Dame Carol Ann Duffy

1 portrait of Dame Carol Ann Duffy

© Peter Everard Smith

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Dame Carol Ann Duffy

by Peter Everard Smith
C-type colour print, August 2005
12 1/4 in. x 17 5/8 in. (312 mm x 449 mm) image size
Purchased, 2010
Photographs Collection
NPG x134329

Sitterback to top

Artistback to top

  • Peter Everard Smith (1943-), Photographer. Artist or producer of 8 portraits, Sitter in 1 portrait.

This portraitback to top

Photographed at the Aldeburgh Poetry Festival, where Peter Everard Smith has been official photographer for the Poetry Trust since 2003.

Related worksback to top

  • NPG 7145: 'Work in Progress' (based on same portrait)

Linked publicationsback to top

  • 100 Pioneering Women, p. 143 Read entry

    Dame Carol Ann Duffy (b.1955) is a poet, playwright and children’s writer. In 2009, she succeeded Andrew Motion as Britain’s Poet Laureate, and in doing so became the first woman, Scot and openly LGBT person to hold the position in its 400-year history. Her poetry collections include Standing Female Nude (1985); Selling Manhattan (1987), which won the Somerset Maugham Award; Mean Time (1993), winner of the Whitbread Poetry Award and Forward Prize; and the T.S. Eliot Prize-winning Rapture (2005). Oppression, gender, love and violence are key themes in her writing, and her poems are regularly studied in schools. As a playwright, Duffy’s work has been performed at the Liverpool Playhouse, Almeida Theatre, London, and the National Theatre.

  • 100 Writers, p. 162

Placesback to top

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Events of 2005back to top

Current affairs

London suffers its worst bomb attack since the Second World War when four devices are detonated during rush hour on public transport. Three of the bombs went off on tube trains, and one on a bus killing 56 people and injuring 700. A Leeds-based terror cell of British born or raised Islamic extremists committed the attacks.
John Sentamu becomes the first black Archbishop of the Church of England.

Art and science

As part of the international Make Poverty History campaign, ten Live 8 concerts are held simultaneously around the world to coincide with the meeting of the G8 and persuade the world's richest countries to 'drop the debt' owed by the world's poorest countries, increase aid to the world's poorest people and negotiate fairer international trade rules.

International

1,836 die in America as a result of Hurricane Katrina and the subsequent flooding. The hurricane was the most costly in US history and one of the most deadly. It caused the levees of Lake Pontchartrain to break, which flooded 80% of New Orleans. About one million people evacuated the city while 25,000 stayed behind, many taking refuge in the city's Superdome.

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