King Charles: First official portrait since
coronation is unveiled, painted by Jonathan Yeo
By Katie
Razzall,
Culture and
media editor
https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-68981200
The first
official painted portrait of King Charles III since his coronation has been
unveiled at Buckingham Palace.
The vast
oil on canvas shows a larger-than-life King Charles in the uniform of the Welsh
Guards.
The vivid
red work, measuring about 8ft 6in by 6ft 6in, is by Jonathan Yeo, who has also
painted Tony Blair, Sir David Attenborough and Malala Yousafzai.
Queen
Camilla is said to have looked at the painting and told Yeo: "Yes, you've
got him."
In the new
portrait, the King is depicted, sword in hand, with a butterfly landing on his
shoulder.
Unveilings
are always a little nerve-wracking, both for the sitter and the artist, but
particularly when one of them is a King.
Yeo jokes:
"If this was seen as treasonous, I could literally pay for it with my
head, which would be an appropriate way for a portrait painter to die - to have
their head removed!"
In reality,
Yeo isn't going to lose his head of course - no executions for a badly received
portrait of a monarch, in modern times anyway.
Fortunately,
he has also already had a nod of approval from a key royal figure.
The Queen
dropped in during the final sitting and said the artist had captured the King
well. Yeo says the best judge of a portrait is someone who knows your sitter
really well because they have instant recognition of whether it feels familiar.
The King
also got a glimpse of it, says Yeo, in its "half-done state… He was
initially mildly surprised by the strong colour but otherwise he seemed to be
smiling approvingly".
It is a
vibrant painting.
The King
was made Regimental Colonel in the Welsh Guards in 1975. In the picture, the
red of the uniform fades into the red background, bringing the King's face into
even more prominence.
Yeo says he
wanted the painting to be distinctive and a break with the past. He was aiming
for something personal.
"My
interest is really in figuring out who someone is and trying to get that on a
canvas."
Yeo decided
to use some of the traditions of royal portraiture - the military outfit, the
sword - but aimed to achieve something more modern, particularly with the deep
colour and the butterfly.
He says
he's referencing the tradition of official royal portraits but suggesting
that's something "from the past and what's interesting about them is
something a bit different from that".
"In
history of art, the butterfly symbolises metamorphosis and rebirth," he
explains, fitting for a portrait being painted of a monarch who has recently
ascended to the throne.
The
butterfly is also a reference to the King's long held interest in the
environment, causes "he has championed most of his life and certainly long
before they became a mainstream conversation".
Yeo says it
was Charles' idea after they talked about the opportunity they had to tell a
story with the portrait.
"I
said, when schoolchildren are looking at this in 200 years and they're looking
at the who's who of the monarchs, what clues can you give them?
"He
said 'what about a butterfly landing on my shoulder?'".
Yeo began
the portrait when Charles was still Prince of Wales, with the first sitting at
Highgrove in June 2021.
The King
sat four times in all, for about an hour at a time, with the final sitting at
Clarence House in November 2023. Did the artist notice any obvious change in
the man after he became King?
Yeo says
he's spotted "a physical change" in politicians he's painted in the
past. "They physically look and feel different when they're in high office
or out of it."
Yeo adds
the King "had already been gaining presence and stature by the time I
started it, and it went up a level again when he became King, as you'd
expect".
The
sittings ended before the King's cancer was diagnosed. He had a lot going on,
says Yeo, with an upcoming speech at the COP Summit, but "didn't seem like
someone who was physically exhausted".
He was
"in good spirits", the painter adds.
King
Charles posed in his full Welsh Guards uniform and had to stand leaning on his
sword for around 40 minutes each time.
"He
stood impressively still, and didn't get distracted like some sitters do."
Yeo won't
reveal much of what they talked about during sittings, although he says Charles
III has "a great sense of humour" and is a "very engaging
person".
His
interest in art meant Charles wanted to discuss the process of creating the
work and the brushes being used. They also talked about "how he'd learned
to paint and about some of the pictures on the walls".
But Yeo
says "there's a sanctity to the portrait process". Your sitters
"need to believe what goes on is between the two of you because that way I
think they feel more comfortable about opening up".
Royal
portraits in the past have had an important role to play in signifying power
and projecting an image. They were part of the tools used to ensure the
survival of the monarch. Some of the most memorable include Henry VIII by Hans
Holbein the Younger. The Tudor king employed Holbein as court artist, although
only two portraits survive.
But Yeo
says our relationship with royalty has shifted since those days.
"On
the one hand, we know they're real people with quirks and personality traits.
We've seen that much more of them. On the other hand, we still want to buy into
the mysticism and the fairy tale that they're different from us, that there's a
bit of magic there."
In his
portrait, he was "trying to figure out how to do both at once".
Painting a
portrait of this size was "quite an operation", says Yeo. Having used
his first sittings with the king for photographs and sketches, he did most of
the painting between the third and fourth sittings.
He then had
to hire a truck to transport the canvas and his equipment to Clarence House for
the last time he saw the King.
As well as
easel, painting tables and lighting, they had to "cover all the carpets in
sheets so we didn't damage these priceless carpets".
Yeo also
brought "a dias, a sort of platform, for me to stand on so I was up high
enough to paint his face and one for him to stand on so that he's on a level as
well".
The artist
claims not to have been interested in getting involved in the "rigid
formality" of royal portraiture previously. But as he turned 50, he began
to think about how "you have to see how you measure up against the works
of the past".
The
portrait was commissioned by the Drapers' Company, the City of London livery
company which has been collecting royal portraits for centuries.
His
painting will go up in Drapers' Hall in London surrounded by "a dozen
other fabulous, similarly huge portraits of Queen Victoria and various other
kings and queens".
For him,
painting Charles III was different from most previous commissions, where you
start from scratch.
"All
my life I'd known who he was and what he looked like so it was really just a
case of deciding what to show and trying to slightly channel who he seems to be
now."
He
deliberately minimized the visual distractions in his portrait to "allow
people to connect with the human being underneath".
There's a
great deal of sympathy for the King, Yeo adds. The portrait "reflects
exactly who he is, everything he represents and what he's been through".
The
portrait will go on public display at the Philip Mould Gallery in London from
16 May until 14 June. It will be displayed at Drapers' Hall from the end of
August.
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