Commissions

 

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BP Portrait Award
at the National Portrait Gallery


Commissioned portraits
Part of the first prize for winning the BP Portrait Award is a commission to paint a portrait that subsequently enters the Gallery's collection. The portraits below are some of the resulting commissions.


     

Paul Emsley
 Winner in 2007



V.S. Naipaul, by Paul Emsley, 2009 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

V.S. Naipaul
by Paul Emsley
2009
NPG 6875

Trinidadian-born novelist left the Caribbean for England in 1950 to study at Oxford. His first novel The Mystic Masseur (1957) was followed by his critical success A House for Mr Biswas (1961). Naipaul's literary themes include exile and displacement. In 1971 he won the Booker Prize with In a Free State. In 1990 he was Knighted and was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2001.
     
 
     

Dean Marsh
 Winner in 2005

Camila Batmanghelidjh, by Dean Marsh, 2008 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London; commissioned as part of the First Prize, BP Portrait Award, 2005

Camila Batmanghelidjh
by Dean Marsh
2008
NPG 6845

 

Batmanghelidjh is an Iranian-born psychotherapist and founder of the charity Kids Company which provides practical, emotional and educational support to vulnerable inner-city children and young people. The charity reaches 12,000 children a year and has raised £40 million since its beginnings in a disused railway arch in Camberwell, south London in 1996. Also founder of The Place 2 Be, a charity that offers school-based counselling services, Batmanghelidjh considers herself very privileged to be working with children whom she describes as extraordinarily courageous and dignified.
     
 
     

Stephen Shankland
 Winner in 2004

Sir Peter Mansfield, by Stephen Shankland, 2008 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Sir Peter Mansfield
by Stephen Shankland
2008
NPG 6836

Mansfield was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 2003 for his contribution to the invention of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). His vision and research have made widespread clinical use of the technique a reality. MRI scanners are today used in hospitals all over the world and it is estimated that over 60 million investigations with MRI are carried out every year. Mansfield is now working on the introduction of new applications for Nuclear Magnetic Resonance as a medical technique. 
     
 
     

Charlotte Harris
Winner in 2003

Dame Vivien Louise Duffield, by Charlotte Harris, 2005 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Dame Vivien Louise Duffield
by Charlotte Harris
2005
NPG 6765

Chairman, The Clore Foundation
     
 
     

Catherine Goodman
Winner in 2002

Dame Cicely Mary Strode Saunders, by Catherine Goodman, 2005 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Dame Cicely Mary Strode Saunders
by Catherine Goodman
2005
NPG 6704

Physician and Medical Director. A pioneer of modern palliative care, Dame Cicely Saunders established St. Christopher's Hospice in 1967 as the first research and teaching hospice linked with clinical care. St. Christopher's aims to provide the relief of 'total pain' through physical, psychological, social and spiritual care. Dame Cicely was President and a Founder Trustee of the Cicely Saunders Foundation, a charity set up in 2002 to improve the care of people at the end of life, wherever they are cared for.
       
 
     

Stuart Pearson Wright
Winner in 2001

J.K. Rowling, by Stuart Pearson Wright, 2005 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London; commissioned as part of the First Prize, BP Portrait Award, 2001

J.K. Rowling
by Stuart Pearson Wright
2005
NPG 6723

J. K. Rowling, creator of the Harry Potter books, has said that the character and plot came to her 'fully formed' during a train journey in 1990. She began writing shortly afterwards when she moved to Portugal to teach English. Later, as a single mother living in Edinburgh, she continued working on the manuscript in longhand. Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (1997), was the first of a planned series of seven - one for every year Potter spends at Hogwarts, a school for Wizards. The phenomenally successful series has the rare capacity to captivate both child and adult audiences alike. Her books have been translated into 61 languages, sold over a quarter of a billion copies worldwide and been made into major feature films.
     
 
 

Victoria Kate Russell
Winner in 2000 

Fiona Mary Shaw, by Victoria Kate Russell, 2001-2002 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Fiona Mary Shaw
by Victoria Kate Russell
2001-2002
NPG 6609

Irish born actress, who graduated from RADA in 1982. Often hailed as one of the finest classical performers in Britain. Her stage appearances are characteristically controversial and powerful, notably her title roles in Richard II, Electra and most recently Medea, all collaborations with director Deborah Warner. Theatre awards include two Laurence Olivier awards for best actress. Although foremost a stage performer, she has made film appearances in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, she played the hero's wicked Aunt Dursley.

Victoria Russell graduated from Central St Martin's College of Art with a first class degree in Fine Art in 1994 before undertaking a diploma at the Royal Academy Schools.

