Bust of Martin Luther King Jr. (Alston)
Bust on display in the Oval Office on January 11, 2024.
A bronze bust of Martin Luther King Jr. was made by African-American artist Charles Alston in 1970, two years after King was assassinated. Alston received a commission from the Reverend Donald S. Harrington , of the Community Church of New York, to create a bust of King for $5,000. Five bronze busts were cast in 1970, each approximately 32 centimetres (13 in) high.
One cast was acquired in 1974 for the collection of the Smithsonian Institution 's National Portrait Gallery in Washington DC, but has been on long-term loan to the White House since 2000, under the administration of Bill Clinton .[ 1] It was displayed in the White House Library , and was reputedly the first image of an African American on public display in the White House. The bust was moved to the Oval Office in 2009 by Barack Obama , where it was displayed along with a bust of Abraham Lincoln .[ 2] It replaced a bust of Winston Churchill by Jacob Epstein that had been a loan to George W. Bush from the British Government Art Collection . In January 2017, Donald Trump placed another Epstein Churchill bust belonging to the White House in the Oval Office but also retained the bust of King.[ 3] Alston's sculpture of Martin Luther King Jr. remained in a prominent position at the Oval Office when Joe Biden began his presidency in January 2021. It is currently displayed near a bust of Robert F. Kennedy , with both sculptures flanking the fireplace in the office.[ 4]
A second cast of Alston's bust of King was donated to the National Museum of African American History and Culture in January 2016.[ 5]
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Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial
National Historical Park
King Center for Nonviolent Social Change
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church
National Civil Rights Museum
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FBI–King suicide letter
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity
Season for Nonviolence
U.S. Capitol Rotunda sculpture
Oval Office bust
Homage to King sculpture, Atlanta
Hope Moving Forward statue, Atlanta
Safe House Black History Museum
Statues of Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial, San Francisco
Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial (Compton)
Landmark for Peace Memorial , Indianapolis
The Dream sculpture, Portland, Oregon
Kennedy–King College
Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, Washington, D.C.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Library, San Jose
Paris park
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King County, Washington
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Civil rights movement in popular culture
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