DALLAS (AP) 鈥 Former President George W. Bush didn't need to look too far for inspiration for his newest works of art.
The 78-year-old has brushed portraits of world leaders and people who immigrated to the U.S. But his newest collection draws on scenes much closer to home: his presidential library in Dallas.
The exhibit opened Thursday at the George W. Bush Presidential Center on the campus of Southern Methodist University. Bush and former first lady Laura Bush moved to Dallas after he left the White House in 2009, and he took up oil painting a few years later.
The 35 new works are an ode not only to life at the center but also to SMU. The exhibit called 鈥淎 Shining City on the Hilltop" is both a nod to SMU鈥檚 nickname 鈥 The Hilltop 鈥 and former President Ronald Reagan鈥檚 famous use of the phrase 鈥渟hining city upon a hill鈥 to refer to America, said Teresa Lenling, director of the presidential museum.
鈥淭his features not just the places around the SMU campus but it really takes a look at the people that are the heart of this campus and the community,鈥 said Lenling, adding that Bush composed the paintings from photos taken around the center and campus.
One of the paintings comes from the center's opening in 2013, when then-President Barack Obama and all of the still-living former presidents, including Bush's father, George H.W. Bush, posed in front of the new building.
Devon Yarbrough, who works at the center, said she was 鈥渧ery surprised鈥 but pleased to spot herself in one of the paintings. She鈥檚 depicted reading a book on her lunch break while sitting on a bench under a tree in the center鈥檚 15-acre park.
This is the fifth exhibit of George W. Bush's art to be featured at the center. His first exhibit was a collection of including former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Russian President Vladimir Putin and the Dalai Lama.
He's also done a collection of paintings of military veterans, which were and painted portraits of people who immigrated to the U.S., which are compiled in his book 鈥淥ut of Many, One.鈥
The exhibit is on display through Oct. 19.
Jamie Stengle, The Associated Press