Yes, there will be the more predictable elements: a full-scale model of the Oval Office, videos of election nights and mannequins wearing the first lady’s dresses.
But the Obama Presidential Center, which officially opens on the South Side of Chicago in June, will also have a feature rarely — if ever — prominent in past presidential libraries: original works by 30 artists that were commissioned by Barack and Michelle Obama.
The decision to make art a priority in President Barack Obama’s privately funded, $850 million project for posterity is consistent with the Obamas’ longstanding commitment to the arts over two administrations. During those terms, the first couple centered artists like Alma Thomas, whose 1966 canvas “Resurrection” was the first painting by an African American woman to enter the White House Collection, along with Kehinde Wiley and Amy Sherald, who painted the Obamas’ National Portrait Gallery portraits.



“Michelle and I wanted the Obama Presidential Center to be more than a library or a museum,” Obama said in a statement to The New York Times. “We wanted it to be an important cultural institution for Chicago and the South Side, a place that belonged to the community. Art was central to that.”