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    You are at:Home»Crime & Justice»A 3-D Look Inside Trump’s Revamped Oval Office
    Crime & Justice

    A 3-D Look Inside Trump’s Revamped Oval Office

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtDecember 23, 2025008 Mins Read
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    A 3-D Look Inside Trump’s Revamped Oval Office
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    Mr. Trump spends a great deal of his public and private time in the Oval Office. Here, he fields phone calls from allies, hosts hourslong staff meetings and takes questions from reporters while cameras roll.

    It’s not unusual for presidents to decorate the space to their own tastes. They often choose art or items meant to evoke meaning and a historical connection to past political eras.

    But in his second term, Mr. Trump has placed a connection to his lavish decorating style above all else. His tastes veer toward the gilded, triumphal style of Louis XIV, a theme that shows up in his own properties.

    Mr. Trump has regularly added to or swapped out items in the Oval, according to Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary. Some of Mr. Trump’s changes go beyond the decorative — he has installed a red button on his desk that lets him instantly order a Diet Coke.

    Most objects on the walls are from the White House archive. But a few things, including gold angel statuettes placed above two of the doorways, were brought in from Mar-a-Lago, his estate in Palm Beach, Fla.

    A golden angel statuette was placed above a doorway leading to the West Wing. Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Donna Hayashi Smith, the White House curator, and several members of her team spend time pulling portraits and other items from an archive to show Mr. Trump for approval. The president has also traveled to a vault below the White House to see items in person before choosing to display them in the Oval, Ms. Leavitt said.

    Mr. Trump was recently shown a portrait of the former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, which now hangs near the fireplace. Ms. Leavitt said the president added this portrait, the only one of a woman in the office, because he “admires” Mrs. Kennedy.

    The Oval Office makeover is among the many changes Mr. Trump has ordered at the White House, including paving the Rose Garden, remodeling the Lincoln bathroom and demolishing the East Wing to build a massive ballroom.

    The Golden Stage

    Why all the gold?

    “He’s a maximalist,” Ms. Leavitt said, citing Mr. Trump’s background in real estate and hospitality. “So he loves showing people who come in, the renovations, his office, his gift shop.”

    She added that when traveling overseas, Mr. Trump proudly talks about the White House to world leaders as he invites them to visit him in Washington. “This is the people’s house. It is also the epicenter of the world,” Ms. Leavitt said. “And he genuinely does have a great respect for the White House.”

    Almost as soon as he took office, Mr. Trump began adding gold accents to the Oval. By his first bilateral meeting, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel in February, there were five gold-framed portraits surrounding the fireplace and nine gold antiques on the mantel. By his October meeting with President Alexander Stubb of Finland, the gold had proliferated.

    Eric Lee/The New York Times

    Kenny Holston/The New York Times

    Mr. Trump also added ornately framed mirrors on two doors leading to other parts of the West Wing. One of them, shown below, covers a peephole where the president’s aides have, in the past, looked through to monitor the progress of meetings.

    Now, if the door is closed, they can no longer see what is happening inside the Oval.

    An aide to President Barack Obama watched the progress of an Oval Office meeting from an adjacent room on Nov. 24, 2009. Pete Souza/The White House

    A large mirror now covers the peephole from within the Oval. Doug Mills/The New York Times

    The sheer amount of gilded appliqués on the walls of the Oval Office has sparked internet rumors that they are plastic furnishings purchased from Home Depot, painted in gold. Mr. Trump has denied those claims, saying that the appliqués are authentic gold.

    A White House official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe the process, said that the underlying materials are made of plaster or metal, then covered with real gold leaf. A craftsman from Florida regularly travels to Washington to gild the appliqués by hand, often when the president is away on the weekends, that official said.

    Gold is a metaphor the president uses to visually show his success, said Robert Wellington, an art historian at the Australian National University and author of “Versailles Mirrored: The Power of Luxury, Louis XIV to Donald Trump.”

