Reena Ahluwalia's Winston Red Painting Enters Smithsonian Collection

Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia paints one of Earth’s rarest red diamonds for the permanent record at the National Museum of Natural History.
Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia with her painting, “The Legacy of the Winston Red Diamond”
Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia with her painting, “The Legacy of the Winston Red Diamond”
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Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia’s painting, “The Legacy of The Winston Red Diamond,” has been accessioned into the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. At a May 6 ceremony in the Janet Annenberg Hooker Hall of Geology, Gems, and Minerals, Dr. Gabriela Farfan, the Coralyn W. Whitney Curator of Gems and Minerals, accepted the painting. This is the first contemporary painting ever to join the National Gem Collection.

The painting features the Winston Red Diamond, one of the world’s rarest diamonds. A 2.33-carat, pure Fancy red, old mine brilliant cut, it represents a one-in-25-million rarity. It is the 5th-largest of its kind known to exist and the only Fancy red diamond on public exhibit. In 2023, Ronald Winston, son of legendary jeweler Harry Winston, the “King of Diamonds”, gifted the diamond to the Smithsonian.

Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia (left) and Dr. Gabriela Farfan, Coralyn W. Whitney Curator of Gems and Minerals (right), at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. The ceremony marked the first contemporary painting accessioned into the National Gem Collection. Image: Reena Ahluwalia.
Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia (left) and Dr. Gabriela Farfan, Coralyn W. Whitney Curator of Gems and Minerals (right), at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. The ceremony marked the first contemporary painting accessioned into the National Gem Collection. Image: Reena Ahluwalia.


Ahluwalia’s artwork synthesizes the Winston Red’s scientific findings, historical significance, and cultural symbolism within a single canvas. The painting creates a visual bridge between the stone’s mineralogy and its place in human history. The composition traces the diamond’s journey from the “Raj Red” to the “Winston Red,” from its likely South American origins to Jacques Cartier’s 1938 sale to Digvijaysinhji, the Indian Maharaja of Nawanagar. Known as the “Good Maharaja,” he set the red diamond in his iconic Ceremonial Necklace of Nawanagar, a Cartier masterpiece that later inspired the “Toussaint Necklace” recreation. The stone’s donor, Ronald Winston, purchased the diamond from the Maharaja of Jamnagar in the late 1980s.

The artwork is an artistic enquiry inspired by Ronald Winston’s gift and the study authored by Dr. Gabriela A. Farfan and team, published in the Gemological Institute of America (GIA) Gems & Gemology, Spring 2025. The Winston Red owes its pure crimson color to a balance of absorption features: the 550 nm band associated with plastic deformation and nitrogen-related defects. Through precise color and form, Ahluwalia translates these mineralogical markers into a unified composition. “Art endures beyond its physical form as an idea whose meaning transcends time,” says Ahluwalia. “I chose to paint the Winston Red because I felt a responsibility to tell its whole story through an artistic lens. Using the diamond as a philosophical prism, my practice treats minerals as analogues for human resilience — formed under pressure, shaped by circumstance, and resilient through adversity.”

Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia with her painting, “The Legacy of the Winston Red Diamond”. Now held in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Image: Reena Ahluwalia.
Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia with her painting, “The Legacy of the Winston Red Diamond”. Now held in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Image: Reena Ahluwalia.

Ahluwalia maintained dialogue with both Ronald Winston and Dr. Gabriela Farfan throughout her artistic process. The resulting artwork intersects nature, science, and art, framing the diamond as a vessel of cultural and geological memory.

 “Ultimately, this painting serves the diamond's history and legacy,” Ahluwalia concludes. “When art serves a larger purpose, its impact becomes as enduring as the diamond itself. It is my way of preserving the intangible heritage of the Winston Red Diamond for future generations. I want it to spark curiosity and inspire the next generation — from gem lovers and historians to mineralogists and Earth scientists.”

 Within Ahluwalia's Human-Gem Arc, the work is a conceptual study of endurance, turning geological pressure into a visual statement of resilience.

Visual Artist Reena Ahluwalia (left) with Dr. Gabriela Farfan, Coralyn W. Whitney Curator of Gems and Minerals (right), and the National Gem team at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. The ceremony marked the permanent accession of Ahluwalia’s The Legacy of the Winston Red Diamond—the first contemporary painting to join the National Gem Collection. Image: Reena Ahluwalia.
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