Yesterday, Michelle Obama and a team of Washington, D.C. museum curators released the list of 45 artworks and artifacts that would be loaned to the White House during the current administration. Between the slideshows assembled by the
Washington Post and the
New York Times, you get a sense that they had three major priorities: American history (like the
George Catlin frontier paintings and
portrait of Truman), African American artists (especially
Alma Thomas, but also
Glen Ligon and
William H. Johnson) and, happily, abstract modernism (like
Richard Diebenkorn,
Josef Albers and
Nicolas De Stael).
My favorite—aside from the fact that they picked up an Edgar Degas bronze sculpture in the mix because, well, why not—is that they'll be blessing one room with the 1849 patent model of Samuel Morse's electric telegraph (pictured). Hopefully that'll go on the Oval Office desk. Other pieces I hope will end up facing Obama at his desk are Ligon's amazing "Black Like Me No. 2" and Ed Ruscha's "I Think I'll...", which is probably the most passive modernist artwork ever made.
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