Gallery seeks portrait artist for poll winner
Gallery seeks portrait artist for poll winner
The New Zealand Portrait Gallery is
looking for an artist to
paint a picture of the late
Celia Lashlie who won a poll in
which members of the
public were asked “Who’s missing?
from the national
collection held on the Wellington
waterfront.
The face
of Lashlie, the social justice campaigner who
achieved
worldwide fame for telling mothers how to handle
their
teenage sons, will join those of The Queen, Kiri
te
Kanawa, Sir Edmund Hillary and about 200 others at
the
gallery.
She was a runaway winner when the public
were asked to vote
last month for the most deserving New
Zealander to join the
illustrious faces in the portrait
collection.
Lashlie died of cancer at the age of 61 in February.
“We were delighted with the overwhelming
response and our
voters’ enthusiasm,” gallery
director Gaelen Macdonald
said Sunday in a statement
calling on established artists to
submit expressions of
interest in being commissioned to
produce a posthumous
portrait of Celia Lashlie.
She asked artists to submit
samples of recent portraiture
commissions by July 3 with
a brief statement about their
practice including their
desire to paint Celia’s portrait.
Gaelen Macdonald said
it was planned to select the winning
submission in
conjunction with Celia’s family on July 6.
It is seeking funds for the commission.
ENDS