Here's one issue the Clintons may -- or may not -- want to brush off.
In a recent interview with the Philadelphia Daily News, the artist who painted a portrait of President Bill Clinton that hangs in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. revealed a surprise -- the portrait “subtly” incorporated Monica Lewinsky.
Artist Nelson Shanks told the newspaper that the shadow on the left side
of the portrait was cast by a mannequin in a blue dress -- a nod to the
president’s affair with his 22-year-old intern.
Shanks, who described Clinton as “the most famous liar of all time,”
told the Philadelphia Daily News that the shadow represents a
metaphorical “shadow on the office he held.”
Shanks painted the portrait while standing in the Oval Office.
He says he placed a mannequin in a blue dress to cast a shadow on the
mantle while he was painting. However, the mannequin and the president
were never in the room at the same time, he noted.
According to Shanks, the Clintons are pressuring the National Portrait
Gallery to remove the painting. However, a museum spokesperson told ABC
News that they have not received any requests from the Clintons to
remove the portrait.
The portrait is currently not on display, but it is in the museum’s gallery of collection.
The portrait originally stirred controversy when it was released in 2006
for the notable absence of a wedding ring on the President’s hand.
Shanks did not immediately respond to request for comment from ABC News
[From : ABC NEWS]
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