The Queen’s image: the reverential and the real
A new publication shows how depictions of Elizabeth II have
changed over the past 60 years - from the remoteness and splendour of her early
reign to later pictures portraying her as “one of us”. With Freud and Warhol
she has even became contemporary art
By Roy Strong. Features, Issue 236, June 2012
Published online: 04 June 2012
Queen Elizabeth II must be the single most visually
recorded human being in history. Literally millions of images of her exist as
she has lived through a century which has witnessed a media explosion. That was
already under way in the year that she was born, in 1926, for the inherited
forms of disseminating the royal likeness had already extended beyond coins,
banknotes, seals, medals, sculpture and paintings to embrace photography and
its use in newspapers and magazines. During her lifetime, film and television
were to play crucial roles in sustaining and spreading the monarchical image as
well as photography, which began controllable but became ever more intrusive in
the age of the paparazzi. The medium of television also expanded: colour, once
rare, became commonplace. As I write, the internet throws up almost 58 million
images of The Queen in every guise.
These facts establish that during Queen Elizabeth II’s
reign, any attempt to control the royal image was to become increasingly
difficult. But not quite impossible, for the public presence of the monarch in
the rituals of state and in officially sanctioned images—ranging from her
profile on the obverse of the coinage to official portraits commissioned by the
Palace to mark particular moments in the reign—projects a very definite
storyline, which charts what was in fact an iconographical paradox, one which
remains unresolved. On the one hand, the public, in an egalitarian age during
which deference has gone, increasingly wishes members of the Royal Family to be
seen to be “one of us”. On the other, there lingers a strong desire for a being
set apart, a bejewelled icon embodying the nation and its heroic past, along
with values and virtues long since abandoned by most of the population. That
contradiction lies at the heart of the iconography of Elizabeth II, which,
looked at dispassionately, is often so disjunctive that at times we could be
looking at representations of two different people.
The Queen began her life as the elder daughter of a younger
son and it was not until the year of George VI’s coronation in 1937 that any
serious thought was given to the presentation of the new heiress to the throne.
Her earliest appearances before the camera are in the main by Marcus Adams
(1875-1959), a fashionable photographer of royal children, soft-focus and
cloyingly sweet. In 1936, a photographer calling herself Lisa Sheridan (died
1966) was asked almost by chance to photograph the York family informally. Her pictures, more
like snaps, were important not for their style but for their innovative
content, visual equivalents of the revelations of the young princesses’
governess, Marion Crawford, on their childhood life. After 1937, such pictures
were for official release and designed to present the new monarch, his consort
and his children as a happy family doing what any middle-class family would
have done at the time. They are carefully contrived presentations of the two
young princesses and their parents engaged in family life and especially any
activity that reflected the war effort.
Lisa Sheridan was not alone. There was also the society
photographer Dorothy Wilding (1893-1976), who was to be the official
photographer for the 1937 coronation (the pictures were wooden and dull) and
would go on to photograph The Queen several times as Princess. After Elizabeth ’s accession,
Wilding was to take the hugely important image of The Queen which was to be on
all the postage stamps from 1953 to 1967.
By then, a far more important image-maker had arrived on
the scene: Sir Cecil Beaton (1904-80). He had taken the legendary photographs
of The Queen Mother in 1939 in which, heavily bejewelled and wearing a
crinoline from another age, she was deployed as seemingly inhabiting another
world or floating like some vision in the State Apartments of Buckingham
Palace. Beaton brought to his work for the Royal Family a huge sense of the
portraiture of the past, an ability to ennoble even the most unpromising
members of the Royal Family and an amazing technical virtuosity which, above
all through his manipulation of light, endowed his sitters as though a race
apart. He had created an image of the future Queen Mother where there had been
none and was to have in her a firm ally. As a consequence, between 1953 and
1968 he was to be the key royal image-maker.