    “He’s really setting up a kind of stage — a gilded stage for his presidency,” Mr. Wellington said. “His style is to amass things together to make this look of ‘rich.’ ”

    Aside from the gold, Mr. Trump has hung more than 20 portraits in the Oval Office. In addition to Mr. Washington’s above the fireplace, portraits of John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Abraham Lincoln, James Monroe and Franklin D. Roosevelt are also on the walls.

    Mr. Trump has ruminated about the fate of Mr. Harrison, who died shortly after he was inaugurated, to people who have visited the Oval Office. He has said that the portraits of his predecessors are there to remind him of how quickly fate can change.

    Most other presidents had just a few portraits or scenery paintings in the Oval.

    George W. Bush, June 2005

    Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Barack Obama, October 2014

    Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Even the lighting in the Oval has not gone untouched.

    During his first term, Mr. Trump had lights replaced in the Oval to make sure he was better lit during televised appearances.

    Now, between the gold and the overhead lights, the room is very bright. The president has recently discussed installing chandeliers, a White House official said.

    The Resolute Desk

    In this space, Mr. Trump has ceremonies, like awarding medals to the Kennedy Center honorees or the 1980 Olympic hockey team. He has also hosted business leaders, like Apple’s Tim Cook, or other politicians, like New York City’s mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani.

    Mr. Trump has recently taken to sitting at the Resolute Desk while people stand behind him at events.

    Mr. Trump met with Zohran Mamdani, the mayor-elect of New York City on Nov. 21. Eric Lee/The New York Times

    Mr. Trump met with members of the 1980 U.S. Olympic men’s hockey team on Dec. 12. Eric Lee/The New York Times

    Other presidents have used the Oval Office in a more structured, organized way than Mr. Trump does.

    President Joseph R. Biden Jr. used it as a space for briefings with his staff; the list of attendees was tightly controlled by his senior aides. President Barack Obama often arrived at the office in the late morning, worked there until dinner and continued his evening working in the executive residence. President George W. Bush would reach the Oval by early morning, and in the days and months after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, the office became the backdrop of some of his most significant national addresses.

    Mr. Trump treats the Oval Office as something akin to a boardroom or center stage. His most loyal aides are often in the room with him, helping workshop social media posts or fetching documents at his request. Meetings often run long, and sometimes get folded into unrelated events, because the president enjoys looping in more people as the day goes on.

    On Nov. 12, Mr. Trump displayed a bill he had just signed to end the government shutdown. Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Kid Rock was a guest when Mr. Trump signed an executive order meant to combat concert ticket scalping and price gauging on March 31. Doug Mills/The New York Times

    One day this month, Mr. Trump welcomed a conga line of reporters, political allies and at least one cabinet secretary for meetings. He took phone calls and diverted to other subjects, including his plans for the East Wing ballroom. By the end of the day, he was several hours behind his official schedule, according to a person familiar with his schedule.

    Mr. Trump, seated at the Resolute Desk, with a model of the East Wing Ballroom. Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Smaller details in the Oval Office were still in the works recently. A gold statuette of an eagle flying over the Constitution was added last month near the flags behind the desk.

    Doug Mills/The New York Times

    But Mr. Trump is most likely finished putting up new items, Ms. Leavitt said.

    The Oval Office in 360

    Tap and drag the image to explore on your own.

    Additional photo credits:

    George Washington portraits above the fireplace: White House Historical Association (Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan administrations); Everett Collection, via Alamy (Jimmy Carter administration)

    Photo of gold coasters and Diet Coke button: Doug Mills/The New York Times

    Gifts to Trump: Doug Mills/The New York Times (plaque from Apple); Tom Brenner for The New York Times (FIFA Peace Prize trophy); Eric Lee/The New York Times (Washington Commanders football); Doug Mills/The New York Times (Rolex desk clock)

    office Oval Revamped Trumps
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