| Clinton's official portrait is the first by                           a black artist
 
 Associated Press
 
 LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- Simmie Knox, the first black artist to                           paint an official presidential portrait, is preparing to unveil his oil                           painting of former President Bill Clinton in a ceremony Monday at                           the White House.
 
 "My mind hasn't completely wrapped around it yet," Knox said in                           a telephone interview from his Silver Spring, Md., home. "Just                           imagine: I was born in 1935 in Aliceville, Alabama, a
 sharecropper, and now I'm painting the president. Can you                           imagine that?"
 
 The self-taught artist, best known for his portraits of black                           celebrities like baseball legend Hank Aaron and comedian Bill                           Cosby, also will unveil a painting of the former first lady, New
 York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.
 
 At the former president's request, the oil painting is set in the Oval                           Office. It will be the first presidential portrait in the White House                           collection to include the American flag.
 
 Knox, who met with Clinton just before the former president left                           office, said he felt especially connected to him because they grew                           up under similar circumstances -- in a poor family in the
 segregated South.
 
 "I think that's why he has the compassion that he has," Knox said.                           "He knows how it feels to have lived a certain life and to have                           been deprived of things."
 
 At their meeting, Knox took dozens of photographs and                           discussed what Clinton, 57, would like to see in the portrait.
 
 "You need to get your mind's-eye image," Knox said. "Once I see                           you I'll never forget you. When I don't know you and I work from                           an image in a photo I'm really feeling in the dark, but when I meet                           with you and talk to you, it really registers, and all I need is one
 good exposure."
 
 The portrait of Clinton for the other official presidential collection,                           the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery, will be done by artist                           Nelson Shanks, a gallery spokeswoman said.
 
 Official portraits of presidents and first ladies often are unveiled at                           the same time, but rarely by the same artist. Hillary Clinton asked                           Knox to paint her after seeing some mock-ups of her husband's                           portrait.
 
 |