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At Home with Political Portraits
Photographs of the Domestic Display of U.S. Presidents
At Home with Political Portraits
Photographs of the Domestic Display of U.S. Presidents
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Description
At Home with Political Portraits focuses on photographs of the domestic display of three U.S. presidential icons: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, and Barack Obama to examine everyday expressions of national pride and belonging as well as tensions these displays signal about the state of democracy.
Even though keeping political portraits in the home has traditionally been associated with authoritarian regimes, the United States has a long history with the practice, and Wingate analyzes how photos of three 20th- and 21-century U.S presidential icons plays into this history. With radio, television, and social media, respectively, Roosevelt, Kennedy, and Obama entered the intimate spaces of people's daily lives in new and unprecedented ways. Exhibiting presidential portraits at home was, and is, a patriotic and commemorative act. But the photographers and artists who draw our attention to these expressions of pride and belonging, such as Jack Delano, Gordon Parks, Louis Carlos Bernal, Bruce Davidson, Jordan Casteel, and An Rong Xu, also reveal the tensions they signal.
Wingate argues how both the artists and their subjects strive to make meaning from national symbols and to locate one's place within the imagined community of nationhood. In doing so, they invite reflection on U.S. citizens' hopes and anxieties about the state of the nation's democracy.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Picturing Democracy
1. Roosevelt: 'To hell with any more elections, we're gonna make him king'
2. Kennedy: A Martyr and a Deity
3. Obama: My Wishes and Dreams Are with You…
Conclusion: “No Kings!”
Bibliography
Notes
About the Author
Index
Product details
| Published | Apr 02 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 176 |
| ISBN | 9781666926545 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 28 bw illus |
| Dimensions | 229 x 152 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Over the last century, we have sometimes invited US presidents into our homes and places of work via photographic portraits. This astonishing cultural practice, which stretches from FDR to Trump, and harks back to Lincoln and to prints of Washington, tells us a lot about who we are and how we relate to the republic, its leaders and the values embedded in the practice. Richly and beautifully told, this timely book is a revelation.
Paul Staiti, Alumnae Foundation Professor of Fine Arts, Mount Holyoke College, USA

























