Opinion: What I noticed immediately about King Charles’ portrait | CNN (2024)

Opinion: What I noticed immediately about King Charles’ portrait | CNN (1)

Artist Jonathan Yeo and King Charles III with Charles' official portrait.

Editor’s Note: Holly Thomas is a writer and editor based in London. She is morning editor at Katie Couric Media. She tweets@HolstaT. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author. Viewmore opinionon CNN.

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King Charles III’sfirst official portrait wasunveiled this week, and I’m sure his majesty would agree it’s a stirring sight. Thelarger-than-lifepainting by Jonathan Yeo depicts Charles from the mid-thigh upwards. He’s wearing his crimson Welsh Guards uniform, and both hands rest on the hilt of his sword. Almost the entire canvas, besides his hands and head, is awash in a fiery red. He’s looking straight ahead, the shadow of a wry smile on his lips. A butterfly hovers over his right shoulder.

Opinion: What I noticed immediately about King Charles’ portrait | CNN (2)

Holly Thomas

Yeo has offered a partial explanation of his artistic decisions. The butterfly, he said,representshow Charles’ “role in our public life has transformed.” Apparently it was Charles’ idea, the product of some impressive reverse engineering during which Yeo picked the King’s brain for visual clues with which future schoolchildren might dissect the portrait’s meaning. “He said,‘What about a butterfly landing on my shoulder?’” Yeorecalled.

Unfortunately for Yeo, Charlesand the butterfly, nothing about the portrait has garnered nearly so much comment as its dominant color. One commentator on the Royal Family’sofficial Instagram feedremarked that it looked as though the King was “burning in hell,” while another said it gives the impression that he “has a lot of blood on his hands.” One less earnest observer wrote, “Tampax the third,” perhaps in reference to one of the King’s moreembarrassingappearancesin the British press.

Intriguing though these insights are, the first thing I noticed about the painting wasn’t its menstrual overtones, but what they obscured. The King’s body is almost entirely opaque. He’s fading into the background, the outline of his ceremonial uniformblurred out of focus. It’s a fitting representation of a man once known forcholeric asides, now obliged by his elevated role to keep his personal feelings private. He’s withdrawn, but his aristocratic silhouette remains.

Like most Brits, I’ve known Charles as a prince for most of my life. His reputation as a frustrated king-in-waiting was exacerbated by his tendency to voice his opinions on subjects close to his heart. He petitioned government ministers at the highest levels in his notorioussecret“black spider memos,”offering his thoughts on issues from the Iraq War to environmental interests. Months before Queen Elizabeth II’sdeath, he wasoverhearddenouncing the government’s “appalling” Rwanda policy.

LONDON, ENGLAND - MAY 14: Artist Jonathan Yeo and King Charles III stand in front of the portrait of the King Charles III by artist Jonathan Yeo as it is unveiled in the blue drawing room at Buckingham Palace on May 14, 2024 in London, England. The portrait was commissioned in 2020 to celebrate the then Prince of Wales's 50 years as a member of The Drapers' Company in 2022. The artwork depicts the King wearing the uniform of the Welsh Guards, of which he was made Regimental Colonel in 1975. The canvas size - approximately 8.5 by 6.5 feet when framed - was carefully considered to fit within the architecture of Drapers' Hall and the context of the paintings it will eventually hang alongside. Jonathan Yeo had four sittings with the King, beginning when he was Prince of Wales in June 2021 at Highgrove, and later at Clarence House. The last sitting took place in November 2023 at Clarence House. Yeo also worked from drawings and photographs he took, allowing him to work on the portrait in his London studio between sittings. (Photo by Aaron Chown-WPA Pool/Getty Images) Aaron Chown/WPA Pool/Getty Images video Related video ‘Poster for a horror film’: Royal expert reacts to King Charles’ official portrait

Now bound by the monarch’s constitutional duty to remain politically neutral, Charles has reined in those impulses and gone through the prescribed motions. In his firstspeech to parliamentas head of state last November, he was obliged to announce Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s promise to grant annual North Sea oil and gas exploration licenses, plus abill banning councilsfrom passing environmental rules the government sees as penalizing motorists. It can’t have sat well with a manwho,in 2021,describedCOP26 as the “last chance saloon” to combat climate change.

Besides these ceremonial outings, Charles has recently been less prominent in British public life than ever, particularly following theannouncementin February of his cancer diagnosis. He’s understandably kept a low profile since — blending, like his artistic avatar, into the background. But while his public persona has undoubtedly evolved, his private attitudes appear less flexible.

Charles has longmade it clearthat he intends to usher in a more streamlined, cost-effective monarchy thatrelies lesson taxpayer-funded handouts. However, as Tina Brown notes in her excellentbook“The Palace Papers,”this wouldn’t entail much sacrificefor the late Queen’seldest son.

Charles’ private wealth dwarfs that of any other member of his family. As Prince of Wales, his income was largely generated by the Duchy of Cornwall, whichowns 52,449 hectares (more than 200 square miles) of land, including extensive farming, residential and commercial properties. InNovemberoflastyear, theGuardianrevealed that another of hishereditary estates, the Duchy of Lancaster, has been profiting from the deaths of thousands of its tenants by collecting financial assets owned by people who die without a will or next of kin.Buckingham Palace did not comment to the Guardian. A representative for the Duchy of Lancaster indicated that after his mother’s death, the king endorsed extending the policy of using “bona vacantia” funds on “restoration and repair of qualifying buildings in order to protect and preserve them for future generations.”

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      In the last 10 years alone, that system hasreportedlymade King Charles more than £60 million ($76 million) richer. Last year, the Guardianestimatedhis total net worth at around £1.8 billion (about $2.3 billion). This puts Charles’ financial position instark contrastwith those members of hisextended familywho’ve historically relied on the monarch’s generosity to make ends meet. Paying one’s own way is significantly easier when one is a landed billionaire.

      Considering that Charles has displayedno intentionof splitting his inheritance with his siblings (or anyone else), it seems safe to assume that his private outlook has not evolved alongside his public persona.This, I think, is the contrast that Yeo best captures in his new work. Charles’ body is camouflaged and a little withdrawn, but his gaze remains clear, the expression instantly recognizable. As QueenCamilla apparentlyremarkedas soon as it was unveiled: “Yes, you’ve got him.”

      Opinion: What I noticed immediately about King Charles’ portrait | CNN (2024)
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