Watch Live: Obamas return to the White House for portrait unveiling


Washington — Former President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama returned to the White House on Wednesday for the formal unveiling of their official White House portraits.

President Biden and first lady Jill Biden are hosting the couple for what marks Michelle Obama’s first visit to the White House since her husband left office in 2017. The former president visited the White House in April for a celebration of the anniversary of the passage of the Affordable Care Act. 

“Barack and Michelle, welcome home,” Mr. Biden told the Obamas Wednesday. “Welcome home.”

“It is great to be back,” Obama said after their portraits were unveiled. “… Thank you so much for your hospitality. Thanks for letting us invite a few friends to the White House. We will try not to tear up the place.” 

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The former White House portraits of Barack and Michelle Obama.

Robert McCurdy and Sharon Sprung / Obama Foundation


On Wednesday, the current president lauded his former boss. 

“Mr. President, nothing could have prepared me better or more to become president of the United States than being at your side for eight years, and I mean that from the bottom of my heart,” Mr. Biden told his predecessor. 

Artist Robert McCurdy painted President Obama. Artist Sharon Sprung painted Mrs. Obama. 

“I want to thank Sharon Sprung for capturing everything I love about Michelle: Her grace, her intelligence, and the fact that she’s fine,” Obama said, eliciting laughs and cheers from the audience. “And I want to thank Robert McCurdy for taking on a much more difficult subject, and doing a fantastic job with mine.”

The portrait of the former president depicts him in a black suit with a gray tie, in a very realistic-looking portrayal derived from photographs McCurdy took. The portrait of Mrs. Obama shows her in a blue dress, seated on a red sofa in the Red Room. Her portrait also draws entirely upon photos Sprung took. 

McCurdy said the “marathon” process took him about 18 months, while Sprung said she worked on nothing but Michelle Obama’s portrait for eight or nine months. Both had the viewer in mind as they painted. 

“I wanted people to pass by the painting and recognize her, or be more curious even about her or to read more about her, but to get her,” Sprung said in a video about the process. 

“The way the painting is constructed is entirely about the viewer,” McCurdy said in the video. 

In the video, Sprung described how painting is a journey.

“I don’t know how my paintings are going to turn out,” Sprung said. “You just follow your feeling the whole time, and I have enough confidence at this point in myself as a painter to do that.”

White House ceremony to unveil portraits of former U.S. President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama, in Washington
U.S. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden host former U.S. President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama for the unveiling of their official White House portraits, painted by Robert McCurdy and Sharon Sprung, respectively, in the East Room of the White House, in Washington, U.S., September, 7, 2022.

EVELYN HOCKSTEIN / REUTERS


Presidents typically host their predecessors to unveil their formal portraits, but former President Trump upended that tradition, declining to welcome the Obamas back to the White House during his tenure. The Obamas hosted former President George W. Bush and his wife Laura at the White House in 2012.

Former presidents and first ladies typically have two official portraits completed upon leaving office. One set hangs in the National Portrait Gallery, while the other enters the collection of the White House Historical Association to be displayed in the White House. The Obamas’ portraits in the National Portrait Gallery were completed in 2018.



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