Queen Elizabeth portraits to tour Britain in run-up to Diamond Jubilee

‘Queen Elizabeth II,’ Dorothy Wilding (Hand-colored by Beatrice Johnson), 1952. Hand-colored bromide print, 316 x 248 mm. National Portrait Gallery, London (x125105). © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler/ National Portrait Gallery, London.
From Beaton and Leibovitz to Annigoni and Warhol, The Queen: Art and Image will be the most wide-ranging exhibition of images in different media devoted to a single royal sitter. Formal painted portraits, official photographs, media pictures, and powerful responses by contemporary artists will be shown in an exhibition which explores both traditional representations and works which extend the visual language of royal portraiture.
Documenting the changing nature of representations of the monarch, the exhibition will show how images serve as a lens through which to view shifting perceptions of royalty. This perspective reflects changes in the social scene and historical context, and the exhibition highlights important developments and events: from The Queen’s relationship with the press and the miners’ strike, to the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, and the advent of new technology. This textured view of the period is supplemented by archival material – from newspapers to film footage, postage stamps to consumer ephemera.
Among the highlights from the works from life are Annigoni’s hugely popular life-size 1969 commission for the National Portrait Gallery, Lucian Freud’s 2000-01 portrait from the Royal Collection and Justin Mortimer’s painting where The Queen’s head floats away from her body against a huge background of flat vibrant yellow. Among the exhibited photographers for whom The Queen sat are Annie Leibovitz, Dorothy Wilding and Cecil Beaton – including his iconic Westminster Abbey Coronation image – and Chris Levine’s highly unusual photograph from 2004 of The Queen with her eyes closed.
The Queen: Art and Image will show a significant selection of unofficial portraits of the British monarch from major 20th-century artists including those of Gilbert and George, Andy Warhol and Gerhard Richter, as well as less formal portraits by such photographers as Eve Arnold, Patrick Lichfield and Lord Snowdon.
Collectively, the exhibition celebrates and explores the startling range of artistic creativity and media-derived imagery that The Queen has inspired. It also probes the relation of this imagery to a world of changing values during a reign that has engaged the attention of millions.
“The Queen is the most portrayed person in British history, reflecting her long reign and also the respect and affection which is felt towards her. The Diamond Jubilee is a wonderful celebration and the National Portrait Gallery is very pleased to be sharing this exhibition,” said Director Sandy Nairne.
Locations and dates for The Queen: Art and Image – The Tour are as follows:
National Gallery Complex, Edinburgh, June 25- Sept. 18, 2011;
Ulster Museum, Belfast, Oct. 14, 2011-Jan. 15, 2012;
National Museum, Cardiff, Feb. 4-April 29, 2012;
National Portrait Gallery, London, May 17-Oct. 21, 2012.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated hardbound catalog featuring over 60 portraits, with essays by historian and writer Sir David Cannadine and curator Paul Moorhouse. Published by the National Portrait Gallery, London, priced £30 (about $47 U.S.). Available June 2011.
A program of events including lectures, tours and lunchtime talks will accompany the exhibition at all venues.
ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE

‘Queen Elizabeth II,’ Dorothy Wilding, 1952. Chlorobromide print, 290 x 215 mm. National Portrait Gallery, London (P870(5)). © William Hustler and Georgina Hustler/ National Portrait Gallery, London.

‘Queen Elizabeth II, 1969,’ Pietro Annigoni, Oil on panel, 1981 x 1778 mm, National Portrait Gallery, London (4706). © National Portrait Gallery, London.

‘Queen Elizabeth II,’ Eve Arnold, 1968. Cibachrome print, 432 x 295 mm. National Portrait Gallery, London (P520). © Eve Arnold / Magnum Photos.

‘Lightness of Being, 2007,’ By Chris Levine. Print on lightbox. © Chris Levine. Courtesy of Mr Kevin P.Burke and the Burke Children. Private Collection.