At least it wasn't done in charcoaled shades of gray.
A solemn official portrait of a former Los Angeles Mayor James K. Hahn was unveiled Thursday at City Hall in a ceremony tinged with laughter, if not with color.
At least it wasn't done in charcoaled shades of gray.
A solemn official portrait of a former Los Angeles Mayor James K. Hahn was unveiled Thursday at City Hall in a ceremony tinged with laughter, if not with color.
Hahn is depicted with folded arms and a somewhat aloof expression. He is pictured wearing a black suit, white shirt and pale blue tie, against a green backdrop.
The 3-foot oil-on-linen painting will hang in a portrait gallery on the 26th floor of the City Hall tower in the downtown Civic Center that is lined with images of 39 other Los Angeles mayors.
Hahn was the first incumbent mayor in 72 years to fail to win reelection when he was voted out of office in 2005. Current Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa won by 17%.
At the time, Hahn was viewed by many as a bland, almost invisible leader whose administration was tainted by criminal probes and accusations that he fostered a "pay-to-play" atmosphere in City Hall.
Some in the crowd of about 450 who filled the City Council chambers Thursday night for Hahn's return and for the portrait-unveiling ceremony were disappointed that a less stoic image wasn't depicted.
His sister, Councilwoman Janice Hahn, said she had not gotten a sneak peek at the painting. But "this portrait will probably have a smile on it," she predicted. "History will smile on this man."
For his part, Hahn pronounced himself pleased with the results.
"I wanted to smile," Hahn, 57, told the crowd, which included several other council members as well as Villaraigosa. "But they said, 'No, this is an official portrait. It's not for a political mailer.' "
Villaraigosa praised Hahn's "very significant role in this city," avoiding mention of the bruising 2005 election, except to describe the two of them as protagonists involved "in an act much bigger than ourselves."
During that election campaign, Hahn suggested in TV ads that Villaraigosa once had attempted to win clemency for a convicted drug dealer and opposed a toughened anti-child-abuse law. Villaraigosa responded by accusing him of smear tactics, asserting that Hahn ran "the sleaziest campaigns in America."
Hahn's lone term as mayor was also difficult. He pictured himself as a gutsy leader who made "tough decisions" that benefited the city has a whole.
As mayor, he grappled with reforms in the Police Department by successfully pressing for the ouster of Police Chief Bernard C. Parks. Parks' removal riled the black community, which in 2001 had rallied to support Hahn's election.