His early portraits of Elizabeth as Princess placed her in the
never-never-land occupied by her mother, but his greatest leap forward was to
lie in the extraordinary series of pictures taken at the coronation which
established him as unofficial photographer royal. This time the blow-up
backcloth is of the upper part of Henry VII’s chapel in Westminster Abbey,
partly relieved by a swag of curtain, The Queen herself in her robes and
wearing the Imperial State Crown and clasping both orb and sceptre. In the
years to come, Beaton was to rework his formula for The Queen Mother in 1939
for her daughter, deploying the marble columns, sumptuous draperies and gilt
furniture of the various palace rooms, but never again venturing, as he had in
1939, into the garden. Although he described the palace decor as the
“frustrating sort… you’d see in a grand hotel or attempted on an Atlantic
liner”, he set a formula which radically influenced his successors and which
was reiterated by Annie Leibovitz in 2007 and by John Swannell in the pictures
taken in 2011 for the Diamond Jubilee. This reprise of the iconography of the
1950s and 1960s during what cannot be anything other than the closing years of
the reign reflect The Queen’s ascendancy to iconic status. They represent the
reign as it were reliving itself in its final phases. Taken together, these
Palace images might be said to epitomise one vision of The Queen as queen.
There was another, however. By the late 1960s, such
splendour was out of kilter with the times. “There have been so many pictures
of The Queen in tiara, orders and crinoline that I felt I must try something
different. Must rely,” Beaton wrote, “on a plain white or blue background—and
determine to be stark and clear and bold”. The result was one of his most
memorable images of her, standing attired in a simple admiral’s cloak.
That The Queen’s image called for a change of tack came
from two sources. One was the realisation that photographic style had radically
altered. By the late 1960s these pictures of The Queen were hopelessly dated as
the pace, set by the two American masters, Irving Penn and Richard Avedon, was
picked up and transmuted by the lenses of David Bailey and Terence Donovan. The
accent was on asymmetry and movement and an “in your face” bravura totally
alien to the requirements of the Palace, which called for distance and rigid
formality.
Somehow a new formula was urgently needed to reflect that
the Palace wasn’t wholly out of tune with the social revolution of the era. It
called for something that was not so assertive in terms of props but looked
instead to present the monarch as a timeless figurehead presiding over the
nation. Beaton achieved this by doing what he dismissively referred to as “a
poor man’s Annigoni”. So far there has been no reference to any painting as
being of importance, but in 1953 and 1954 The Queen had sat for the Italian
painter Pietro Annigoni (1910-88) for perhaps the definitive portrait of the
reign—for the Fishmongers’ Company.
The Queen arises, an aloof figure wearing the dark blue
cloak of the Order of the Garter, no crinoline, no jewels bar pearl earrings
and the Garter Star. Behind her stretches a distant wintry landscape over which
she towers. From the moment that it was finished, this portrait assumed an
iconic status and one must ask why. Annigoni’s work ran counter to the
modernist and post-modernist styles which dominated the mid-20th century. He
also came to The Queen’s portrait unencumbered by the baggage of past British
royal portraiture by the likes of Gainsborough, Reynolds and Lawrence. His
background was Italian and such a formula was derived from quattrocento
portraits, often of women sitters, in profile, set against distant landscapes.
When he painted The Queen again in 1969 for the National
Portrait Gallery, Annigoni was to repeat the formula, this time utilising a
different and even more powerful frontal image with her in an enveloping cloak
posed in the manner of a Madonna della Misericordia, the Virgin Mary enveloping
all mankind within the generous folds of her robe. He saw, he said, The Queen
alone, alone against everything: “I did not want to paint her as a film star; I
saw her as a monarch, alone in the problems of her responsibility.” In both the
portraits there is a solemnity absent in virtually every other painting. Both
stand apart as exceptionally powerful images whose potency only grows as time
passes and her reign can be seen in retrospect.
Drawing on this, Beaton successfully produced an
alternative photographic formula for mid-20th-century regality, although The
Queen’s face is softened compared with the distant aura in both of Annigoni’s
pictures. The potency of this solution is reflected in the fact that Annie
Leibovitz was to reiterate the theme in her 2007 sitting in an extraordinarily
powerful image in which The Queen is presented almost as a portent, the
dramatic skyscape echoing the famous “Ditchley portrait” of her great namesake,
Elizabeth I, which hangs in the National Portrait Gallery.
