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Portraits in Courage

"It has changed my life": George W Bush is sticking with the painting (and he's getting better)

Bush took up painting as a hobby in 2012. His early efforts were criticised as “naive” and “clumsy”.

george bushcenter.org bushcenter.org

AFTER PUTTING DOWN his executive pen former US President George W Bush picked up a paintbrush – and the hobby has become something of a career.

An exhibition of his oil paintings depicting US military veterans will opened this week at the former president’s library in Dallas.

The collection, on display at the George W Bush Presidential Center in Texas until October, features 66 portraits and a four-panel mural.

Bush’s paintings pay tribute to the nearly 100 wounded or traumatised personnel who he has known personally since leaving the White House in 2009.

George W Bush AP / Press Association Images AP / Press Association Images / Press Association Images

As the 43rd US president Bush had commanded the US military members, who all served in the wars he launched in Iraq and Afghanistan following the attacks on September 11, 2001.

The former commander-in-chief on Tuesday released a book titled “Portraits in Courage: A Commander in Chief’s Tribute to America’s Warriors,” which includes images of the portraits and the veterans’ personal stories.

Bush said he wanted to use the paintings and book to highlight the veterans’ struggles with post-traumatic stress and the transition to civilian life.

“They’re stories of courage, injury, recovery, willingness to help others,” Bush said during a forum at the Reagan presidential library near Los Angeles, as part of his book promotion tour.

And I also wanted to highlight the invisible wounds. That’s my biggest concern.

‘Incredibly meaningful’

Books George W Bush US military veteran Robert Ferrara talks in front of a mural painted by Former President George W Bush. LM Otero LM Otero

Bush’s book has already shot to the top of Amazon’s best-seller list, and the former president plans to donate profits from its sale to his presidential centre’s work aiding veterans.

He said the paintings would not be sold in his lifetime, but would be endowed to his foundation.

Matt Amidon, deputy director of the Military Service Initiative at the George W Bush Institute, said the veterans have found it “incredibly meaningful… to have a former commander-in-chief to take the personal time to paint each one of them”.

All-but-retired from public life, the 70-year-old Bush spends most of his time at his Texas ranch, where he first started painting in 2012.

He was inspired to explore his artistic side by famed former British prime minister Winston Churchill, who also painted in retirement.

“I basically said, what the hell, this guy can paint, I can paint,” Bush told a laughing audience at the forum, adding that it helped him stay active in retirement.

He kept his hobby a secret at first, but in 2014 unveiled 30 stylised portraits of heads of state he knew as president – all painted from photographs.

The distorted and sometimes only vaguely recognisable faces of people such as former British prime minister Tony Blair, Russian President Vladimir Putin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, attracted some withering criticism, panned as “naive” or “clumsy”.

Others praised what they saw as the “high amateur” work of someone who, although not formally trained, had clearly studied some art history and painting techniques.

‘Changed my life’ 

Bush admitted during the forum that those earlier efforts lacked confidence.

“There’s not much expression in it,” he said, adding that he believes he has since evolved as a painter.

His new portraits – clearly more accomplished works – show greater mastery over the art.

The former president, who referenced impressionism in describing his work, said he was originally not very interested in art.

But since taking up painting he said he has come to see the world in a new light.

“I see colours and shadows that I never did before. I see the sky differently,” Bush said.

It has changed my life to the better.

Bush’s idea to paint a portrait series of veterans came after his art teacher saw his collection of world leaders and suggested the former president next paint people outside the spotlight.

As with the world leaders portraits, Bush worked with photographs and spent a year on the artworks.

While other US presidents have taken up painting in retirement, Bush is thought to be the first to paint portraits.

He said his current project is a six-foot tall self-portrait.

“It’s a fascinating experience,” he said.

© – AFP, 2017

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