2023 Coronation commissions

For the Coronation of Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla, the Government Art Collection has commissioned leading British and British-based artists right across the UK to create striking new artworks.

A woman in a raincoat is drawing in front of a crowd

Artist Joy Gerrard sketching among the crowds on Coronation Day

Working in paint, pencil, photography and sculpture, these new artworks will reflect upon this historic event’s social, cultural and spiritual significance. As well as recording responses to the Coronation, these works will explore themes of sustainability, diversity, community and youth associated with King Charles III’s reign. Eventually, these new artworks will become part of the Government Art Collection and support its public programme.

In 1953, for the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, the Ministry of Works commissioned notable artists of the day such as L.S. Lowry and Dame Laura Knight. The 2023 commissions will bring new energy to this tradition. Located across England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland and in New York, each artist will offer their own take on the Coronation’s meaning to them personally and to the region they are based in.

In London, Cornelia Parker, Hew Locke and Dale Lewis will offer responses to events in Westminster, while Joy Gerrard will survey the crowds that gathered in both London and Belfast. Leslie Thompson will capture the excitement of the events that took place in Manchester, and Vanley Burke will record the reactions of communities in Birmingham. In Wales, Mohamed Hassan has photographed a range of neighbourhood festivities and, in Scotland, Sophie Gerrard has documented reactions to the day within rural communities. Further afield, British-born US-based artist Shantell Martin has offered her own response to the Coronation in New York City.

Cornelia Parker

Cornelia Parker, studio, London, 2013 © Anne-Katrin Purkiss. All Rights Reserved, DACS/Artimage 2023.

Cornelia Parker RA (born 1956) lives and works in London. One of Britain’s most celebrated artists, she works across sculpture, installation, embroidery, drawing, photography and film to investigate processes of transformation and suspension and to explore the times in which we live. Over the last three decades, Parker has presented numerous major commissions and solo exhibitions nationally and internationally, most recently at Tate Britain (2022), the Museum of Contemporary Art Australia (2019), Westminster Hall, Palace of Westminster (2017) and Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2016). In 2010, Parker was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts and made an OBE. She received a CBE in 2022. In 2017, she was appointed as the first female Election Artist for the United Kingdom General Election. Her works are held in public and private collections around the world, including the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston, the Fundación “la Caixa” in Barcelona, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

I have made art in collaboration with British institutions such as the British Army, the Police, HM Customs and Excise and exhibited in the Palace of Westminster as Election Artist. My latest works made for my 2022 Tate retrospective have titles such as Flag and Island so perhaps it is inevitable that a royal theme beckons. Being invited to make a work in response to the Coronation might be a once in a lifetime opportunity, so it is one I have decided to wholeheartedly embrace.

– Cornelia Parker

Dale Lewis

Dale Lewis

Dale Lewis (born 1980) was born in London, where he continues to live and work. His large-scale paintings draw on his immediate surroundings and his personal memories to reflect on the realities of contemporary urban life. Lewis’ monumental compositions inherit the scale and compositional structures of Renaissance paintings and explore similar themes of metamorphosis and transcendence, but his paintings frequently invert such traditions to explore their modern parallels. Lewis has had recent solo exhibitions in London at Block 336 (2021), Edel Assanti (2020 & 2018), in Los Angeles at Nino Mier Gallery (2019) and exhibited internationally, most recently in China, Austria and Mexico. In 2016, Lewis was the recipient of the Jerwood Painting Fellowship. His work features in a number of international collections, including the Arsenal Contemporary Art (Montreal), The Roberts Institute of Art (London), Fundación AMMA (Mexico City), Saatchi Gallery (London), Zabludowicz Collection (London) and the Hort Foundation (New York).

My work has always focused on British society, its history and traditions as a source of inspiration. I’m looking forward to capturing the spectacle, absorbing the energy of the crowds and being amongst people from all walks of life from across the country.

– Dale Lewis

Hew Locke

Hew Locke. Photo © Danny Cozens.

Hew Locke RA (born 1959) was born in Edinburgh, Scotland. He spent his formative years in Georgetown, Guyana, before returning to the UK to study, settling in London where he continues to live and work. Locke fuses historical source material with a keen interest in current affairs, often through the juxtaposition or modification of existing artefacts. Through such altered objects, he explores the visual language of power and the symbols through which different cultures assume and assert identity. Locke’s previous work has been particularly focused on the UK, the monarchy and his childhood home of the then newly-independent Guyana. In 2022, Locke presented The Procession at Tate Britain and, later that year, unveiled Gilt, the Façade Commission at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Locke’s work is in the permanent collections of the Tate and the British Museum, Brooklyn Museum (New York) and Pérez Art Museum (Miami), among others. 

I have always been interested in the visual expression of national identity, both planned and spontaneous. The symbolism of this major public display, put on for a national and international audience, promises to be interesting and revealing.

– Hew Locke

Joy Gerrard

Joy Gerrard. Photo © Kate-Bowe O’Brien.

Joy Gerrard (born 1971) was born in County Tipperary, Republic of Ireland, and today lives and works in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Working across print, photography, painting and large-scale public sculpture, Gerrard’s work investigates different systems of relations between crowds, architecture and the built environment. Most recently, Gerrard has produced large-scale ink on paper works to recreate global political events. Solo and group exhibitions include the Royal Academy of Arts (2022), Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery (2022) and Ulster Museum (2022), and she has exhibited widely overseas, including most recently in Austria and Sweden. Since 2004, Gerrard has installed several public installations, including at the London School of Economics and at Westminster Hospital. In 2020 Gerrard was elected an Associate member of the Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin and in 2023 she was a Golden Art Foundation Fellow (New York, USA).

