Good morning. It’s Thursday. Today we’ll find out why former Representative Carolyn Maloney wore a firefighter’s jacket for a just-unveiled portrait. We’ll also get details on the bribery investigation involving Mayor Eric Adams’s former chief adviser.
Some of the portraits in the hallways and hearing rooms around the U.S. Capitol show former senators and House members in suits and ties. Some show lawmakers in shirtsleeves. One portrait shows a former committee chairman at his desk with his poodle in his lap.
Former Representative Carolyn Maloney, whose portrait was unveiled on Wednesday, is the only one wearing a firefighter’s jacket.
Maloney, who represented a district that included the Upper East Side from 1993 until last year, did not expect the artist Sharon Sprung to paint her in the jacket. Maloney received it when she was pressing for compensation and health benefits for 9/11 victims and for emergency workers who responded to the attacks.
Maloney also did not expect her first encounter with Sprung to go the way it did, either.
“She came over,” Maloney said. “She goes through my closet and pulls out my fire jacket.” Maloney recalled the “offhand statement” she made in 2019 that she would not take the jacket off until Congress approved a measure extending funding for the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund through 2090. That guaranteed benefits for those who became ill from the toxins at ground zero.
By then Maloney had worn the jacket to the Met Gala.
“The theme was camp,” Maloney said, and Lady Gaga was one of five hosts, with an entourage of men in tuxedos attending to the long fuchsia train of her dress. “Lady Gaga looked at me and said, ‘You outcamped me.’” Maloney recalled. “I said, ‘Nobody outcamps Lady Gaga.’”
The jacket ended up in the closet after Maloney lost a race for re-election in a redrawn district in 2022. Sprung — who painted Michelle Obama’s official White House portrait — was commissioned to paint Maloney’s portrait, which was bound for a caucus room where the House Committee on Oversight and Accountability holds its hearings. Maloney was the chairwoman during her last two terms.
The tradition of hanging portraits of former congressional leaders dates back more than 150 years, and in the mid-19th century the government paid for the paintings. Congress cut off taxpayer funding in 2016, but like many of her former colleagues, Maloney set up a committee through the United States Capitol Historical Society to raise money for the portrait project. In all, Maloney said, her committee raised $129,000.
Maloney said that her daughters had objected to using the firefighters’ coat for the painting, at least at first. “They thought I should be in a suit, looking like a congressional woman,” Maloney said, but Sprung insisted. “She said, ‘This is so distinctively you, it makes a stronger statement than you in a suit,’” Maloney recalled.
Sprung said she wanted to express her subjects’ “importance in our lives and grab people as they walk by the portrait, to get them more interested in who the person is.” And Maloney’s importance was personal: Sprung said that her husband, William Astwood, a marriage and family therapist, was in an office that was in the cloud of debris on Sept. 11. He receives compensation for a lung ailment that is pervasive among people who were in the area, she said.
Sprung photographs her subjects before beginning her work, and there are sittings (one or two, Maloney said), although Sprung said that Maloney “doesn’t sit still — still is not her way of being.”
There was also the matter of Maloney’s expression. “She refused to paint me smiling,” Maloney said. “She said, ‘You were not smiling when you passed this bill.’”
Sprung said she had sized up Maloney as “very proud and very strong.”
“I’m not sure she really agreed with my vision,” Sprung said, “but I felt so strong about 9/11, I just went ahead and did it.” She mentioned a couple of familiar paintings, among them “Whistler’s Mother” and Vermeer’s “Girl with a Pearl Earring.” “You have a profound sense of who these people were,” she said. “That’s what I’m hoping for.”
Maloney’s conclusion? “She was right.”
Weather
Expect sunny skies with temperatures in the mid-40s. At night, temperatures will drop to the mid-30s.
ALTERNATE-SIDE PARKING
In effect through Dec. 25 (Christmas Day).
The latest metro news
-
Who wants to be governor?: With no incumbent in the race, next year’s contest to replace Philip Murphy as governor of New Jersey was never going to be dull.
-
“The Magician” pleads guilty: A businessman in the Bronx falsified information on thousands of returns, committing one of the largest tax frauds in Department of Justice history, prosecutors said.
-
Get-out-of-jail-free card: Videos released by a New Jersey government watchdog have pierced a veil of secrecy around cards that can be used to avoid traffic tickets.
-
Stowaway tries to flee: The woman who stowed away on a plane from New York City to Paris late last month was arrested after trying to leave the U.S. again, this time on a bus bound for Canada, two law enforcement officials said.
-
A pioneer in art collecting: Picasso paintings. Jasper Johns ale cans. Irving Penn photos. The cosmetics heir Leonard Lauder, now 91, created the model for the headline-grabbing donation that museums dream of.
Former Adams aide expected to surrender today
Ingrid Lewis-Martin, who abruptly resigned as Mayor Eric Adams’s chief adviser on Sunday, is expected to surrender today and to be arraigned on bribery charges along with her son and two businessmen, people with knowledge of the matter said.
At issue is a $100,000 loan for a Porsche. The two businessmen are accused of providing the money to Lewis-Martin’s son, Glenn Martin II, after Lewis-Martin had helped them settle an issue with the city’s Department of Buildings concerning a construction project at one of their hotels. It is unclear if Martin has made payments on the loan, which was arranged in 2023, one of the people said.
The investigation into Lewis-Martin appears to be continuing, and there has been no sign that it has focused on the mayor. He is facing trial in April on unrelated federal charges alleging bribery, conspiracy, wire fraud and campaign finance charges.
Adams has repeatedly maintained his innocence and has said that the charges against him are politically motivated.
Lewis-Martin’s arraignment would come in a week that has already brought significant legal and political setbacks for the mayor beyond her departure from City Hall. On Monday, the city’s campaign finance board denied Adams as much as $4.3 million in public funding for his re-election campaign. On Tuesday, a federal judge refused to dismiss a bribery charge against him.
Lewis-Martin’s lawyer, Arthur Aidala, declined to comment on Wednesday, and a lawyer for Glen Martin II did not respond to requests for comment.
Teny Geragos, a lawyer for one of the businessmen, Mayank Dwivedi, said that he had done nothing wrong and that the district attorney had “an incomplete and inaccurate view of the facts.” Jonathan Sack, a lawyer for the other businessman, declined to comment.
So did spokeswomen for the office of the district attorney, Alvin Bragg, and the city’s Department of Investigation, which is conducting the inquiry with Bragg’s prosecutors and investigators.
METROPOLITAN diary
Christmas Eve
Dear Diary:
We were visiting our son in Astoria for Christmas. He was couch-surfing at the apartment of a friend who had gone someplace warm for the holidays. There were no decorations in the apartment, not even a poinsettia.
We went out to a Christmas Eve service somewhere in Manhattan and stopped for Chinese food afterward. When we were done, we headed to the subway.
On the way, we saw a Christmas tree vendor closing up. It was close to midnight. He had a three-foot tree on display, complete with lights and a wooden stand.
How much, I asked.
He shrugged and said I could have it for free.
Giggling, I carried the tree through the turnstile and onto the train. We rode with it back to Astoria and then brought it up to the apartment where my son was staying.
It lit up our Christmas celebration the next morning.
— Donna Lane
Illustrated by Agnes Lee. Send submissions here and read more Metropolitan Diary here.
Glad we could get together here. See you tomorrow. — J.B.
P.S. Here’s today’s Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. You can find all our puzzles here.
Hannah Fidelman and Ed Shanahan contributed to New York Today. You can reach the team at [email protected].
Sign up here to get this newsletter in your inbox.
The post The Congresswoman Wore an F.D.N.Y. Jacket appeared first on New York Times.