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In May 2020, shortly after news outlets reported that an unveiling ceremony for former U.S. President Barack Obama's official White House portrait was unlikely to take place this year due to political disagreements with current President Donald Trump, some social media users started to circulate what they claimed was Obama's official portrait. They were trying to bring visibility to what Trump doesn't want people to see, according to one user. That portrait is pictured below: One social media user wrote: The unveiling of the official portrait of former President Barack Obama at the White House has not taken place because President Trump refused to take part in the ceremony. Please share the portrait that Trump doesn't want people to see. But the above-displayed image does not show Obama's official White House portrait. It is actually a painting by Dutch artist Edwin van den Dikkenberg and has no official connections to the White House or Obama. Dikkenberg's painting first went viral in 2017. That was when it was again shared as if it were an official portrait of Obama. At the time, Dikkenberg told BuzzFeed News that he was excited his painting received so much attention, but confirmed that this was not Obama's official portrait: Dikkenberg was also asked about why he chose to paint Obama in a tan suit, given that this suit color once caused considerable outrage among the president's critics. Dikkenberg said that he had to paint Obama from a photograph since he didn't have access to the president (again, this is not an official White House painting), and that he found the color of Obama's suit in his source image, blue, to be a bit boring. So he switched colors: Another portrait of Obama was also shared on social media as if it were the portrait scheduled to be unveiled at the White House in 2020. This painting of Obama was done by Kehinde Wiley and was unveiled at the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery in February 2018. While this an official portrait of Obama, it is not the official White House portrait that would have been unveiled at the White House ceremony in 2020. The official White House portraits are commissioned by the White House Historical Association, and are distinct from the portraits hanging in the National Portrait Gallery. Official White House portraits are traditionally unveiled by the president's successor near the end of their first term, and end up displayed (or stored) at the White House. NBC News wrote: For context, here's a video from May 2012 of Obama unveiling the portraits of former President George Bush and first lady Laura Bush. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GD3IodWyGME&t=187s
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