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The art of diplomacy

Former US president George W Bush says relations with Vladimir Putin grew “increasingly tense” during his White House years, as he unveiled his portraits of world leaders, including the Russian head of state.

Putin, former Australian prime minister John Howard, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, former British prime minister Tony Blair, Afghan President Hamid Karzai and the Dalai Lama are among the two dozen leaders featured in an exhibition of the paintings that opens in Texas on Saturday.

Giving his journalist daughter Jenna a sneak preview of the exhibition for a television program, Bush lingered by his canvas of a solemn-eyed Putin.

Bush, 67, said relations with Putin during his eight years in the White House – from 2001 to 2009, a period that included the US-led invasion of Iraq – “became more tense as time went on”.

“Vladimir’s a person who in many ways views the US as an enemy,” Bush said. “And although he wouldn’t say that, I felt that he viewed the world as, either the US benefits and Russia loses or vice versa.”

“I tried of course to dispel him of that notion.”

The portraits are a central part of The Art of Leadership: A President’s Personal Diplomacy, which explores the relationships Bush forged with world leaders during his presidency.

The George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum, on the campus of Southern Methodist University in Dallas, says the exhibition will run through June 3.

None of the portraits, at the George W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum, had been seen publicly – or, for that matter, by the subjects themselves.

Bush said he hoped Blair, his staunch ally in the Iraq war, would like the one he painted of him.

“I like it,” he added.

“It like it because it conveys a compassionate person and a strong person and a reliable friend.”

Perhaps his favourite portrait, he said, was the one he did of his father George Bush, 89, who served as US president from 1989 to 1993.

“He’s a great listener, as you know, and when it came to diplomacy, he was a master at befriending people to find common ground,” he said.

“It was a joyful experience to paint him. I painted a gentle soul.”

Bush took up painting – starting with his pets, then going on to landscapes before advancing to portraits – because “there’s a Rembrandt trapped in this body (and) I’m a driven person. I want to get better.”

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