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Simmie Knox
A Presidential portraitist at the pinnacle
of his profession
by Theodore Carter
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PHOTO:Amelia Knox
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Silver Spring artist Simmie
Knox had painted dignitaries beforeSupreme Court judges,
governors, writers, and famous performersbut he never
thought that his 40-plus years of painting would lead him
to a seat next to President Clinton in the Oval Office. It
was late 2001, the end of the presidents second term,
and Knox was trying to earn a commission as the official portraitist
of President and Mrs. Clinton.
"Of course I was nervous," laughs Knox, "Im
just a farm boy from Alabama."
The Oval Offices brilliant blue drapes, carved presidential
desk, and busts of Lincoln, Kennedy, and Roosevelt left Knox
awestruck.
"Its a place that Ive read about for years,
Ive seen pictures on television and in the newspaper
and suddenly I was there."
It wasnt until after a few minutes of watching Clinton
flip through photos of paintings of Justice Ruth Ginsberg,
Hank Aaron, and Thurgood Marshall that Knox was put at ease
by President Clinton.
"He said to me, You know, a lot of the people
youve painted are friends of mine. Thats
when I knew I was all right," says Knox.
Knoxs portraits of President and Mrs. Clinton were
unveiled June14 during a White House ceremony hosted by President
George W. Bush and Laura Bush. The portraits show President
Clinton in an easy, natural pose standing in front of the
American flag in the oval office. Mrs. Clinton is depicted
much differently than the other first ladies adorning the
White House walls.
"She is the only one wearing a pantsuit, and showing
a broad smile like that," says Knox.
With the official unveiling, Knox became the only African
American to have painted an official portrait of the President.
The farm boy had become a part of Presidential history, prompting
Bill Clinton to say of Knox, "he, too, is a great American
story."
Knox, the son of a sharecropper, was born in 1935. He grew
up in Aliceville, Ala. and spent more time working on the
farm than he did at school. It wasnt until his father
moved him to Mobile, at the age of 11, that he was able to
attend school regularly. In Mobile, he began to draw and discovered
his artistic talent while drawing super heroes with his classmates.
"We always wanted to see who could draw Superman the
best, or Batman the best," he says.
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| With his recently unveiled
portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton, Simmie Knox became
the first African American Presidential portraitistand
the first to depict a First Lady in a pantsuit. |
Knox wanted to go to Alabama State Teachers College
after graduating high school in 1956, but couldnt afford
the $5 registration fee. He joined the Army in order to earn
money for his education.
After the Army, he moved to Milford, Del., where he worked
in a textile factory. Knox still harbored dreams of going
to college to study artas evidenced by the self- portrait
Knox keeps in his Silver Spring studio, painted when he was
28. "I did this without any formal training," he
says, pointing at his drawing of himself with a proud, upturned
chin.
That self-portrait was his entire portfolio when he applied
and was admitted to Temple Universitys Tyler School
of Art. Despite his interest in figure drawing, his education
took him another direction.
"I learned about design, texture, shape, color, light
[but]
it was the time of Jackson Pollock," he says, explaining
how he was pushed away from realistic renditions of his subjects
and into an abstract style.
Knox came to Washington in the early 1970s as a painter of
mammoth abstract-expressionistic paintings. His paintings,
some bigger than he, were displayed in the Jacobs Ladder
Gallery on Wisconsin Avenue. Others are still on display in
The Kreeger Museum on Foxhall Road.
Although successful as an abstract painter, Knox wanted to
go back to painting the human face. He realized that he "had
an ability to capture likeness that very few people had,"
a skill left over from his informal training as an illustrator
of super heroes.
In 1975, Knox boldly announced his return to realism with
an enormous portrait of Frederick Douglass, a painting now
owned by the Smithsonian.
A few years later, he was commissioned by the state of Tennessee
to paint writer Alex Haley. Knox considers the Haley portrait
another one of his cornerstone pieces, not only because of
its merit, but also because of the difficulty he had in completing
the project.
"They rejected it; told me it was too big," he
says.
Accustomed to working on gigantic abstract paintings, Knoxs
portraits were done on a grand scale, some as large as 12
feet high. He had been using second-rate canvases, too, stretching
them himself and nailing them into their wooden framework.
