Current:Home > MarketsHere's the story of the portrait behind Ruth Bader Ginsburg's postage stamp -Achieve Wealth Network
Here's the story of the portrait behind Ruth Bader Ginsburg's postage stamp
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-10 20:31:41
As a Supreme Court justice with a large and devoted fan base, Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a cultural and judicial phenomenon.
And now the influential justice will adorn cards, letters and packages: The U.S. Postal Service officially unveiled a new stamp featuring Ginsburg on Monday. The Forever stamps cost 66 cents each — or $13.20 for a sheet of 20.
The stamp's oil-painting portrait is based on a photograph captured by Philip Bermingham, a well-known portrait photographer who also happened to be Ginsburg's neighbor in the Watergate building.
"It is such a powerful photograph," Bermingham, who has photographed royalty and other luminaries, told NPR. "I wish I knew how I could replicate this on every session."
The photograph was taken in 2017
On the day of the photo shoot, Ginsburg, who was then 84, hosted Bermingham and his daughter in her office at the Supreme Court, where a shelf of books sat on her desk. Other books stood at the ready on carts nearby.
Bermingham had long anticipated the session, but in the early going of the shoot, things didn't seem to be working out. Finally, he decided the angles were all wrong — and the 6'4" photographer realized he should get on the ground, to let his lens peer up at Ginsburg, who stood around 5 feet tall.
"So I got down on the floor and I got her to lean over me," he said. "So I'm looking right up at her" — and Ginsburg's eyes connected with the camera in a way they hadn't in the rest of the session.
"It's like you feel a presence in the photograph," Bermingham said.
The two had frequently run into each other at the Kennedy Center, pursuing their mutual love of opera. And they had joked before about their height gap. Once, towering over Ginsburg in an elevator, Bermingham had laughingly said she looked petrified to see him.
But Ginsburg made sure to dispel that notion.
"I look up to you, but I'm not afraid of you," she later wrote to him in a note.
Ginsburg's stamp memorializes her quest for equal justice
The moment U.S. Postal Service art director Ethel Kessler saw Bermingham's striking photo of Ginsburg, she knew it should be the reference for the late justice's stamp.
"For me, this was the stamp project of a lifetime," Kessler said in a statement to NPR, calling Ginsburg "a true pioneer for equal justice."
The new stamp shows Ginsburg in her judicial robes, wearing her famous white beaded collar with an intricate geometric pattern that she said came from Cape Town, South Africa.
It was one of the justice's favorite collars and jabots — and it's a change from the more formal gold-colored piece she wore for her portrait photograph with Bermingham.
The Postal Service commissioned New Orleans artist Michael Deas for the stamp, asking him to create an oil painting that would deliver the timeless gravitas of a Supreme Court justice, and also capture Ginsburg's intellect and character.
"Ultimately, it was the details that led to the stamp's aura of grandeur and historical significance," said Kessler, who designed the final product. "Resilient yet sublime. Determined but accessible. It is truly... justice."
Ginsburg, who died in September of 2020, is the first Supreme Court justice to get a solo U.S. stamp issue since 2003, when Thurgood Marshall was honored.
veryGood! (9715)
Related
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- The life and death spirals of social networks
- Chase Chrisley's Ex Emmy Medders Shares Hopeful Message After Calling Off Engagement
- When temps rise, so do medical risks. Should doctors and nurses talk more about heat?
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Justin Jones, Justin Pearson win reelection following 'Tennessee Three' expulsion vote
- Another harrowing escape puts attention on open prostitution market along Seattle’s Aurora Avenue
- Americans flee Niger with European evacuees a week after leader detained in what U.S. hasn't called a coup
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Stores are locking up products to curb shoplifters. How that's affecting paying customers.
Ranking
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- ‘Back to the Future’ review: Broadway musical is a dazzling joyride stuck on cruise control
- Major cases await as liberals exert control of Wisconsin Supreme Court
- Suspect in Idaho student stabbings says he was out for a solo drive around the time of the slayings
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Love Is Blind’s Irina Solomonova Reveals One-Year Fitness Transformation
- A Learjet pilot thought he was cleared to take off. He wasn’t. Luckily, JetBlue pilots saw him
- Florida effectively bans AP Psychology for gender, sex content: College Board
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
James Phillip Barnes is executed for 1988 hammer killing of Florida nurse Patricia Miller
International buyers are going for fewer homes in the US. Where are they shopping?
California judge arrested in connection with wife’s killing
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Stores are locking up products to curb shoplifters. How that's affecting paying customers.
Top Alaska officials facing ethics complaints could get state representation under proposed rules
This week on Sunday Morning (August 6)