"White home replaces Obama image with rebel Trump Image of current US president with blood on his face and American flag now hanging in Grand Foyer"

grazynarebeca.blogspot.com 2 months ago
© X / WhiteHouse
The White home placed a dramatic image of U.S. president Donald Trump in a prominent position in the large Foyer East Wing, replacing the authoritative image of erstwhile president Barack Obama.
The fresh work of art depicts Trump with blood on his face and the American flag in the background, capturing the minute erstwhile he lifts a clenched fist after surviving the assassination in July 2024 during an election rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

A dramatic scene, showing Secret Service agents rushing to shield Trump as he gestures challengingly, became an image defining his re-election campaign, reflecting his call to “Fight, fight, fight.’“A fewer fresh works of art in the White home 👀”, The administration posted on Friday on its authoritative X account, sharing a short image film.

The portrait, which was based on a photograph taken by fresh York Times photographer Doug Mills, was created by artist Marc Lipp and donated by safety spokesperson at Andrew Pollack's school, whose daughter Meadow died in a shooting at Parkland School in 2018.Some critics have noted that the Grand Foyer seat is traditionally reserved for portraits of fresh presidents.

However, they admitted that Trump, being erstwhile president, does not break any authoritative protocol.

Although Obama's image was moved to make area for a fresh painting, it is inactive exhibited publically in another prominent place overlooking Steinway's performance piano, on which Franklin D. Roosevelt erstwhile played, explained White home spokesperson Harrison Fields."Obama remains in the entrance hall on the White home floor" – wrote Fields on X.

This site previously occupied a image of George W. Bush, who was now reportedly moved to the stairwell.



Translated by Google Translator

source:https://www.rt.com/news/615689-trump-bama-portrait-white-house/

Read Entire Article