Loading

Ryan K. Zinke

Brent Cotton2020

U.S. Department of the Interior Museum

U.S. Department of the Interior Museum
Washington, DC, United States

Ryan K. Zinke (b. 1961) arrived at the Department of the Interior as a fifth-generation Montanan and self-described "Theodore Roosevelt conservationist." In a career chronicled in his 2016 book, American Commander, Zinke served 23 years as a U.S. Navy SEAL before retiring in 2008 and transitioning to politics. He was elected to the Montana State Senate (2009–2011) and then to Congress as Montana's lone representative (2014–2017). He was the first former Navy SEAL in the U.S. House of Representatives and the first as a cabinet secretary. He is also Interior's first secretary from Montana.

A month into his tenure, the 52nd secretary hosted President Trump at Interior for issuing an executive order to review certain national monuments presidentially designated or expanded under the Antiquities Act since January 1, 1996. Zinke would go on to broaden access to hunting, fishing, and recreational opportunities and amplify the need to address deferred maintenance within the public lands system. Throughout his secretarial term, Zinke aligned Interior resources in support of Trump Administration priorities regarding regulatory reform, domestic energy production, border security, and stemming the nation's opioid crisis.

Zinke instituted initiatives that would have lasting impacts on the workplace—making Interior the first dog-friendly Federal agency with the rollout of Doggy Days in May 2017; updating policies on employee harassment; and laying the groundwork for a Department-wide reorganization to streamline processes within unified regions.

Award-winning, Montana-based artist Brent Cotton based this painting upon photographs from Zinke's 2017 visit to Bears Ears National Monument in Utah. It is the first Interior portrait to show a secretary in an active pose and the first to include an animal. Many secretarial portraits contain elements of symbolism. Among the ones here: the U.S. Park Police emblem on the horse's martingale references the secretary having ridden a Park Police horse to Interior on his first day. The military patch on the jacket sleeve signifies his Navy SEAL service. The six desert wildflowers in the foreground are tributes to his wife, children, and grandchildren. This official portrait was unveiled in December 2020 at Interior.

Show lessRead more
  • Title: Ryan K. Zinke
  • Short Description: This oil on board painting is the official secretarial portrait of Ryan K. Zinke (b. 1961), the 52nd secretary of the U.S. Department of the Interior, as created by Montana-based artist Brent Cotton. The painting has a smooth finish--with light impasto mostly as highlights--and has a surface varnish. The subject is depicted seated on horseback in a meadow setting within Utah's Bears Ears National Monument. There are trees and a rocky butte in the background and desert wildflowers and a small snake in the immediate foreground. The portrait is signed by the artist in the front lower left corner and also on the backing board and in black ink [signature + 2020] on the reverse stile. White lettering on the backing board reads: "BEARS EARS NATIONAL MONUMENT / SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR / ~ RYAN ZINKE ~ / 2017-2019 / ARTIST / BRENT COTTON / (C) 2020/ MONTANA". Symbolic elements of the painting include the following: The emblem of the U.S. Park Police added to the horse's martingale connects back to Ryan Zinke having ridden a U.S. Park Police horse across the National Mall to report to Interior on his first day as secretary. The six desert wildflowers in the foreground are said to represent his wife, children, and grandchildren. The patch on the proper left sleeve of his jacket bears the insignia for Navy Seal Team Six in which Zinke had previously served; it denotes his 23 years as a U.S. Navy Seal and the fact that he is the first former Navy Seal to serve as a Cabinet Secretary. The Native American motif on his hat is intended as an acknowledgment of Interior's trust responsibilities and government to government relations with American Indians and Alaska Natives.
  • Creator: Brent Cotton
  • Creator Lifespan: b. 1972
  • Date Created: 2020
  • Location Created: Montana, USA
  • Physical Dimensions: Framed: H 48.75, W 41 inches; Unframed: H 38.875, W 30.875 inches
  • Provenance: Gift of Ryan Zinke, 2020. U.S. Department of the Interior Museum, INTR 07776
  • Subject Keywords: Department of the Interior, President Donald Trump, Montana, Ryan Zinke, Secretary of the Interior
  • Type: Painting, Portrait
  • Rights: Copyright held by the artist
  • External Link: Public lecture: "Within These Halls: A Beyond-the-Frame Look at Secretarial Portraiture" (July 13, 2016)
  • Medium: Oil on board
U.S. Department of the Interior Museum

Get the app

Explore museums and play with Art Transfer, Pocket Galleries, Art Selfie, and more

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites