HRH The Duchess of Cambridge

Until the 27 August 2013

On display in Room 39

NPG 6956 - © National Portrait Gallery, London

HRH The Duchess of Cambridge
b.1982
By Paul Emsley (b.1947)
Oil on canvas, 2012
1152 x 965 (45 3/8 x 38)
NPG 6956

© National Portrait Gallery, London; A National Portrait Gallery commission given by Sir Hugh Leggatt in memory of Sir Denis Mahon through the Art Fund

The National Portrait Gallery is delighted that our Patron HRH The Duchess of Cambridge has given birth to a son and the Director, Deputy Director and all the staff send their warmest congratulations to the Royal couple on this wonderful occasion.

Discover portraits of Royal babies in the Collection

Catherine Elizabeth Middleton, now Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge, was born in Berkshire and attended Marlborough College. The Duchess studied at the British Institute in Florence before enrolling at the University of St Andrews in Fife to study History of Art. She married His Royal Highness Prince William at Westminster Abbey on 29 April 2011. In January 2012, St James’s Palace announced The Duchess’s patronage of five charities, one of which is the National Portrait Gallery. Her first solo public engagement was the opening of the Lucian Freud Portraits exhibition and Her Royal Highness has shown a keen interest in portraiture and photography in particular.

The first official painted portrait The Duchess of Cambridge is currently on display in Room 39. The artist, Glasgow-born Paul Emsley, grew up in South Africa and won first prize in the BP Portrait Award (2007). Painting Her Royal Highness at the beginning of her public life, The Duchess was able to give Emsley two sittings, the first at Kensington Palace and the second at the artist’s studio.

Paul Emsley says: ‘The Duchess explained that she would like to be portrayed naturally - her natural self - as opposed to her official self. She struck me as enormously open and generous and a very warm person. After initially feeling it was going to be an unsmiling portrait I think it was the right choice in the end to have her smiling - that is really who she is.’

 

Until the 27 August