Monday, 28 May 2012

The Queen. Art & Image



I love to look at people. You find me in (almost) every exhibition of portraits I can get to – so it was a very special treat to see “The Queen. Art&Image” in the National Portrait Gallery (curator Paul Moorhouse).
The “Portrait of Queen Elizabeth II” by Pietro Annigoni, 1954-5 impressed me: A very upright young Queen with a Grand Admiral’s Cape. One can only speculate how it would feel to be raised to the task of monarch. She was so young when she became Queen, so beautiful and full of energy, seemingly without a doubt about her role, so aloof.
“When I was a little child, it always delighted me to look out of the window and see the people and the traffic going by”, said the Queen once - that was interpreted for the Annigoni portrait as: ‘The image suggests an individual gazing at the world from a position of isolation.’
The theme of the Monarch in an Admiral’s Cape is repeated through the decades: by Annigoni 1954, Cecil Beaton 1968, Annie Leibovitz 2009.
On the other hand (my favourite) we see the private person: the Queen under an umbrella, laughing into a rainy sky. 


The image changes gradually.
We see a portrait by Gerhard Richter, that shows a blurred portrait of a Queen, surrounded by a sort of haze.
Then we see the Queen in her family, no longer stiff portraits but ‘relaxed’ meetings.
What I admire: though giving in to more nearness to the public the Queen always keeps a sort of personal distance.
So the snapshot of the Queen looking at Castle Windsor after the fire seems almost indecent to me (as I always think of photographs of persons in grief, whichever rank in life they have – I wish they were protected to keep their dignity, not being exposed).
The peak of image change comes after the death of Diana, Princess of Wales.
What I admire: the Queen very seldom rejects the request for a portrait, and she doesn’t censore or comment on a portrait. No comments on Justin Mortimer’s or Lucien Freud’s portrait. I never forgot the cover of the Sex Pistols' single “God Save the Queen” by Jamie Reid – funny -, but after a short glance at  “Medusa” by John Locke I have forgotten that one in a minute.
Unsettling: the holograms. Especially the last one, where the Queen has closed her eyes. 


The official Jubilee-Portrait by the German Thomas Struth gives a successful synthesis of Art&Image: for first time you see the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, as Struth said, "both in their royal environment... and yet both in their own aura".
Though official, it is a (huge) photograph with a private touch, both sitting on a beautiful sofa (not a throne!) in Windsor Castle’s Green Drawing Room. The Queen is a bit nearer to the viewer, more light on her face and powder-blue dress, looking aloof but almost vulnerable to me. I pondered what made the tweak in that portrait, and I think it is the “Image” of Royalty in the baroque splendour versus her comfortable black shoes. Even a Queen is human and gets older. Someone wrote: “.. the Duke appears to fall back into shadow” – that I cannot confirm: the vivid presence of Prince Philip, a beautiful man, drew me back at least three times after having made my round.
Because this portrait shows – to me – not only the image, but it shows love and understanding between a couple. 
I feel it: He ist he love of her life.


PS: I found a beautiful little gem about Prince Philip in a German newspaper from 1950: “As any other proud father Prince Philip went himself to the registrar to let the birth of his son been registrated. He took the ration cards, which were allowed to every new born child, and bought himself the bottle of codliver-oil and the two bottles orange juice, that every new born was allocated out as extra ration."


6 comments:

Jane and Lance Hattatt said...

H M The Queen was indeed a most beautiful woman in her youth and has, as you say, embraced her role as Monarch with a grace and composure coping with the trials and tribulations of the decades with an assurance and yet a distance which has made her admired by so many the world over.

For our own part, we are not Royalists but can certainly respect a job well done and a difficult job at that. That the Royal Family are said to be enjoying the highest ratings of popularity that they have for years saddens us, but we are sure that this is in no small measure due to the professionalism of H M The Queen and her devotion to the role she was born to but never chose.

Tony Van Helsing said...

The Queen seemed to be genuinely happy when she was young and I remember seeing old footage of her flirting with some sailors, she was a fox!

Susan Scheid said...

I'd love to see the Struth portrait. The photos of his I've seen are remarkable. The young Queen under the umbrella shows a lovely side of her. On the Queen subject, tomorrow is the Queen's Garden Party. John and Dolly Metcalf will be there, and he'll receive an MBE.

Mr Paul said...

How wonderful for this to be top of your list of place to visit on your trip to London. I am eager to see it and will be waiting until after the Jubilee. I am very fond of Beaton's work and a long time fan of the beautiful Norman Hartnell Gown with all that extravagant ermine. I am looking forward very much to get up close to these artworks as well as seeing lesser known and modern portraiture.
Paul

Britta said...

Thank you all so very much for your comments, that show many different aspects!
Britta

walk2write said...

I agree with you, Britta. The best portrait of the Queen is the one of her smiling in the rain. An unguarded moment in time when she let her hair down, so to speak. She is a remarkable woman, no matter what people might think of royalty. The world is a better place because of her, no doubt.

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