Arts

    Duke and Duchess Cambridge launch public art exhibition showing portraits of a nation in lockdown

    The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with PhD student and volunteer Sami Massalami Ayad

    London's Waterloo station enjoyed a royal sighting this morning as Prince William and Kate Middleton—the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge—pounded the pavements to inspect a series of billboards that mark the nationwide launch of Hold Still,a public exhibition of portraits taken across the UK during lockdown. This ambitious community project, which invited people of all ages to submit a photographic portrait taken during a six-week-long period during May and June this year, was spearheaded by the Duchess in partnership with the National Portrait Gallery (NPG), of which she is a patron.

    “She got in touch with the idea about a week after lockdown and we began discussing it—it all happened very quickly,” says the NPG's director Nicholas Cullinan. “We were curious about what the response would be, and we got more than 31,000 entries, which was incredible.”

    A judging panel which included Cullinan, the Duchess—who has a degree in art history and wrote her BA thesis on Victorian photography—and the poet Lemn Sissay then whittled down the entries from 31,598 to 100. This final selection of what Cullinan describes as “extraordinary images from all across the country” has been viewable since September as an online exhibition on the NPG’s website, where it has already received nearly five million viewings. Now this collective portrait of a quarantined nation will be emblazoned on billboards across more than 100 sites in 80 towns, cities and rural locations throughout the UK until 6 December.

    Sami Massalami Ayad in front of his Hold Still portrait Sami (2020) by Grey Hutton
    Photo: David Parry

    For this morning’s launch, the Duke and Duchess insisted on visiting all four poster sites around Waterloo station in a prolonged walkabout, which caused consternation for their security officers but much excitement for the customers at a nearby KFC when the royal couple stopped for a chat. They were accompanied by Cullinan and Steve Murrells, chief executive of the Co-op Group, which have arranged, booked and paid for all the outdoor poRead More – Source

    [contf] [contfnew]

    the art news paper

    [contfnewc] [contfnewc]

    Related Articles

    Arts

    Which City Is Art Capital of The US?

    Exploring the art scene in the United States is an exciting and...

    Arts

    The cultural moments that defined 2021

     Year two of the pandemic was, in many ways, just as challenging and...

    Arts

    Julia Ducournau explains the crippling love beneath her beautiful dark twisted fantasy ‘Titane’

    cnn– Julia Ducournau lights a cigarette, as if to punctuate her point....

    Arts

    ‘Priceless’ 16th century globe could be the oldest ever auctioned

    cnn– A16th century globe depicting the world before Australia had even been...