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George W. Bush, portraitist — 14 Comments

  1. He’s actually authentically, bravely and generously moving the paint around, despite clearly struggling. Not easy. The paintings are good.

  2. Agree Esther. I am sure that there will be critics in abundance, and more than a few harsh ones. It is brave to put yourself out there; and fitting that he is doing it to benefit veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan.

    His self portrait seems to be more reflective and a bit poignant.

  3. I like the portraits and think he has genuine talent. The one that moved me the most is the portrait of his father, but he’s had a lifetime to observe him.

    One of the things I have long admired about George W. is his gracious demeanor and confident leadership in the face of public derision, during his presidency and after. Surely he knew, after all of the mocking he has endured for years, that he was opening himself up to ridicule by sharing his paintings with the world. He rises above it and never responds in kind.

    I really hope Trump learns to follow Bush’s example in this regard, because everything directed toward Bush by the press, comedians, leftists on social media, etc. will look tame in comparison to the scorn to be heaped on the new president for the next four years. And staying classy and letting the insults roll off has never been The Donald’s strong suit.

  4. I prefer W’s earlier paintings. Some of these are almost caricatures, tending to the grotesque. See the lead-off painting. They are too heavy-handed.

  5. Painting on canvas puts one in a very different mental space than writing, or speaking, or anything else connected with words. It’s different from playing music, also, because music has its own language you inevitably adhere to and stay within. Music requires endless repetition, although this repetition leads to change. Painting is a craft, a job with a beginning middle and end. It’s a meditation.

  6. miklos, you sound like a painter, and not like a musician, especially not one who plays classical music. All forms of art have beginnings, middles and ends.
    I meditate to Mozart especially K.563. And Beethoven’s Archduke Trio. Try them!

  7. There’s often a dispute over how intelligent Bush is. The Left says a village idiot. Others say Bush is smarter than Kerry and Hussein combined.

  8. Oh sorry, forgot to include that one of the practical tests for intelligence and talent isn’t the IQ test, it’s seeing how many fields you can learn/master in a few years.

    Music, mathematics, language, art. If you can get specialization, prodigy, genius, savant, or proficient levels in all of them, that is often taken as a testament to intelligence.

  9. Ymarsakar:
    “one of the practical tests for intelligence and talent isn’t the IQ test, it’s seeing how many fields you can learn/master in a few years”

    I wonder how fighter pilot skills compare to portraiture skills.

  10. Art is an ancient practice. What did gifted fighter pilots do with themselves until airplanes were invented?

  11. I wonder how fighter pilot skills compare to portraiture skills.

    Perhaps the same ratio as Miyamoto Musashi’s dual sword method vs Musashi’s focus on calligraphy.

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