Lennon,
Thatcher, Henry VIII star in 'Face of Britain'
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[November 17, 2015] By
Jeremy Gaunt
LONDON (Reuters) - What do
John Lennon, Margaret Thatcher, Henry VIII and West
Indian immigrants in 1956 London have in common? They
are all, according to British historian Simon Schama,
part of "The Face of Britain".
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Schama - known to worldwide audiences for his 15-part
documentary "A History Of Britain" - has curated a small but
delightfully precise exhibition at London's National Portrait
Gallery.
It takes a thematic approach. Rather than starting with
portraits of early Britons and heading towards the modern, the
exhibition is presented in five rooms dedicated to "Power",
"Love", "Fame", "Self" and "People".
This approach allows for some fascinating juxtapositions.
In "Power", for example, Thatcher, Britain's first woman prime
minister, shares space with Henry VIII, the king who ruled
England from 1509 to 1547.
Both portraits - respectively, a sitting by Rodrigo Moynihan and
a painting by George Vertue after Remigius van Leemout and Hans
Holbein the Younger - tell a tale about their subjects.
Henry is portrayed with his third wife, Jane Seymour, but also
with his parents Henry VII and Elizabeth of York. The message is
one of legitimacy in a dynasty - the Tudors - that at the time
was still fairly vulnerable.
The Thatcher portrait was apparently subject to much
interference from the sitter, who was renowned for her strident
views and penchant for control. The painting, as a result, is
rather bland.
Elegant juxtapositions continue in the "Love" gallery, where
Beatle Lennon shares the walls with George, prince of Wales, and
his older, commoner mistress of circa 1784 onwards, Maria
Fitzherbert.
Both have poignant stories. The Lennon portrait - the famous
photograph by Annie Leibowitz of a naked Lennon curled up on his
(clothed) wife Yoko Ono - was taken just a few hours before he
was assassinated in 1980.
George, meanwhile, is said to have died as King George IV in
1830 with a miniature of Fitzherbert around his neck.
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"The craving to keep the ones we love close to us never goes away,"
says in an introduction to the "Love" gallery. "If they can't be
with us, having their likeness can turn absence into presence,
divide distance and even defy death."
ORDINARY PEOPLE
The exhibition, befitting the nature of the gallery itself, does not
limit itself to painting and photographs.
For example, pride of place in the "Fame" room - where Diana,
princess of Wales, Horatio Nelson and William Shakespeare can be
found - is a display of 50 cigarette cards from 1926 of contemporary
celebrities, including a youngish Winston Churchill, Charlie Chaplin
and G.K. Chesterton.
Elsewhere, there is a lenticular portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II,
and sculptor Marc Quinn's self-portrait made with his own blood.
Ordinary people also get a look in. A series of photographs taken in
Torquay around 1900 present people such as a chair mender and a crab
salesman.
Similarly, Jamaican-born photographer Charlie Phillips offers a
glimpse at London's pre-gentifried multi-racial Notting Hill Gate.
The exhibition, which is free, runs until January 4. A link can be
found at: http://www.npg.org.uk/whatson/simon-schamas-face-of-britain/exhibition.php
(Editing by Michael Roddy and Gareth Jones)
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