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Around the Mall

Scenes and sightings from Smithsonian museums and beyond


January 7, 2009

George W. Bush’s Portrait at National Portrait Gallery

The National Portrait Gallery is now home to 43rd president, George W. Bush. Courtesy of Wikimedia

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Gift of friends of President & Mrs. Bush

President George W. Bush: National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Gift of friends of President & Mrs. Bush

The 43rd president of the United States has officially been added to the National Portrait Gallery’s hall of “America’s Presidents.” President Bush and the first lady, who also sat for a portrait that now hangs on the gallery’s first floor, were in attendance at the December 20th unveiling—the president in a rather witty mood.

“I suspected there would be a good-size crowd once the word got out about my hanging,” he reportedly said in his remarks. And he continued to get laughs from his audience, as he commented on the symmetry of the exhibition: “It starts with George W.—and ends with George W.”

The portrait itself is quite informal. The president is sitting casually on the edge of a sofa, and he has a warm, relaxed expression on his face, despite the hardships of his eight years in office.

It might best be described as though he is looking into the eyes of a friend, and, in fact, he was. The artist, Robert Anderson of Darien, Connecticut, was a classmate of President Bush’s at Yale. In his remarks, Bush called Anderson his “buddy.”

National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Gift of friends of President & Mrs. Bush

First Lady Laura Bush: National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Gift of friends of President & Mrs. Bush

He joked about how making him beautiful would be a bigger task than what Laura Bush’s portraitist Aleksander Titovets was faced with when painting the first lady, the literacy advocate and former teacher and librarian that she is, with a book in hand. “I needed to find a person who would do the painting that would be a good and forgiving friend,” he said.

Apparently, Anderson easily managed the president’s eyes and hands but had some difficulty when it came to his mouth. President Bush’s response: “That makes two of us.”



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