The Chick is an oil painting traditionally given to the most junior member of Washington's congressional delegation.
Description
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The Chick is painted with oil on canvas,[1][2] protected by a wooden frame.[3] It depicts a newly-hatched chicken and the remnants of its eggshell on a black background.[4] The back of the painting is signed by members of the Washington delegation who have previously been in possession of the painting.[2] The frame is labeled "Baby Jay", after Jay Inslee, who did not receive the painting when he was in Congress.[2][5]
The painting is known for its lack of visual appeal; for instance, representative Adam Smith called it as an "eyesore",[6] and representative Marie Gluesenkamp Perez described the painting a "gimlet-eyed monstrosity".[3]
History
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The painting was originally gifted by Joel Pritchard to Norm Dicks in 1976. It is not precisely known how Pritchard originally obtained the painting.[7] Since then, the painting has traditionally been given to the newest member of the Washington congressional delegation.[8] If multiple new members of the delegation are elected in the same year, each receives the painting for a time.[5] Every new member of Washington's delegation has received the painting, except for Jay Inslee, who served in the House from 1993 to 1995 and from 1999 to 2012.[2][7]
The painting is currently held by Emily Randall, who represents Washington's 6th congressional district; she was sworn into office on January 3, 2025, together with Michael Baumgartner, and received the painting from him the next year, on January 9, 2026.[7][9] She is the 33rd recipient of the painting.[5]
Significance
[edit]Traditionally, the painting is hung in its owner's office, with each member of Congress choosing precisely where it is displayed.[1][5] Representative Emily Randall, who is the current owner of the painting, hung the painting in her office restroom as a protest against an effort in Congress to ban transgender people from using restrooms other than those of their sex assigned at birth.[5]
According to some members of the delegation, such as Michael Baumgartner, the painting and the process of gifting it symbolizes the cordial relationship between its bipartisan members.[7] Others, such as representative Dan Newhouse, have interpreted the chicken in the painting as having an "eye of total confusion", and have related its expression to the process of becoming familiar with Congress.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Hotakainen, Rob (January 14, 2015), "Bowing to tradition, new congressman gets old painting", Bradenton Herald, McClatchy Washington Bureau, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ a b c d Donovan Smith, Orion (January 23, 2025), "'The Chick' changes hands: Freshman Reps. Michael Baumgartner and Emily Randall inherit famously bad painting as part of Congressional tradition", The Spokesman-Review, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ a b Weiss, Benjamin S. (January 23, 2025), "The unsung ballad of the 'chick pic': An avian tradition for Washington State lawmakers", Courthouse News Service, archived from the original on January 23, 2025, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ Greenstone, Scott (February 5, 2025), "Washington's Congressmembers have been sharing one 'ugly' painting for 50 years", KUOW, archived from the original on October 11, 2025, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ a b c d e Wang, Jackie (January 9, 2026), "Are you a freshman from Washington state? Congratulations on your new painting", Roll Call, archived from the original on January 12, 2026, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ Blumenthal, Liz (January 7, 1999), "Rep. Baird assumes office and 1st post of responsibility", The News Tribune, p. 10, archived from the original on January 13, 2026, retrieved January 13, 2026 – via Newspapers.com
- ^ a b c d Kaur, Anumita (January 10, 2026), "In a divided Congress, WA's members share a baby chick", The Seattle Times, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ "As Part of Tradition, Congresswoman Marie Gluesenkamp Perez Receives 'The Chick' Painting", The Chronicle, January 30, 2023, retrieved January 12, 2026
- ^ Cornfield, Jerry (January 6, 2025), "New 6th District Rep. Randall sworn into Congress along with state's new Republican rep", Kitsap Sun, archived from the original on January 8, 2025, retrieved January 12, 2026