Jessica Capshaw Instagram – New York State of mind in a California sea of sunshine…(trying to bring back the sunshine-y thoughts 😉)
💄: @georgieeisdell
💇🏼♀️: @marktownsend1
👱🏼♀️🌈: @traceycunningham1
📸: @higgsy_photography
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Flashback Friday to beachy sunsets by the sea…
📸: @destryallyn
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Me and my lil’ cub…
🎃🎃🎃🎃Happy Halloween!! 🎃🎃🎃🎃
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Me and my lil’ cub…
🎃🎃🎃🎃Happy Halloween!! 🎃🎃🎃🎃
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Sending big love out to all while I’m workin’ it on a Saturday with my 90’s French tips ready to go…#dearzoe
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Sending big love out to all while I’m workin’ it on a Saturday with my 90’s French tips ready to go…#dearzoe
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – There’s snow place like home for the Holidays… ❄️ 🎿 ❄️
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – There’s snow place like home for the Holidays… ❄️ 🎿 ❄️
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – There’s snow place like home for the Holidays… ❄️ 🎿 ❄️
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Best crew ever.
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – 💖 I was saving this picture to post in October while it was Breast Cancer Awareness month. Then before I knew it October was over. Gaaaahhhhhh!! 💖
I’ll keep this short and sweet and mammogram chic… Know your history, schedule your mammograms, and help support all of your friends and family to do the same.
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Word on the street is that these two GORGEOUS, talented, KIND, generous, SMART, loving, and pretty much all around awe inspiring women have a show that’s gonna blow our minds. Which makes sense since they’ve been blowing my mind ever since I first met them.
Count. Me. In.
@themorningshow @appletv @reesewitherspoon @jenniferaniston
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Yee-haw with my Me-Maw ❤️
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Sunday/ Funday ⛷❄️🎿
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – Sunday/ Funday ⛷❄️🎿
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – I love this.
Being brave has never felt like I was able to shed my fear in order to do what I wanted to do. Being brave has always felt like I had to hold my fear, move through it and do whatever I was hoping to do anyway.
Anyone else?
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – My mother, Kate Capshaw, The Portrait Artist… National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C.
The National Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait competition celebrates excellence in the art of portraiture. 46 portraits were selected from over 2,600 entries. In her debut as a painter three of her portraits are hanging in the @smithsoniannpg RIGHT NOW!!! The finalists created portraits in a wide range of media but all of the works share in common their portrait’s potential to insist on the presence and importance of every human being. My mother’s portraits are oil paintings of 3 homeless youths living in Los Angeles. “This is an ever-growing community found in the tens of thousands in urban, suburban and rural areas across the nation. In most cases they are not even responsible for their circumstances. Family trauma and inadequate social policies are the main drivers. My intention here is to introduce the often hidden…in an intimate way.”
– Kate Capshaw
It doesn’t feel like I have words big enough to convey the depth of pride I feel in her work. Nor could I possibly tread on the depth of emotion that I felt walking through this collection in a way that could explain just how much I felt. All of these artists and their works made me feel ALL of the feelings. The portraits draw you in and their subjects insist on being seen. I saw and felt their stories through their portraits and I felt the pull to ask more of myself. These portraits point to the ways that I could do more to promote the care of each and every subject of the portrait. I really do believe that we all have the power to shift the status quo and to push light into the hidden spaces that have existed for too long without being seen. I felt that on repeat as I walked through the collection…I have the most profound respect for each of the artists and send them all the heartiest of congratulations.
I love you, Mom.
#outwinboochever
@smithsoniannpg
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – My mother, Kate Capshaw, The Portrait Artist… National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C.
The National Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait competition celebrates excellence in the art of portraiture. 46 portraits were selected from over 2,600 entries. In her debut as a painter three of her portraits are hanging in the @smithsoniannpg RIGHT NOW!!! The finalists created portraits in a wide range of media but all of the works share in common their portrait’s potential to insist on the presence and importance of every human being. My mother’s portraits are oil paintings of 3 homeless youths living in Los Angeles. “This is an ever-growing community found in the tens of thousands in urban, suburban and rural areas across the nation. In most cases they are not even responsible for their circumstances. Family trauma and inadequate social policies are the main drivers. My intention here is to introduce the often hidden…in an intimate way.”
– Kate Capshaw
It doesn’t feel like I have words big enough to convey the depth of pride I feel in her work. Nor could I possibly tread on the depth of emotion that I felt walking through this collection in a way that could explain just how much I felt. All of these artists and their works made me feel ALL of the feelings. The portraits draw you in and their subjects insist on being seen. I saw and felt their stories through their portraits and I felt the pull to ask more of myself. These portraits point to the ways that I could do more to promote the care of each and every subject of the portrait. I really do believe that we all have the power to shift the status quo and to push light into the hidden spaces that have existed for too long without being seen. I felt that on repeat as I walked through the collection…I have the most profound respect for each of the artists and send them all the heartiest of congratulations.
