Trump’s portrait in the Colorado Capitol removed after he complained about it

The Colorado legislature agreed to remove a portrait of President Donald Trump from the state Capitol after he derided the painting as โ€œthe worstโ€ in a lengthy social media post over the weekend.

The Legislatureโ€™s bipartisan Executive Committee officially ordered Capitol staff to take down the portrait on Monday. Democratic state lawmakers, who have a majority in both chambers, said they agreed with their Republican colleaguesโ€™ request to remove it.

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โ€œIf the GOP wants to spend time and money on which portrait of Trump hangs in the Capitol, then thatโ€™s up to them,โ€ Jarrett Freedman, a spokesperson for Colorado House Democrats, told The Washington Post in a statement.

Trump railed against the portrait in a Truth Social post on Sunday, claiming that it was โ€œpurposefully distorted to a level that even I, perhaps, have never seen before.โ€

The painting depicts Trump with full cheeks and a slight frown. When it was unveiled in 2018, the artist, Sarah A. Boardman, described Trumpโ€™s expression in the painting as โ€œserious, non-confrontational, thoughtful,โ€ the Colorado Times Recorder reported.

A painting on Donald Trump is hung on a wall
Trump’s portrait at the Colorado Capitol in Denver.Thomas Peipert / AP file

In his post, however, Trump criticized Boardman โ€” who has also painted portraits of former Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush โ€” and insulted her artistic ability.

โ€œThe artist also did President Obama, and he looks wonderful, but the one on me is truly the worst,โ€ he wrote. โ€œShe must have lost her talent as she got older.โ€

Trump then called for its removal, claiming that โ€œangryโ€ Colorado residents have complained about the portrait and that he was merely โ€œspeaking on their behalf.โ€ He also took the opportunity to attack Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, as โ€œweak on Crimeโ€ regarding Tren de Aragua, a Venezuelan criminal gang that he said has been active in Aurora, Colorado.

โ€œJared should be ashamed of himself!โ€ Trump wrote.

After his rant, he posted both his official presidential portraits on Truth Social.

Infamously image-conscious, Trump has often taken issue with the publication of unflattering photos of himself. In a 2016 article about a meeting with media executives, Politico reported that Trump, then president-elect, personally complained to NBC Newsโ€™ president at the time that the network was using photos in which he appeared to have a double chin.

In an early 2017 social media post, he grumbled that a CNN book about his 2016 election campaign used the โ€œworst cover photo of me!โ€ And in 2023, he repeatedly complained about Fox Newsโ€™ photo choices, once even attacking the network for using the โ€œabsolutely worst pictures of me, especially the big โ€˜orangeโ€™ one with my chin pulled way back.โ€ It was unclear at the time exactly which image he was referring to.

In 2019, Trump grumbled about energy-efficient light bulbs, telling reporters that they cost more money and made him look worse.

โ€œAnd I hate to say it, it doesnโ€™t make you look as good. Of course, being a vain person, thatโ€™s very important to me,โ€ he said. โ€œIt gives you an orange look. I donโ€™t want an orange look.โ€

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