of Nancy Reagan in 1985. It was donated to theNational Portrait Gallery byTime magazine.[5]

The paintings were commissioned by the retail executiveMilton Petrie and his wife, Carroll, and theWhite House Historical Association.[1][4][6]Jerry Zipkin contacted the Petries to ask if they would pay for the portraits.[6] In January 1990 the Petries attended a private dinner for 30 people at the White House at which the portraits were unveiled. Carroll Petrie subsequently recalled that "After dinner they unveiled the portraits. The one of Nancy was so beautiful. Unfortunately, the one of President Reagan was not terribly good. They redid his, but it still wasn't good. So they got another artist to do it".[6]

Shikler also donated a 1991 portrait of Ronald Reagan to the National Portrait Gallery.[7] The National Portrait Gallery also has a 1980 oil on paper portrait by Shikler of Reagan, donated byTime magazine.[7]

Kinstler portrait of Ronald Reagan

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Official White House portrait of Ronald Reagan by Everett Kinstler
Ronald Reagan, 1991
Official White House portrait byEverett Kinstler

Everett Kinstler was hired to paint the second official portrait of Reagan. He is depicted in the portrait sitting on theTruman Balcony of the White House. TheJefferson Monument is shown in the background.[8] It is the only official presidential portrait to show the subject outside.[8] Kinstler said he painted Reagan "... just the way he appeared to me – a confident man with a ready smile and good humor. He seemed perfectly comfortable with who he was".[8] It was first displayed at the White House on the occasion of a state dinner honoring thePresident of Nicaragua,Violeta Chamorro.[4] It was funded by Mr. and Mrs.Joe Allbritton.[3]

As of March 2025, the portrait of Reagan hangs in theOval Office, to the left of PresidentDonald Trump as he sits at his desk.[9][10] According toThe Washington Post, the effect is that "Reagan appears to be smiling approvingly on Trump's endeavors".[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefg"Reagans return to White House".Doylestown Intelligencer. November 17, 1989. RetrievedNovember 18, 2023.
  2. ^"Reagan switches official portrait".The Burlington Hawkeye. April 18, 1991. RetrievedNovember 18, 2023.
  3. ^abc"Official White House Portraits".White House Historical Association. RetrievedFebruary 18, 2025.
  4. ^abc"Reagan switches portraits".The Jacksonville Journal Courier. April 19, 1991. RetrievedNovember 18, 2023.
  5. ^National Portrait Gallery (December 1, 2020).First Ladies of the United States. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution.ISBN 978-1-58834-694-0.
  6. ^abcColacello, Bob (July 18, 2015)."Ronnie and Nancy: Part II".Vanity Fair. RetrievedJuly 22, 2015.
  7. ^abNational Portrait Gallery (February 13, 2018).America's Presidents. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution.ISBN 978-1-58834-611-7.
  8. ^abc"Comics to celebrities".The Berkshire Eagle. March 8, 2012. RetrievedNovember 18, 2023.
  9. ^abBendavid, Naftali (March 11, 2025)."Trump embraces Reagan's aura while rejecting his worldview".The Washington Post.ProQuest 3175756282. RetrievedMarch 19, 2025.
  10. ^Liptak, Kevin; Collins, Kaitlan; Zeleny, Jeff (March 16, 2025)."Flags, figurines and gold everywhere: Trump transforms the Oval Office into a gilded gallery".CNN Wire Service.ProQuest 3177595576. RetrievedMarch 21, 2025.

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