 

Clive Smith
Winner in 1999

Ian McKellen, by Clive Smith, 2001-2002 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Ian McKellen
by Clive Smith
2001-2002
NPG 6610

Actor of stage and screen. Widely regarded as one of the leading actors of his generation Has played numerous leads in the classical and modern repertoire in theatres worldwide. Born in Burnley and educated at Cambridge University, he made his London debut in A Scent of Flowers (1964). His stage performances, particularly of Shakespeare, are legendary and include title roles in Richard II (1969) and Macbeth, in which he played opposite Dame Judi Dench (1976-7). Nominated for two Academy Awards for his performances in Gods and Monsters (1998) and as Gandalf the Grey in Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Rings (2002).

 

Tomas Watson
Winner in 1998 

John Robert Fowles, by Tomas Watson, 2001 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

John Robert Fowles
by Tomas Watson
2001
NPG 6584

Novelist born in Leigh-on-Sea and educated at Edinburgh University and New College, Oxford, where he studied French and German. A master of layered story-telling, illusionism and ambiguous endings, he has worked in a variety of genres from psychological thriller, The Collector (1963) to mythological magic realism, The Magus (1966). His semi-historical novel, The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969) was made into a film in 1981, directed by Karel Reisz with Meryl Streep in the title role and screenplay by Harold Pinter.

 

James Lloyd
Winner in 1997

Sir Paul Brierley Smith, by James Lloyd, 1998 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Sir Paul Brierley Smith
by James Lloyd
1998
NPG 6441

Clothes designer; founder of Paul Smith Ltd Nottingham (1970), wholesaler in 34 countries with shops in London, Nottingham, New York, Paris and the Far East. Member of the Design Council and the Government appointed Creative Industries Taskforce; knighted 2000.

James Lloyd held the Paul Smith scholarship at the Slade School of Art (1994-6). The portrait was painted in the artist's studio near London Bridge; in the background on the right is a photograph of an earlier painting by James Lloyd in Paul Smith's collection.


 

James Hague
Winner in 1996

Michael Caine, by James Hague, 1998 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Michael Caine
by James Hague
1998
NPG 6411

Actor of international fame whose numerous film roles have included those in Zulu (1963), The Ipcress File (1965), Sleuth (1973) and Educating Rita (1983).

 

Ishbel Myerscough
Winner in 1995

Helen Mirren, by Ishbel Myerscough, 1997 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Helen Mirren
by Ishbel Myerscough
1997
NPG 6415

Stage and screen actress; her distinguished career ranges from the Royal Shakespeare Company to Hollywood roles and the huge success of the television series Prime Suspect, in which she plays DCI Jane Tennison.

Ishbel Myserscough, who trained at Glasgow School of Art, paints entirely from life and is used to frequent and prolonged sittings with her subjects. The small scale of this portrait reflects the artist's solution to capturing a busy sitter: the work was completed in one week at Helen Mirren's house in Los Angeles.


 

Peter Edwards
Winner in 1994

Kazuo Ishiguro, by Peter Edwards, 1995 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Kazuo Ishiguro
by Peter Edwards
1995
NPG 6332

Novelist; born in Japan, came to England aged six; author of The Remains of the Day (1989, winner of the Booker Prize and adapted for the screen), The Unconsoled (1995) and his latest work, When We Were Orphans, published in April 2000.

Link
Peter Edwards' website


 

Philip Harris
Winner in 1993

Sir Anthony Dowell, by Philip Harris, 1995 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Sir Anthony Dowell
by Philip Harris
1995
NPG 6331

A dancer and (since 1986) Director of the Royal Ballet; among the most notable roles Dowell has created are Oberon in The Dream (1964), Troyte in Enigma Variations (1968) and Beliaev in A Month in the Country (1976).

 

Lucy Willis
Winner in 1992

Francis Pakenham, Lord Longford; Author, publisher, politician and penal reformer. Elizabeth Pakenham, Lady Longford; Historian and biographer.

 

Justin Mortimer
Winner in 1991

Harold Pinter, by Justin Mortimer, 1992 - NPG  - © National Portrait Gallery, London

Harold Pinter
by Justin Mortimer
1992
NPG 6185

Playwright, director and (from 1949-57) actor; his highly influential plays include The Caretaker (1960), The Birthday Party (1957) and Party Time (1991); screenplays include Accident (1967) and The French Lieutenant's Woman (1981).

 

Annabel Cullen
Winner in 1990

Minister of State for Education and Employment (since 1997); Master of Birkbeck College (1987-1997); Chairman of the BBC's General Advisory Council (1987-1991)