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1489371
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1/13/75 - Mrs. Ford's Portrait Unveiling
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1489371
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1/13/75 - Mrs. Ford's Portrait Unveiling
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Sheila R. Weidenfeld Files (Ford Administration)
Sheila Weidenfeld's Daily Events Files
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President (1974-1977 : Ford). Office of the First Lady. 1974-1977
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1975-01-31
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1975
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1975-01-01
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1975
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The original documents are located in Box 4, folder "1/13/75 - Mrs. Ford's Portrait Unveiling" of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald R. Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box 4 of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library GUEST LIST FOR THE UNVEILING OF MRS. FORD'S PORTRAIT ON MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1975, AT 7:30 P. M., THE WHITE HOUSE: The Vice President and Mrs. Rockefeller Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Brune Mrs. Beatrice Brune is the artist's sister from Iowa The Honorable Philip Buchen and Mrs. Buchen The Honorable John Byrnes and Mrs. Byrnes The Honorable Elford Cederberg and Mrs. Cederberg Mr. and Mrs. Clement E. Conger The Honorable Glenn Davis and Mrs. Davis The Honorable Robert Hartmann Dr. and Mrs. James Howe Mrs. John Jarman Miss Nancy Lammerding The Honorable Clark MacGregor and Mrs. MacGregor The Honorable George Mahon and Mrs. Mahon Mr. and Mrs. Rod Markley Mr. and Mrs. Perkins McGuire The Honorable Ronald H. Nessen and Mrs. Nessen Mrs. Pepe Pina Mrs. Pina is the wife of Mr. Ulbricht's agent in Spain Mr. L. Nicholas Ruwe Mr. and Mrs. David Scott Mr. and Mrs. John Ulbricht Mr. and Mrs. Edward Weidenfeld Mr. and Mrs. William G. Whyte OF MRS. FORD'S PORTRAIT ON ON MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 1975, AT 7:30 P. M., THE WHITE HOUSE, 3 USINESS SUIT: Buchen, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Byrnes, The Honorable John and Mrs. Cederberg, The Honorable Elford and Mrs. Conger, Mr. and Mrs. Clem Davis, The Honorable Glenn and Mrs. Hartmann, The Honorable Robert Jarman, Mrs. John Lammerding, Miss Nancy MacGregor, The Honorable Clark and Mrs. Markley, Mr. and Mrs. Rod McGuire, Mr. and Mrs. Perkins Nessen, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Rockefeller, The Vice President and Mrs. Weidenfeld, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Whyte, Mr. and Mrs. William G. Artist's Party: Ulbricht, Mr. and Mrs. John Brune, Mr. and Mrs. (Beatrice Ulbricht Brune is the artists sister) Pina, Mrs. Pepe (Mrs. Pina is the wife of Mr. Ulbricht's agent, Pepe) Kissinger, The Secretary of State and Mrs. Henry Mahon, The Honorable George and Mrs. Rumsfeld, The Honorable Donald and Mrs. Scott, Mr. and Mrs. David BUFFET FORD Hot Senegalaise Soup Lamb Curry with Rice and Raisins Condiments: Sliced Almonds Chopped Hazel Nuts Grated Orange Rind (light red wine) Chutney Tossed Green Salad Assorted Rolls Pineapple Sherbet For release Tuesday, Jan. 14, 1975 THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Press Secretary to Mrs. Ford NOTICE TO THE PRESS A portrait of Mrs. Ford, commissioned by the President when he was Vice President, was presented at a private party at the White House last night. A few close friends and staff members were invited. The portrait, by American artist John Ulbricht, is done with oils on a linen canvas and will hang in the Family Quarters. The canvas measures 78" X 59", and the frame is 3" wide. The frame is classical and simple in design, done in a subdued antique gold leaf on wood. In the painting, Mrs. Ford is seated against a background of soft green. She is wearing a pale green gown of Chinese # silk embroidered with pale green chrysanthemums. According to Ulbricht, the painting does not fit into a stylistic category, and although in muted lines and shadings is not truly impressionistic. He uses a technique in which layers on layers of oil glazes are built up over a period of time. Ulbricht, who lives in Mallorca, has also done portraits of Picasso; Lord Mountbatten; Novelist and poet Robert Graves; the Duchess of Devonshire; and the Duchess of Alba. Biographical material follows: John Ulbricht was born in Havana, Cuba, in 1926. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago from 1946 until 1950, when he was awarded a grant to continue his studies abroad. For the following two years he lived in Mexico City, after which he became the assistant to the director of the Denver Art Museum in Denver, Colorado. In 1954 he moved to Europe and currently resides in the village of Galilea, Mallorca with his wife, the painter Angela von Neumann, and their two children. He has held one-man exhibitions in London, New York, Paris, Edinburgh, Los Ange- les, Mexico City, Madrid, Palma de Mallorca and other cities. His paintings are repre- sented in numerous private collections as well as in a number of public institutions in- cluding the following: the Dallas Art Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts, the State University of New York at Buffalo, the Pasadena Art Museum, the London National Portrait Gallery, the La Jolla Museum of Art, the Uni- versity of Texas, the University of Southern Illinois, the University of Victoria (Cana- da), and the University of San Francisco. Biographical Note John Ulbricht was born in Havana, Cuba, in 1926. