King portrait enlarged to reflect his stature
ATLANTA – After decades of being dwarfed by the framed faces of other dignitaries, the portrait of Martin Luther King Jr. in Georgia’s Capitol has been enlarged.
The new painting, unveiled in an elaborate ceremony Monday, is 50 percent larger than the old one, which had become surrounded by bigger and bigger portraits of Georgia politicians.
“It was never anyone’s interest to diminish King’s stature. But the unintended effect of adding larger portraits nearby over the last three decades has created that doubt in the minds of some of our young visitors,” said Secretary of State Cathy Cox.
King’s portrait was dedicated in 1974 by former Gov. Jimmy Carter while members of the Ku Klux Klan chanted their opposition outside.
Thirty-two years later, some of Georgia’s top politicians were on hand to celebrate the new painting, including Republican Gov. Sonny Perdue and Cox.
Several of King’s relatives called the ceremony bittersweet, noting that the civil rights leader’s late widow, Coretta Scott King, had lobbied for the larger painting in the months before her death in January.