I am excited to have an opportunity to witness this symbolic, historical moment in person. I will concentrate on community, audiences, spectators and crowds both in London and Belfast, where I live and on the different experiences of being present at the event versus viewing it through news and social media.

– Joy Gerrard

Leslie Thompson

Leslie Thompson

Leslie Thompson (born 1970) is a Manchester-based visual artist. His work, produced in collaboration with Venture Arts Studios (an art studio that works with learning disabled and neurodivergent artists) draws on his own memories, as well as popular cultural references from the 1970s and 1980s, to produce vibrant drawings, most often in ink but also on textile, in ceramic and in paint. While some of Thompson’s drawings allude to his upbringing in Manchester’s Moss Side area, others depict a rich array of flora and fauna or focus on the details of architectural assemblages. Often commissioned to produce live drawings, Thompson has gained a reputation as one of Britain’s most dynamic mural artists. His work has been exhibited widely across the UK, including exhibitions at The Lowry, Salford (2023), Paper Gallery, Manchester (2022) and Project Ability, Glasgow (2017) and, in 2019, his work was exhibited in Tokyo. Thompson’s work is held in private and public collections across the UK.

It’s fantastic to be chosen to draw the King’s coronation. I’ve seen him on TV for many years.  I look forward to drawing all the people, the horse and carriage, the crown, and the London buildings, as well as people celebrating in Manchester.

– Leslie Thompson

Mohamed Hassan

Mohamed Hassan

Mohamed Hassan (born 1984), born in Alexandria, Egypt, has been living and working in West Wales since 2007. Through photography, Hassan focuses on themes of identity and belonging and explores the lived experiences of those on society’s margins. His work investigates how both people and place shape how we experience the world, and his photographs incorporate autobiographical elements that reflect his own cultural heritage and personal relationship to rural Wales. Hassan has won several awards for his work and exhibited internationally, most recently in the Facing Britain exhibition, which toured Germany and Poland, as well as in solo exhibitions in Cairo, Egypt. His UK exhibitions have included shows at the Glynn Vivian (Swansea), Ffotogallery (Cardiff), Mission Gallery (Swansea), The National Waterfront Museum (Swansea), Oriel Davies (Newtown), and the National Portrait Gallery (London).

The Coronation of King Charles III is an extraordinary and remarkable historic event. I am inspired by the symbols of tradition and national unity at its heart, and excited to capture the celebrations in Wales in a way that expresses the uniqueness and diversity of the Welsh nation.

– Mohamed Hassan

Shantell Martin

Shantell Martin © Cole Haann.

Shantell Martin (born 1980) was born in London and today lives and works between Los Angeles and New York. A public speaker, philosopher, cultural facilitator, curator, choreographer, songwriter and performer, Martin produces live illustrations, frequently at scale and often as part of live collaborations, exploring themes such as intersectionality, identity, and play. Martin has had solo shows at the Denver Art Museum, the New Britain Museum of American Art and produced commissions for the Museum of Modern Art (New York) and the New York City Ballet, as well as working with a number of high-profile musicians and designers.

Art is such a beautiful and meaningful way to capture moments in history. I’m super excited to bring my perspective, experience and skill set to such a momentous occasion in celebration of British culture and heritage.

– Shantell Martin

Sophie Gerrard

Sophie Gerrard

Sophie Gerrard (born 1978) is a photographic artist based in Edinburgh, Scotland. Gerrard’s practice is characterised by sensitive and evocative visual exploration of the natural environment and our relationship to it. Central themes are people, environmental connection, identity and belonging, drawing from archives and personal narratives. Her work is often as much an exploration of others’ lives and connections with landscape as her own. Alongside being regularly published in international newspapers, Gerrard’s work has been exhibited in The Museum Europäischer Kulturen (Berlin), The Wardlaw Museum (St Andrews), The Martin Parr Foundation, The Photographers’ Gallery, The Scottish National Portrait Gallery, OFF and Perth Museum & Art Gallery. Her work is held in private and national collections across the UK and overseas. 

Exploring themes of people, place and sustainability are key elements of my practice, and I’m interested to see how my work can contribute overall to the bigger picture of this historic event.

– Sophie Gerrard

Vanley Burke

Vanley Burke

Vanley Burke (born 1951) has lived and worked in Birmingham since 1965, when he moved as a child to the UK from St. Thomas, Jamaica. Often described as the ‘Godfather of Black British photography,’ Burke is one of Britain’s foremost photographers, renowned for creating powerful imagery that exhibits great empathy for his subjects and challenges negative stereotypes toward British Black communities. Over a decades-long career, Burke has received much praise within the UK and internationally, especially for his striking images of Birmingham, his home city. Burke has had recent solo shows across Birmingham, most recently at Ikon Gallery (2022 & 2015) and Soho House (2022 & 2013), as well as in more publicly accessible settings such as community centres, pubs and churches across the city. Recent London shows have included the Victoria & Albert Museum and Whitechapel Gallery. In 2022, Burke was the recipient of a Paul Hamlyn Award for his contribution to visual art. His works are held in various collections, including Tate and the Arts Council, and his personal archive, the Vanley Burke Archive, was recently deposited at the Library of Birmingham.

Despite differing opinions on the monarchy and the role of the royal family in our country and lives, we cannot overlook the significance of this event in our nation’s history. My objective in this commission is to capture the essence of this event for communities in Birmingham, highlighting its cultural significance and historical value.

– Vanley Burke

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