Andy Warhol
As Matt Wrbican, Archivist of The Warhol in Pittsburgh, attests, 'the halls of royal castles and the inheritors of Crown Jewels were an obsession for most of his [Warhol's] life'.[iii] With their regal paraphernalia and assertive poses, the Reigning Queens are unique in Warhol's oeuvre for their reverential formality, though enlivened by the artist's signature Pop style. In Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom Warhol simplifies, and so amplifies, the key components of the image. The Queen's features are smoothed, the contrast between dark and light areas is heightened and bold outlines to the contours of her face and dress are added.
As described by art historian and professor Cécile Whiting, in such portraits Warhol 'exaggerated the appearance and style of both the subjects themselves and the mass-produced photographic images by which they are known'. Whiting continues that Warhol's paintings are not about 'real people at all, but about their public image in its purest form'.[iv]
Testament to their art historical significance, Warhol's portraits of Queen Elizabeth II are held in some of the most prestigious public collections in the UK, notably those of Tate and the National Portrait Gallery. In 2012, a Royal Edition portfolio was acquired by The Royal Collection to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee and was exhibited at Windsor Castle in the exhibition The Queen: Portraits of a Monarch. Appropriately, considering the circumstances of this royal acquisition, the Royal Edition of Reigning Queens is finished with finely applied lines of the art material 'diamond dust', sparkly crystals of cut glass which exaggerate the glamour and majesty of this extraordinary monarch.
[i] Royal Collection Trust, 'Warhol Portraits Acquired for the Royal Collection', 24 September 2012
[ii] Andy Warhol quoted in David Carrier, 'Andy Warhol's moving Pictures of Modern Life', Notes in the History of Art, Vol. 16, No. 3 (Spring, 1997) p. 3
[iii] Matt Wrbican, 'Minding his Ps and Qs: Warhol's Royals and Other Queens' in Henriette Dedichen (ed.), Warhol's Queens (Hatje Cantz, 2013), p. 104
[iv] Cécile Whiting, 'Andy Warhol, the Public Star and the Private Self', Oxford Art Journal, vol. 10, no. 2, The 60s (1987), p. 58
(Image) Portrait of Andy Warhol (1928 - 1987) as he holds a silkscreen print of Queen Elizabeth II in his studio, the Factory, New York, New York, 1985. (Photo by Derek Hudson/Getty Images)