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago from 1946 until 1950, when he was awarded a grant to continue his studies abroad. For the following two years he lived in Mexico City, after which he became the assistant to the director of the Denver Art Museum in Denver, Colorado. In 1954 he moved to Europe and currently resides in the village of Galilea, Mallorca with his wife, the painter Angela von Neumann, and their two children. He has held one-man exhibitions in London, New York, Paris, Edinburgh, Los Ange- les, Mexico City, Madrid, Palma de Mallorca and other cities. His paintings are repre- sented in numerous private collections as well as in a number of public institutions in- cluding the following: the Dallas Art Museum, the Denver Art Museum, the Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts, the State University of New York at Buffalo, the Pasadena Art Museum, the London National Portrait Gallery, the La Jolla Museum of Art, the Uni- versity of Texas, the University of Southern Illinois, the University of Victoria (Cana- da), and the University of San Francisco. PINTURA 195 X 130 cms Prince Charles: Taking it in stride Bogart in 1918: Taking it on the lip Bettman Archive Central Press photos screen, "when he is enunciating clearly, not do flattering or glamorous portraits," do course that was part of his training as you can see the lip moving out, almost said Ulbricht. "Mrs. Ford is intelligent a Navy pilot. One test forced the future like a proboscis, to envelop a word, and and sensitive enough to know that I am king to get down on his hands and knees then returning to lie wetly against the after the human dimension." in the mud and crawl through a half-sub- teeth while a new word is being formed." merged drainage pipe. Afterward, a ma- Me Tarzan-but my friends still call rine spokesman minimized the danger of On a return trip to Bethesda naval me Your Royal Highness. Inching his the ordeal: "There is a great deal of hospital last week, Betty Ford under- way by rope from tree to tree, scaling straw to break any fall on the tree walk, went a comprehensive medical checkup vertical walls and slogging through a and should anyone panic in the pipe, one and received a favorable report: no re- waist-deep stream in his fatigues, Brit- of the chaps at either end will pull him currence of the cancer that necessitated ain's Prince Charles, 26, proved his met- out." Still, the Prince summed it up as removal of her right breast last Septem- tle by passing a Royal Marines comman- "a most horrifying expedition." ber. The good news added gaiety to a private White House party for the un- TRANSITION veiling of a portrait of Mrs. Ford by Ma- jorca-based U.S. artist John Ulbricht, 48, who is also painting the President. The ELECTED: Margaret Bush Wilson, 55, SENTENCED: Skitch Henderson, 56, First Lady was "absolutely delighted" as board chairman of the National As- composer and former "Tonight" show with her straightforward likeness. "I do sociation for the Advancement of Colored bandleader; to six months in prison for People, succeeding the late Bishop filing false Federal income-tax returns; Stephen Gill Spottswood; in New York in New York City, Jan. 17. Henderson- City, Jan. 13. "I consider myself an who has yet to decide whether to appeal aristocrat," said Mrs. Wilson, a St. Louis -was also fined $10,000. He claimed a lawyer and civil-rights leader. "Charac- $350,000 deduction for donating a library ter. Competence. Accomplish- of his scores and arrange- ment. That's my definition of ments to the University of aristocracy." She is the first Wisconsin, even though-as black woman elected to the Judge Edward Weinfeld put NAACP's top policymaking it in imposing sentence-"he post (a white woman, Mary knew that the gift was prac- White Ovington, was chair- tically worthless." man from 1917 to 1932). NAACP executive director DIED: Gustavo Rojas Pini- Roy Wilkins serves under lla, 74, deposed Colombian the chairman. dictator; of a heart attack, at his home near Bogotá, Jan. RECUPERATING: Golda UPI 17. Rojas studied civil en- Meir, 76, Israel's retired Margaret Wilson gineering at Tri-State College Prime Minister; after surgery in Indiana and worked on a in Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem last Ford assembly line before returning to week to remove a cataract from her left Colombia and entering the army. He eye. The 45-minute operation was per- became President in a military coup in formed under a local anesthetic. "Thank 1953 and was ousted in 1957 after run- Karl Schumacher-The White House you," said Mrs. Meir when it was all over. ning one of Latin America's most ruth- Ford portrait: Taking it straight "I didn't feel a thing." less and corrupt regimes. January 27, 1975 45 THE WASHINGTON POST Tuesday, Jan. 14, 1975 Personalities Portrait Of the First Lady Yesterday was a big day for First Lady Betty Ford. In the morning, she was found to be in "excellent health" after a routine check- up at Bethesda Naval Hos- pital. Last night, her por- trait was unveiled at a pri- vate dinner at the White House for 40 friends. At the dinner were the artist and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. John Ulbricht, and the artist's sister, Beatrice Brune from Iowa. The UI- brichts, formerly based in Chicago, now have a studio on the Spanish Island of The portrait, in a three- Mallorca. Inch-wide m is 78 inches high by 59 inches wide and was painted from sittings in the Fords' Alex- andria home when Ford was Vice President. It