Former US president George W Bush will offer the world a window into his private life when a collection of his paintings goes on exhibit in April.
More than two dozen portraits will go on display at his presidential library in Dallas in April at an exhibit titled "The Art of Leadership: A President's Personal Diplomacy."
The exhibit "will explore the relationships that President George W Bush forged with world leaders to shape international policy and advance American interests abroad," the library said in a statement.
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Bush, whose two terms were shaped by the Sep 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the United States and wars that made him unpopular at home and abroad, has rarely stepped into the limelight since leaving the White House in 2009.
He has refrained from the high-profile charitable and political work that marked the retirements of predecessors Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton.
Instead, he has lived a quieter life in Dallas with his wife Laura and took up painting after learning how the hobby had absorbed former British prime minister Winston Churchill.
He acknowledged the limitation of his skills in an interview last year in which he said he has help from a "patient" instructor and paints daily.
"Painting has changed my life in an unbelievably positive way," he told ABC News ahead of the opening of his presidential library.
"I look at colours differently, and I see shadow.