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Picture This
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When the conservatives in Congress gutted the National Endowment for the
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Arts, they predicted that art patrons from the private sector would come
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forward to fill the ensuing culture gap. Balderdash, said the art community.
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But proving them wrong are the conservatives at the American Enterprise
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Institute, which commissioned three historical portraits by Minnesota artist
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Mark Balma, to be unveiled next month at an AEI reception in the Cannon House
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Office Building.
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Without actually viewing them, Chatterbox can't comment on whether or not
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these are great paintings, but we are prepared to judge these works by their
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titles:
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A Shared Vision pairs Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. Yes, they
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were statesmen, bringing compromise and tact to everything that they did. Also,
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they shared a vision, and are historical. Good job, AEI!
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Resolution, we're not so sure about. This painting depicts the Gulf
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War All-Star starting five of George Bush, James Baker, Dick Cheney, Brent
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Scowcroft, and Colin Powell. Historical, yes, but haven't all of the subjects
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crawled under consulting/public-speaking/book-promoting rocks since the end of
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the Bush administration? It might not be very good, but it's very big--a
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whopping 144 square feet.
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Making the strongest argument for the return of the National Endowment is
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The Four Statesmen, depicting everybody's favorite '70s political hacks:
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Gerald Ford, Valery Giscard d'Estaing, James Callaghan, and Helmut Schmidt.
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Can we have Karen Finley and Piss Christ back, please?
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