will be hung temporarily in the up- stairs family quarters at the White House and may even- tually become her official White House portrait. That depends on whether the White House Historical As- sociation decides to buy it for the White House. B The Official Portrait Artist John Ulbricht painted this official por- trait of Mrs. Betty Ford which was shown by the President and Mrs. Ford last night in a small. party at the White House. The President was so pleas- ed by Ulbricht's por- trait of his wife, done while Mr. Ford was vice president, that he is now sitting for UI- bricht, too. Story on Page C-2. White House Photo Mrs. Ford's Health 'Excellent' By Isabelle Shelton rence of the cancer," Dr. painted on a linen canvas, Star-News Staff Writer Lukash reported. shows Betty Ford against First Lady Betty Ford Checkups such as yes- a green background, passed her first major terday's are "routine" wearing a pale green gown post-operative checkup after the surgery Mrs. of Chinese silk embroider- with flying colors yester- Ford underwent and will ed with chrysanthemums. day, and will be able to be repeated every four "step up" her activities in months, the White House Ulbricht, who was the future, according to doctor said, recommended to the Fords Dr. William Lukash, the The flareup of osteoar- by David Scott of the Na- White House physician. thritis that prevented Mrs. tional Gallery of Art, also This includes "extensive Ford from accompanying has done portraits of traveling" if the First the President to Marti- Picasso, Lord Mountbat- Lady's schedule calls for nique last month is "epi- ten and novelist-poet Rob- it, Dr. Lukash said after sodic" and presently in ert Graves. she went though four hours abeyance, he added. of tests and examinations Cheered by the good at Bethesda Naval Medical news, the Fords gave a Center, where she under- party last night to show a went surgery for breast new portrait of the First cancer three and-a-half Lady to a small group of months ago. friends and staff members. DR. WILLIAM FOUTY, The portrait, commis- chief of surgery at Bethes- sioned by Ford when he da, who performed the was vice president, was surgery, and Dr. Lukash painted by John Ulbricht, both examined Mrs. Ford an American artist now and found her "in excellent living in Mallorca, Spain. health and showing "no evidence of any recur- THE 78 BY 59 INCH oil, 1/9/75 p.cs PEOPLE With Best Wishes From Rabbi Korff Former President Richard $20,000 trip to Japan pa Nixon, observing his 62nd Personalities for by an industrialist. birthday today, is expected Trudeau also came unde to spend it quietly at home pale green mandarin-col- eral opened doors, Liberty fire because he conditio lared brocade gown. dashed from Mrt. Ford's ally accepted the gift of in San Clemente. The painting will be hung Oval Office, past the Roose- swimming pool for his of Rabbi Baruch Korff, an in the family quarters of the velt and Cabinet Rooms, cial residence, which is b ardent Nixon supporter, vis- White House and will not be past a security guard and ing offered by a group ited Nixon yesterday "to designated as Mrs. Ford's of- through the press room to anonymous Toronto donors wish the President well on ficial portrait until the freedom on the front lawn. his birthday," a spokesman From staff reports and news dispute Fords leave the White A White House policeman said. House. shed his jacket and gave Korff has scheduled a chase, nabbing the dog by news conference for this Lorbes Balloons her collar as she neared a morning, apparently to re- Pennsylvania Avenue gate. port on his visit with the Aerospace scientist former chief executive. Thomas Heinsheimer says Gift Guidelines that he doubts publisher Petit's Fall Malcolm Forbes will make Gifts to Margaret Trudeau another try this winter to and other presents to per- Phillippe Petit, the tight- cross the United States and sons in government have rope stunt man who fell 30 the Atlantic Ocean in a bal- prompted Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Tru- feet to a concrete floor in loon. "Our system of 13 bal- deau to consider guidelines St. Petersburg, Fla., Tues- day, is in fair condition. loons appears too compli- or legislation to cover their cated," Heinsheimer told a acceptance. Doctors say he suffered a The latest gift was $3,000 collapsed right lung and rib Torrance, Calif., news con- in photographic equipment, and wrist fractures and is ference. He said Forbes' given to Mrs. Trudeau by expected to remain in inten- "airship" should be rede- King Hussein of Jordan. sive care for four days and signed and that that could White House Photo The prime minister was in the hospital about two not be completed in time to taken to task in the past af- of First Lady Betty weeks. catch the best winds east- ter Mrs. Trudeau accepted a the Ford's Alexan- ward. Petit was arrested last Au- John Ulbricht. gust when he strung a wire A launch attempt Monday failed when some of the 13 between the twin towers of balloons broke free. prema- the World Trade Center in turely. Heinsheimer said to Manhattan and performed avoid a similar fate next his stunts to the amazement time, the gondola must have of onlookers below. either one large balloon or Mrs. Ford's Portrait fewer small ones. A new portrait of First Liberty Spree Lady Betty Ford is expected President Ford's golden to be unveiled this weekend retriever, Liberty, was true to a few friends of the Ford to her name Tuesday when family. she went on a spree around In the portrait, done by the White House to the John Ulbricht, Mrs. F rd is cheers of onlookers. shown seated and wear ing a Taking advantage of sev-