I’ve heard Amy Sherald tell this story before, but it’s so good, I’m asking her to tell it again.
“I was painting, and the phone rang,” the Columbus, Georgia–born painter, who was living and working in Baltimore at the time, begins. It was 2017, and destiny was on the line: Her name was Dorothy Moss, and she was then the curator of painting and sculpture at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C. “ ‘You should sit down,’ Moss said.” Sherald did as she was told. “ ‘Michelle chose you to paint her portrait.’ ”
At the age of 44, Sherald, a relatively under-the-radar Black portraitist whose style is defined by grayscale skin tones and brightly colored, minimalist backgrounds, had been selected to paint the offcial portrait of…