I love you, Mom.
#outwinboochever
@smithsoniannpg
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – My mother, Kate Capshaw, The Portrait Artist… National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C.
The National Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait competition celebrates excellence in the art of portraiture. 46 portraits were selected from over 2,600 entries. In her debut as a painter three of her portraits are hanging in the @smithsoniannpg RIGHT NOW!!! The finalists created portraits in a wide range of media but all of the works share in common their portrait’s potential to insist on the presence and importance of every human being. My mother’s portraits are oil paintings of 3 homeless youths living in Los Angeles. “This is an ever-growing community found in the tens of thousands in urban, suburban and rural areas across the nation. In most cases they are not even responsible for their circumstances. Family trauma and inadequate social policies are the main drivers. My intention here is to introduce the often hidden…in an intimate way.”
– Kate Capshaw
It doesn’t feel like I have words big enough to convey the depth of pride I feel in her work. Nor could I possibly tread on the depth of emotion that I felt walking through this collection in a way that could explain just how much I felt. All of these artists and their works made me feel ALL of the feelings. The portraits draw you in and their subjects insist on being seen. I saw and felt their stories through their portraits and I felt the pull to ask more of myself. These portraits point to the ways that I could do more to promote the care of each and every subject of the portrait. I really do believe that we all have the power to shift the status quo and to push light into the hidden spaces that have existed for too long without being seen. I felt that on repeat as I walked through the collection…I have the most profound respect for each of the artists and send them all the heartiest of congratulations.
I love you, Mom.
#outwinboochever
@smithsoniannpg
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – My mother, Kate Capshaw, The Portrait Artist… National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C.
The National Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait competition celebrates excellence in the art of portraiture. 46 portraits were selected from over 2,600 entries. In her debut as a painter three of her portraits are hanging in the @smithsoniannpg RIGHT NOW!!! The finalists created portraits in a wide range of media but all of the works share in common their portrait’s potential to insist on the presence and importance of every human being. My mother’s portraits are oil paintings of 3 homeless youths living in Los Angeles. “This is an ever-growing community found in the tens of thousands in urban, suburban and rural areas across the nation. In most cases they are not even responsible for their circumstances. Family trauma and inadequate social policies are the main drivers. My intention here is to introduce the often hidden…in an intimate way.”
– Kate Capshaw
It doesn’t feel like I have words big enough to convey the depth of pride I feel in her work. Nor could I possibly tread on the depth of emotion that I felt walking through this collection in a way that could explain just how much I felt. All of these artists and their works made me feel ALL of the feelings. The portraits draw you in and their subjects insist on being seen. I saw and felt their stories through their portraits and I felt the pull to ask more of myself. These portraits point to the ways that I could do more to promote the care of each and every subject of the portrait. I really do believe that we all have the power to shift the status quo and to push light into the hidden spaces that have existed for too long without being seen. I felt that on repeat as I walked through the collection…I have the most profound respect for each of the artists and send them all the heartiest of congratulations.
I love you, Mom.
#outwinboochever
@smithsoniannpg
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – My mother, Kate Capshaw, The Portrait Artist… National Portrait Gallery, Washington D.C.
The National Portrait Gallery’s Outwin Boochever Portrait competition celebrates excellence in the art of portraiture. 46 portraits were selected from over 2,600 entries. In her debut as a painter three of her portraits are hanging in the @smithsoniannpg RIGHT NOW!!! The finalists created portraits in a wide range of media but all of the works share in common their portrait’s potential to insist on the presence and importance of every human being. My mother’s portraits are oil paintings of 3 homeless youths living in Los Angeles. “This is an ever-growing community found in the tens of thousands in urban, suburban and rural areas across the nation. In most cases they are not even responsible for their circumstances. Family trauma and inadequate social policies are the main drivers. My intention here is to introduce the often hidden…in an intimate way.”
– Kate Capshaw
It doesn’t feel like I have words big enough to convey the depth of pride I feel in her work. Nor could I possibly tread on the depth of emotion that I felt walking through this collection in a way that could explain just how much I felt. All of these artists and their works made me feel ALL of the feelings. The portraits draw you in and their subjects insist on being seen. I saw and felt their stories through their portraits and I felt the pull to ask more of myself. These portraits point to the ways that I could do more to promote the care of each and every subject of the portrait. I really do believe that we all have the power to shift the status quo and to push light into the hidden spaces that have existed for too long without being seen. I felt that on repeat as I walked through the collection…I have the most profound respect for each of the artists and send them all the heartiest of congratulations.
I love you, Mom.
#outwinboochever
@smithsoniannpg
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – What you need to know is that our mother made this portrait of my gorgeous sister @sashaspielberg out of TAPE. Ok, that’s it.
#katecapshaw
Jessica Capshaw Instagram – On this #givingtuesday please consider giving to @everymomcounts so that you can support emboldening their efforts to protect as many mothers as humanly possible.