- Today
- Holidays
- Birthdays
- Reminders
- Cities
- Atlanta
- Austin
- Baltimore
- Berwyn
- Beverly Hills
- Birmingham
- Boston
- Brooklyn
- Buffalo
- Charlotte
- Chicago
- Cincinnati
- Cleveland
- Columbus
- Dallas
- Denver
- Detroit
- Fort Worth
- Houston
- Indianapolis
- Knoxville
- Las Vegas
- Los Angeles
- Louisville
- Madison
- Memphis
- Miami
- Milwaukee
- Minneapolis
- Nashville
- New Orleans
- New York
- Omaha
- Orlando
- Philadelphia
- Phoenix
- Pittsburgh
- Portland
- Raleigh
- Richmond
- Rutherford
- Sacramento
- Salt Lake City
- San Antonio
- San Diego
- San Francisco
- San Jose
- Seattle
- Tampa
- Tucson
- Washington
Chelsea Clinton Shares Her Love of Art with Her Children
The advocate and author discusses the importance of creativity and the art she displays in her home.
Mar. 13, 2026 at 2:14am by Ben Kaplan
Got story updates? Submit your updates here. ›
Chelsea Clinton, the daughter of former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, has made it a priority to emphasize art in her home and pass down her love of creativity to her own three young children. Clinton spoke about how her parents instilled in her an appreciation for art from a young age, taking her to museums and encouraging her to think deeply about what she saw. Now, Clinton and her husband, investor Marc Mezvinsky, have thoughtfully curated a collection of works by artists like Mildred Margolies and Pae White, arranging them in their home to spark questions and conversations with their kids.
Why it matters
Chelsea Clinton's commitment to sharing her love of art with her children reflects a broader trend of parents prioritizing creativity and cultural enrichment in the home. In an era where technology often dominates family life, Clinton's approach highlights the value of exposing children to diverse forms of artistic expression and encouraging them to engage with it in meaningful ways.
The details
Clinton recalls how her parents, Bill and Hillary Clinton, would take her to art museums as a child and prompt her to share her thoughts on the paintings, rather than just describe what she saw. This helped Clinton understand that art is not just about passive observation, but about active engagement and personal interpretation. Now, Clinton and her husband have filled their home with works by artists like Mildred Margolies, who studied art in the 1930s, and Pae White, a contemporary multimedia artist. They strategically place these pieces in shared living spaces and quieter corners to foster different types of interactions and conversations with their children.
- When Chelsea Clinton was about six or seven years old, her parents took her to see an exhibition of Claude Monet's Impressionist paintings in Chicago.
- Last week, Clinton spoke about her love of art at the inaugural Making Their Mark Forum in Washington, D.C.
The players
Chelsea Clinton
The daughter of former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who has made it a priority to share her love of art with her own three young children.
Bill Clinton
The former President of the United States and Chelsea Clinton's father, who instilled in her an appreciation for art from a young age.
Hillary Clinton
The former Secretary of State and Chelsea Clinton's mother, who encouraged her daughter to think deeply about the art they viewed together.
Marc Mezvinsky
Chelsea Clinton's husband, an investor who has helped curate the art collection in their home.
Mildred Margolies
An artist whose work, including pieces she created while studying at the Pennsylvania College of Art in the 1930s, is displayed in the Clinton-Mezvinsky home.
Pae White
A contemporary multimedia artist whose tapestries and mobiles, which merge art, craft, and design, are also part of the Clinton-Mezvinsky art collection.
What they’re saying
“Every few paintings my mother would stop me and ask, 'What do you think?' And I remember saying things like, 'There's lots of pink.' And she said, 'I didn't ask you what you see. I asked you what you think.'”
— Chelsea Clinton (Making Their Mark Forum)
“As a parent, I certainly try to continually build the architecture of my small humans' brains and also their hearts, and hopefully deeply connect those two together.”
— Chelsea Clinton (ELLE Decor)
“Some pieces are in shared living spaces where we see them often and where they naturally spark questions or conversations with our kids, while others are in quieter corners where you might pause for a moment and look more closely.”
— Chelsea Clinton (ELLE Decor)
The takeaway
Chelsea Clinton's approach to sharing her love of art with her children reflects a broader trend of parents prioritizing creativity and cultural enrichment in the home. By exposing her kids to diverse forms of artistic expression and encouraging them to engage with it in meaningful ways, Clinton is helping to foster their imagination, curiosity, and appreciation for the arts.
San Francisco top stories
San Francisco events
Mar. 13, 2026
Golden State Warriors vs. Minnesota TimberwolvesMar. 13, 2026
Sugar SammyMar. 13, 2026
Sam Smith - To Be Free: San Francisco 3/13