"It was the best thing that ever happened to me,"
Knox says.
He quickly learned to buy only first-rate materials and to
work on a smaller scale. His second Haley portrait now hangs
in the Tennessee State House.
Although by the early 1980s Knox had established himself
as a successful painter, he still had difficulty making ends
meet as a full-time artist. He, his wife, and their two small
children lived in a two-bedroom apartment in Adams-Morgan.
One of the bedrooms doubled as Knoxs studio. Knox started
painting still lifes and hauled them down to sell in Eastern
Market.
"I liked it there because you could get a whole booth
for ten dollars," he says.
Financial security didnt come until later, when he
was introduced to a person who would become a benefactor.
"I owe a lot to this man," says Knox pointing at
his own rendition of the world-recognized face of Bill Cosby.
Cosby, a serious art collector, found Knox by way of his
Frederick Douglass painting. Cosby collection curator David
Driskell had seen the painting on display at the Museum of
African Art and recognized Knoxs talent. Driskell knew
that if allowed to concentrate on art instead of sales, Knox
would flourish. Cosby immediately hired him to paint several
portraits.
"He sent me to New York, France, Arizona," says
Knox.
With Cosbys backing, Knox was able to build a client
base. He stopped going to Eastern Market and moved into a
house in Silver Spring.
Now, he has "a great commute," painting out of
his home studioa converted garage filled with stacks
of paintings leaning against every wall. The biggest canvases
stretch to the ceiling. Jazz plays in the background on a
small radio engulfed in piles of CDs from the likes of Ella
Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington, and Curtis Mayfield. The garage
workbench is filled with Plexiglas paint palettes stacked
above one another with dixie-cup pillars. Propped on a tabletop
amidst the tools of his trade sits a framed photograph of
Knox with President Clinton inscribed, "With appreciation
for your fine work."
In another corner of his studio are nearly a dozen African
masks. Pointing toward them, Knox explains how African art
influenced cubists like Picasso.
"Its amazing what can be done just with the human
face," he says.
From humble beginnings, Knox gained commissions primarily
through word-of-mouth and has painted famous faces ranging
from former New York Mayor David Dinkins to Muhammad Ali.
Knoxs portrait of former Alabama Governor Don Seigelman
hangs in the Alabama State House, a building Knox wasnt
allowed to enter while growing up in Alabama.
"That painting hangs opposite the painting of George
C. Wallace," Knox says with satisfaction. (Wallace, a
staunch segregationist, gained national notoriety in 1964
during an unsuccessful bid for the presidency.)
But it was Knoxs reputation within the judicial world
that eventual earned him the distinction of presidential portraitist.
"They used to call me the artist of the judges,"
he says.
In 1989, Knox was commissioned to paint Spottswood Robinson,
Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia and an important civil rights leader.
Robinson later recommended Knox to his friend Thurgood Marshall.
His portrait of Marshall now hangs in the Supreme Court building.
During the unveiling of the Robinson painting, Knox gave
his business card to Ruth Ginsberg, then a District Court
Judge serving alongside Robinson. In 1993, president Clinton
appointed Judge Ginsberg to her current spot on the United
States Supreme Court. When it was time for Ginsberg to be
immortalized in portraiture, she called Knox.
"She told me, Ive had your card in a special
spot for nine years," he says.
Not long afterwards, during a party celebrating freshman
senators including Hillary Rodham Clinton, Ginsberg recommended
Knox to the famous first couple. Word-of-mouth recommendations
had landed Knox a portraitists dream job: painting the
President and First Lady.
Now basking in the afterglow of his high-profile portraits
of the Clintons, Knox is fielding calls from People magazine
and ABC World News Tonight. Shell-shocked by the blitz of
media attention, Knox can hardly believe his own success story.
The only explanation he offers is this: "Ive been
doing this same thing for 40 years."
Bill Clintons explanation affords more honor to the
humble presidential portraitist. He said that Knox represents
"part of Americas promisethat people should
rise as far as they can and do whatever their dreams indicate,
if theyre good enough to do it."
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