Berliner Boersenzeitung - Britain's Queen Elizabeth and the artists who captured her

EUR -
AED 4.240369
AFN 72.15222
ALL 96.010337
AMD 436.919504
ANG 2.066474
AOA 1058.793523
ARS 1611.346204
AUD 1.619451
AWG 2.081217
AZN 1.956813
BAM 1.954992
BBD 2.322141
BDT 141.961354
BGN 1.902418
BHD 0.435943
BIF 3443.207399
BMD 1.154628
BND 1.475803
BOB 8.002694
BRL 5.953725
BSD 1.159021
BTN 106.671933
BWP 15.538581
BYN 3.421487
BYR 22630.709035
BZD 2.32374
CAD 1.569088
CDF 2514.779555
CHF 0.902925
CLF 0.02624
CLP 1036.117313
CNY 7.927964
CNH 7.941814
COP 4277.400294
CRC 546.088594
CUC 1.154628
CUP 30.597642
CVE 110.219467
CZK 24.401878
DJF 206.38474
DKK 7.472313
DOP 70.322776
DZD 152.019482
EGP 60.501383
ERN 17.31942
ETB 179.476842
FJD 2.542721
FKP 0.861459
GBP 0.862986
GEL 3.134839
GGP 0.861459
GHS 12.557812
GIP 0.861459
GMD 84.865656
GNF 10160.978406
GTQ 8.886329
GYD 242.829685
HKD 9.03661
HNL 30.67999
HRK 7.534179
HTG 152.079809
HUF 387.852834
IDR 19508.768085
ILS 3.611873
IMP 0.861459
INR 106.414793
IQD 1518.082222
IRR 1526158.440873
ISK 144.802275
JEP 0.861459
JMD 181.545788
JOD 0.818637
JPY 183.472718
KES 149.235293
KGS 100.972297
KHR 4652.158731
KMF 491.871195
KPW 1039.203539
KRW 1708.901395
KWD 0.354321
KYD 0.96568
KZT 569.203375
LAK 24825.626652
LBP 103846.100171
LKR 360.285917
LRD 212.092383
LSL 18.976577
LTL 3.409316
LVL 0.698422
LYD 7.371955
MAD 10.850618
MDL 19.986743
MGA 4805.015002
MKD 61.626888
MMK 2424.742133
MNT 4122.187229
MOP 9.342467
MRU 46.280084
MUR 53.008821
MVR 17.838953
MWK 2009.669786
MXN 20.47174
MYR 4.534194
MZN 73.792291
NAD 18.976577
NGN 1612.160702
NIO 42.653118
NOK 11.181475
NPR 170.679925
NZD 1.957112
OMR 0.443952
PAB 1.159021
PEN 3.972159
PGK 4.994002
PHP 68.655391
PKR 323.852513
PLN 4.26462
PYG 7511.896763
QAR 4.226054
RON 5.093531
RSD 117.396804
RUB 91.506257
RWF 1693.600357
SAR 4.332422
SBD 9.289193
SCR 16.157733
SDG 693.931492
SEK 10.71179
SGD 1.473265
SHP 0.86627
SLE 28.4012
SLL 24211.971348
SOS 661.229703
SRD 43.267957
STD 23898.468664
STN 24.490201
SVC 10.139538
SYP 128.022081
SZL 18.975161
THB 36.770303
TJS 11.109011
TMT 4.041198
TND 3.396597
TOP 2.780068
TRY 50.935488
TTD 7.863764
TWD 36.731256
TZS 3002.032787
UAH 51.094292
UGX 4282.230969
USD 1.154628
UYU 46.620741
UZS 14079.415542
VES 505.331309
VND 30335.541759
VUV 138.091343
WST 3.13415
XAF 655.68613
XAG 0.013274
XAU 0.000223
XCD 3.12044
XCG 2.088575
XDR 0.815463
XOF 655.68613
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.496587
ZAR 19.12766
ZMK 10393.037421
ZMW 22.542687
ZWL 371.789749
  • RYCEF

    -0.3300

    17.35

    -1.9%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.24

    -0.04%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    23.15

    +0.3%

  • JRI

    0.2100

    12.85

    +1.63%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    92.08

    +0.43%

  • BCC

    -0.6400

    71.9

    -0.89%

  • BCE

    -0.5000

    25.89

    -1.93%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.4

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.4300

    34.76

    -1.24%

  • NGG

    -0.1600

    89.69

    -0.18%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    55.15

    -0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.2500

    59.16

    -0.42%

  • BP

    1.6200

    41.56

    +3.9%

  • AZN

    -1.6800

    193.31

    -0.87%

Britain's Queen Elizabeth and the artists who captured her
Britain's Queen Elizabeth and the artists who captured her / Photo: Daniel LEAL - AFP

Britain's Queen Elizabeth and the artists who captured her

Filmed, photographed and painted from all angles over many decades, Queen Elizabeth II sat for a string of renowned British artists whose works have been brought together in a new exhibition.

Text size:

At the entrance to London's Quantus gallery, more used to showing the works of street artists like Banksy or Stony, a bronze bust of the queen who died on September 8 welcomes visitors.

It is one of the centrepieces of Majesty: A Tribute to the Queen which features works by three artists who portrayed Elizabeth at different stages of her life and through a range of mediums.

Frances Segelman did three sessions with the monarch in 2007.

"I didn't want to portray her like some artists do, they distort things, they want to make a sensation, and I didn't want to do that," she told AFP.

Her sculpture was testament to Elizabeth's "solid, strong rock" like presence in British life.

But meeting the queen in person, she said, threw up some surprises.

There was "this wonderful woman there, who I had looked at all my life and she's just sitting there, she's just lovely, talking about different things".

Segelman was relieved that her subject proved so friendly, but soon realised it was also preventing her from concentrating.

- 'Ma'm you don't have to speak to me' -

Worried about how to ask the queen to stop talking, she eventually plucked up the courage to tell her "Ma'am you don't have to speak to me, you can just relax if you like".

The queen, however "just carried on talking, it didn't make any difference", she recalled.

The exhibition also features artworks by Christian Furr, the youngest artist to be commissioned to paint an official portrait of the queen.

"I wanted to do something different, that captured her personality, her liveliness, her life, her humour, and also her humanity," Furr said.

Although there was an "ordinariness" to the queen, she was also "majestic", he said.

Only 28 when she sat for him in 1995, he said he felt out of tune with the nineties when so-called Britart -- known for its use of new materials and creative processes -- dominated the art scene.

"I was completely out of fashion. It was (all) Britart when I created that painting. It was completely anachronistic."

His portrait stands in contrast to the black and white works of Rob Munday, a holograms specialist, that create a 3D effect by combining several images of the same subject.

Entitled "Equanimity", his main work, produced with Chris Levine in 2004, has become one of the most iconic images of the queen.

It has been featured on stamps and banknotes and on the cover of Time magazine in 2012 to mark the queen's diamond jubilee.

From the front, looking straight at the lens, the queen appears dressed in black, wearing a crown and white fur teamed with a string of pearls.

Moving around her, the viewer can see different images of the monarch.

In the early 2000s "it was still very new technology" that required the model to be perfectly still, he said.

The queen however was "very accommodating".

The monarch was "very used" to sitting for artists and so was in many ways the "perfect sitter", he said.

He was still slightly nervous about her reaction to the final result but need not have worried.

"Of course I was a bit worried about what she is going to think about such a realistic portrait, but she was fine with that," he recalled.

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)