RALEIGH, N.C. - A North Carolina artist intrigued by the public obsession
with celebrity has found herself feeding that obsession with a painting of
actress Angelina Jolie as the Virgin Mary hovering over a Wal-Mart check-out
line.
 This photo provided by Chelsea Galleria shows a painting
'Blessed Art Thou,' by North Carolina artist Kate Kretz that features
actress Angelina Jolie and her three children hovering in the heavens
above a Wal-Mart. Kretz says she's intrigued by the public fascination
with celebrities. The painting will be shown at Art Miami, an arts show.
[AP]

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Kate Kretz has painted for 20
years but none of her previous work has garnered the attention given "Blessed
Art Thou," showing this weekend at Art Miami, an annual exposition of modern and
contemporary art.
The painting has gotten much attention from celebrity web sites and blogs.
Since the buzz started, the number of daily unique visitors to Kretz's own blog
has jumped from an average of 30 to 15,000 on Wednesday.
"My intention was to ask a question and get people to think," Kretz said in a
telephone interview Friday from Miami. "I had no idea so many people would be
asking a question and thinking."
The painting -- acrylic and oil on linen -- depicts an angelic Jolie in the
clouds, holding her newborn daughter, Shiloh, with children Maddox and Zahara at
her legs. Below them is a Wal-Mart checkout line. The painting is for sale for
US$50,000 through Chelsea Galleria in Miami, which represents Kretz.
On her blog, Kretz, 43, said the painting addresses "the celebrity worship
cycle." She said she chose Jolie for the subject "because of her unavoidable
presence in the media, the worldwide anticipation of her child, her
'unattainable' beauty and the good that she is doing in the world through her
example, which adds another layer to the already complicated questions
surrounding her status."
Washington Post art critic Blake Gopnik, asked to
comment about "Blessed Art Thou" on a Post blog, was unimpressed. "Once you've
deciphered it, there's not much chance of giving it a second look," Gopnik
wrote.