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Jamaican artist Wayde McIntosh builds “legacy” through objects as much as likeness and depicts American painter Jordan Casteel in a room that reads like a personal archive where family history, community responsibility, and artistic practice are inseparable.

The medium-brown skin of Casteel almost glows she turns slightly towards us from her seat on a couch. She rests her head on one hand in a relaxed but guarded pose, meeting us with a steady, thoughtful gaze. Her short, dark curls frame her face as large, round black tinted eyeglasses catch the light. She wears a black zip-front graphic hoodie with printed text and figures partially visible on the chest. The couch is layered with patterned fabric and cushions, including a bright red pillow and a soft, gray, furry throw at the right edge. Behind her, a tall tapered wooden bookshelf rises like a backdrop with book spines stacked tightly, while long green plant vines cascade down. Pinned or leaning near the shelves are visual signs of public life including a prominent a bold “Black Lives Matter” magazine cover alongside a small flag with red-and-black striping. On the wall to the right, a framed black-and-white photograph shows two men standing with their hands over their hearts, adding a sober, documentary note to the intimate interior.

The civil-rights references (including the photo connected to Jordan Casteel’s grandfather (Whitney Young Jr.) and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.), Black Lives Matter, and David Hammons’s African American Flag link past and present activism without turning Casteel into a symbol alone. She remains a person at home, choosing how much to reveal.

Born in St. Catherine, Jamaica, McIntosh, was trained at MICA and Yale before working in New York. He approaches portraits as a collaborative truth-telling so the setting “reinforces the sitter’s history and character,” honoring how Casteel’s own portrait practice insists on dignity, attention, and the right to be seen on one’s own terms.

Jamaican artist Wayde McIntosh builds “legacy” through objects as much as likeness and depicts American painter Jordan Casteel in a room that reads like a personal archive where family history, community responsibility, and artistic practice are inseparable. The medium-brown skin of Casteel almost glows she turns slightly towards us from her seat on a couch. She rests her head on one hand in a relaxed but guarded pose, meeting us with a steady, thoughtful gaze. Her short, dark curls frame her face as large, round black tinted eyeglasses catch the light. She wears a black zip-front graphic hoodie with printed text and figures partially visible on the chest. The couch is layered with patterned fabric and cushions, including a bright red pillow and a soft, gray, furry throw at the right edge. Behind her, a tall tapered wooden bookshelf rises like a backdrop with book spines stacked tightly, while long green plant vines cascade down. Pinned or leaning near the shelves are visual signs of public life including a prominent a bold “Black Lives Matter” magazine cover alongside a small flag with red-and-black striping. On the wall to the right, a framed black-and-white photograph shows two men standing with their hands over their hearts, adding a sober, documentary note to the intimate interior. The civil-rights references (including the photo connected to Jordan Casteel’s grandfather (Whitney Young Jr.) and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.), Black Lives Matter, and David Hammons’s African American Flag link past and present activism without turning Casteel into a symbol alone. She remains a person at home, choosing how much to reveal. Born in St. Catherine, Jamaica, McIntosh, was trained at MICA and Yale before working in New York. He approaches portraits as a collaborative truth-telling so the setting “reinforces the sitter’s history and character,” honoring how Casteel’s own portrait practice insists on dignity, attention, and the right to be seen on one’s own terms.

"Legacy" by Wayde McIntosh (Jamaican) - Oil on Dibond / 2017 - National Portrait Gallery (Washington, DC) #WomenInArt #WaydeMcIntosh #McIntosh #JordanCasteel #BLM #BlackLivesMatter #Casteel #SmithsonianNPG #artText #art #BlueskyArt #portrait #NationalPortraitGallery #PortraitofaWoman #Smithsonian

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