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Official Portraits of President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama Presented at White House

The White House Historical Association presented the official portraits of former President Barack Obama and former First Lady Michelle Obama, painted by Robert McCurdy and Sharon Sprung, respectively. The portraits and the artists who painted them were introduced during a White House ceremony hosted by President Joe Biden and First Lady Dr. Jill Biden and attended by President and Mrs. Obama.




The White House Historical Association has acquired and commissioned official portraits of the president and first lady since 1965. As is the custom, President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama selected the artists before leaving office. Now that the portraits have been presented to the public, they will hang in the White House and be inducted into the White House Collection.

The Association also assisted in acquiring portraits of presidents and first ladies dating back to Washington, in an effort to add missing portraits to the White House Collection, and retroactively commissioned the official portraits of President John F. Kennedy and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy.

“The White House Historical Association is honored to continue the tradition of funding these portraits,” said Stewart D. McLaurin, President of the White House Historical Association. “It’s a career achievement for the artists selected for these important commissions, and they are now forever a part of White House history.”

Sprung described the first sittings she had with Mrs. Obama: “I felt this trust come from her, that you do your thing, I do my thing. I’m going to trust you with your thing. And I think portraiture works better sometimes like that.”

McCurdy said the former President “was very present and easy to work with” during their sessions together. McCurdy has a stripped-back style which originates with the taking of photographs. “This is the speech everybody gets when they sit for me – look directly in the lens. Don’t smile or gesture. And just hold into that moment. We’re looking for a more meditative or transcendent moment…[the President] did an excellent job of that.”

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