Guernsey Press

New sculptures of Queen and Philip to complete Royal Albert Hall

Life-size figures of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert will also be unveiled with the Queen and the duke’s next year.

Published

The Royal Albert Hall has commissioned two new life-size sculptures of the Queen and the late Duke of Edinburgh to mark its 150th anniversary.

The bronze figures – along with two new statues of the Queen Victoria and Prince Albert – will be permanent additions to the historic London venue and will be unveiled next summer.

The artworks of the Queen and Philip, depicting them in the mid-1960s, pay tribute to the couple’s shared lifetime of service, and the late duke’s “faithful devotion” to his wife, as he gazes towards her.

Unpacking of design maquettes for sculptures of the Queen, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert
Unpacking of design maquettes for sculptures of the Queen, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert (Andy Paradise/Royal Albert Hall/PA)

Philip, the nation’s longest-serving consort, died aged 99 in April and the Queen, who is set to mark her Platinum Jubilee in 2022, has been under doctors’ orders to rest for nearly a month, and has also sprained her back.

The Royal Albert Hall was conceived by Albert – the Prince Consort – and opened by Queen Victoria – who named it in memory of her late husband.

Maquettes of the sculptures – two Queens and their beloved consorts – arrived at the venue this week, ahead of the creation of the full-size pieces.

BAFTA Preparations – London
The Royal Albert Hall (Matt Crossick/PA)

Poignantly, on her wrist will be the Edinburgh wedding bracelet, which Philip gave as a present to his new bride in 1947.

The Queen is shown in evening dress with long gloves, in a gown inspired by the Sir Norman Hartnell era.

The maquette of the Queen
The maquette of the Queen (Andy Paradise/PA)

Both wear the Order of the Garter riband, with Order of the Garter Star and The Lesser George.

Poppy Field, who designed the Queen and Philip’s statues, took inspiration from Dorothy Wilding’s portraits of the couple ahead of their wedding.

“One of Dorothy Wilding’s particularly poignant July 1947 photographs captures Prince Philip looking over to the Queen, who looks directly out to the viewer,” she said.

“Taken just a few months before their marriage, this image symbolises Prince Philip’s faithful devotion to the Queen and the Queen’s promise to the nation.”

Design models of Victoria and Albert
Design models of Victoria and Albert (Andy Paradise/PA)

The stone figures of Victoria and Albert will be by Tom Brown and Tom Nicholls of London Stone Carving.

The two couples will be captured at similar ages, with the Queen in her late thirties and Philip in his early forties.

Prince Albert died in 1861 at the age of 42. Victoria and Albert were both 32 in the year of the Great Exhibition.

Models of Philip and the Queen made as part of the design process
Models of Philip and the Queen made as part of the design process (Andy Paradise/Royal Albert Hall/PA)

The Queen is patron of the Royal Albert Hall, but missed the Festival of Remembrance it staged on Saturday after being told to rest, following preliminary investigations in hospital in October 20.

Ian McCulloch, president of the Royal Albert Hall said: “The Hall is in our temporary stewardship, and it’s our duty to ensure it is here to inspire generations to come.

“As well as launching artistic and engagement programmes as part of our 150th anniversary celebrations, we wanted to commemorate the milestone with something tangible, and these sculptures will finally complete the facade of our glorious Grade I-listed building.

“This anniversary gives us the opportunity to recognise the enduring support of our Royal patrons, and leave a legacy of public art of a high quality and craftsmanship, for which we are honoured to commission the QEST scholars.”

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.