In photographic terms, these are the great images of
Elizabeth II as queen. In terms of painting, are there others? Perhaps the only
other painter who has been able to disregard the baggage of the past has been
Lucian Freud in 2001 in a portrait which is difficult to place, for it was
commissioned for the Royal Collection. As a work of arguably one of the
greatest British painters of the century it cannot be ignored, but it was never
painted as a public image as both of the portraits by Annigoni were. It stands
apart as a hypnotic aberration in which The Queen wears an historic tiara while
attired in a blue day dress and ropes of pearl.
So far we have only explored one side of the public image
of The Queen. The other has been the response of the Palace to the
all-pervading cult of ordinariness, the long-term consequence of its role in
what was a “crowned republic”. The seeds of this were sown in the late 1930s
and 40s, but the pressure of egalitarianism, driven on by an ever more
intrusive media, demanded more and more intimate images of the monarch and her
family. More even than that, as the reign progressed, the monarchy had to
demonstrate that it was “value for money”, and its daily life, give or take a
bit, was to be seen as only a remove or two from middle-class living.
In 1969, the Palace bit the bullet and admitted the
television cameras. That watershed year released the media, enabling it to
cross barriers which up until then it would have been inconceivable to breach.
Much the same thing happened in the case of the visual
arts. Deconstructionism and the demise of deference saw the old tiara-ed image
of regal authority defiled. In the year of the Silver Jubilee, Jamie Reid’s
record sleeve and promotional publicity for the Sex Pistols single “God Save
The Queen” caused a sensation. The lyrics linked The Queen with a “fascist
regime”. In a sense, this assault on the royal image made it more rather than
less potent. The same might be said of Gilbert (born 1943) and George’s (born
1942) highly ambiguous postcard compositions. Although overtly conservative
monarchists, their work entitled Coronation Cross [1981] is a weird deployment
of postcards of Beaton’s coronation photograph of The Queen arranged in the
form of a cross, the quarters in-filled with cards depicting the ceiling of the
nave of Westminster Abbey. Is this casting the role of the monarch as living a
life which is akin to a crucifixion? We have no way of knowing.
To these we can add Andy Warhol’s (1928-87) 1985 reworking
of Peter Grugeon’s official photograph of The Queen for the Silver Jubilee of
1977 in terms of pop art. In this, the long tradition of official photographs
is virtually laid to rest, exposed as constructs and monuments to contrived
artifice. The irony is that Grugeon’s image lives on not thanks to his own
powers as a portrait photographer, but to the image being in a sense ennobled
and transposed by one of the century’s most acerbic commentators on fame in the
media age.
In these images we have travelled an enormous distance from
the safe world of the 1950s when The Queen’s image was unassailable at the
apogee of a society in which hierarchy still resonated. By 2012 all that had
gone. In a sense, The Queen, whether she liked it or not, had been packaged as
a product in the consumer age. The line between a film on her work as monarch
and head of state and a commercial is quite a fine one. The explosion of visual
material on this one woman is such that the result is the reverse of what one
would expect. In a sense these images tell us everything and nothing. The real
Elizabeth Windsor remains an enigma.
“The Queen:?Art and Image”, National Portrait Gallery, London , until 21 October; “Marcus Adams:?Royal Photographer—Photographs
from the Royal Collection”, Harewood House, Leeds, until 17 June, and the Russell-Cotes Art
Gallery &?Museum, Bournemouth , 29 June-16 September
The full version of Roy Strong’s essay “The Queen’s Image:
Perception and Reality” is in The Diamond Jubilee Opus, a limited-edition
celebration of Queen Elizabeth II’s 60 years as monarch, published by Opus
Media Group in large-format (around £2,500) and smaller (£195) versions. For
details or to pre-order, call 020 7213 9587 or visit www.thisisopus.com
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