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- <text id=93TT0603>
- <title>
- Dec. 06, 1993: Clinton Family Values
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 06, 1993 Castro's Cuba:The End Of The Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE WHITE HOUSE, Page 38
- Clinton Family Values
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The mansion's redecoration arches a few eyebrows
- </p>
- <p>By Bonnie Angelo/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It is accepted wisdom in Washington that each new First Family
- gets to put its personal imprimatur on the decor of the White
- House. It is also the right of every self-respecting armchair
- decorator to criticize the First Family's taste. The Lincolns
- were disparaged as spendthrifts. Rutherford Hayes' refurbishings
- were deemed "French-y and pretentious." Teddy Roosevelt smeared
- the Green Room with a polar-bear pelt, and purists reached for
- the smelling salts when Harry Truman built a balcony over the
- South Portico. Even decor queen Jackie Kennedy was sharply rebuked
- by the President himself when an all-too-authentic antique chair
- collapsed under him at the dining table.
- </p>
- <p> Now it is the Clintons' turn. In refurbishing the Treaty Room
- and Lincoln Sitting Room on the executive mansion's second floor,
- the Clintons, avid history buffs, sought to replicate the style
- of Lincoln's era--in retrospect, a risky choice. Mid-19th
- century American decor was in its, shall we say, bawdy-house
- phase at the time. The Victorians never met a swag or tassel
- they didn't like; if one patterned fabric was good, surely four
- would be better.
- </p>
- <p> Kaki Hockersmith, the Little Rock, Arkansas, decorator who designed
- the new settings, was meticulously correct, meeting the principle
- Hillary Rodham Clinton posited to Historic Preservation magazine:
- "Preservation and restoration, not redecoration...furthering
- the historic mission of the house." Duly noted. But to some
- eyes, the strong colors and elaborate draperies seem a tad overwrought.
- Even an approving White House expert admits that "it takes a
- little time getting used to it."
- </p>
- <p> Wing-chair psychiatrists who seek character traits will need
- a full hour to analyze the Treaty Room, which now serves as
- the President's home office. George Bush had it done in pale
- green, with much English chintz; ranks of miniature soldiers
- marched across the marble mantel. Clinton asked for a masculine,
- library-like room, and, says Hockersmith, loves the deep red
- simulated-leather wallpaper, massive, specially designed bookcases
- and his easy chair and ottoman from the Arkansas Governor's
- mansion. Nine major treaties--most recently the Arafat-Rabin
- agreement of last September--were signed on the circa-1867
- table that serves as his desk.
- </p>
- <p> The decorating divide between the Bushes and Clintons widens
- in the Oval Office, where Bush's muted blue haven has been transformed
- into what one Washington sage calls "the Redskin Room" because
- of its use (unwitting, one assumes) of the N.F.L. home team's
- burgundy and gold colors in the upholstery. The Presidential
- Seal all but leaps out from Clinton's deep blue carpeting.
- </p>
- <p> The most controversial change (curiously, since nobody spends
- much time there) is in the Lincoln Sitting Room, recast from
- fairly boring Reagan-Bush conventionality to Victorian overload.
- In the family's personal rooms, the palette shifts to pleasant
- pastels, prompting one visitor to observe that the Bushes' patrician
- threadbare-and-dog-hair style had given way to a less inviting,
- don't-touch tidiness. Perhaps that can be remedied by time,
- wear and Socks.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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