Indra Nooyi with Kim Sajet, Director, National Portrait Gallery, alongside Nooyi?s portrait 
Business

Indra Nooyi inducted into National Portrait Gallery

Indian American and former Pepsico head Indra Nooyi was on Sunday inducted into the prestigious Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery along with Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos in recognition of their accomplishments, impacting America’s shared history, development and culture.

migrator

Washington

“To be an immigrant, a South Asian immigrant of colour, a woman to be included in the Portrait Gallery. It really says that we are the country where people look for the people who make a positive impact and celebrate them.


“It doesn’t matter what your background, colour, creed, ethnicity is. As long as you’ve made a positive impact to the country, we are going to celebrate you – actually memorialise – which I thought was even more spectacular,” Nooyi told reporters during the portrait gallery induction ceremony.


“So, I feel very grateful to be making a home here in this country because this portrait gallery is an accolade which I’ve never dreamed of. And it’s heart-warming to see this,” Nooyi said in response to a question. Among others included in the portrait gallery were Frances Arnold, Lin-Manuel Miranda and Earth, Wind and Fire.


The portrait of Nooyi, 64, has been drawn by artist Jon Friedman, who, she said, has done a “great job.”


“The way John Friedman painted is... he wanted to bring the inner me out in the portrait. So he took hundreds of pictures, then he picked one and drew from that,” she said.


The portrait looks like a photograph, but, Nooyi said, she watched him paint it as she saw it in different stages.


“I watched every hair being painted and so he did a great job,” she said.


“I think the big difference in my portrait is that they asked me a question, what’s meaningful for you -- a picture of my parents, picture of my husband and kids, a picture of a PepsiCo annual report or a Yale (University) hat. All these are major factors in my life. So, it’s in a way an unusual portrait because I have all that behind me, which most portraits don’t have,” Nooyi said.


Nooyi said when she received a letter in this regard last year, she thought this was a joke and asked her PR department to take care of this job. “They came back and said no, it’s not a job, it’s for real,” she said.


She added she came down to the Portrait Gallery thereafter to see for herself and realised that portraits here are chosen to tell the story about the history of the country – not just for the people here today, but for generations to come.

Visit news.dtnext.in to explore our interactive epaper!

Download the DT Next app for more exciting features!

Click here for iOS

Click here for Android

Plea in Madras High Court alleges scam in NaMo app fund collection, seeks action against Nadda, Amit Malviya

Normal traffic restored after temporary repairs to collapsed Thanjavur bridge

Chennai's EMU services affected in Arakkonam section from April 19-26

Madras High Court grants interim injunction on Jana Nayagan's unlawful release

Southern Railway: Train services cut short across Villupuram, Tirupati-Katpadi routes