Britain Memorializes a Queen, With Smiles and Bronze Corgis

Sculptors have immortalized past British monarchs with imposing, stern-faced statues. For Queen Elizabeth II, they’re taking a different approach.

While reporting this story in Oakham, England, Alex Marshall met six corgis.

It looked like a corgi convention.

On Sunday afternoon in Oakham, a quaint English market town, hundreds of local residents stood behind a temporary barrier and craned their necks to see the 50 or so dogs waddling past in the local library’s gardens.

The yapping mutts were just a sideshow, however, to the main event, which was announced from a dais by Sarah Furness, a local dignitary: the unveiling of Britain’s first memorial statue to Queen Elizabeth II.

A bronze statue of Queen Elizabeth II in flowing robes stands on a plinth in a garden. A bronze corgi stands at the statue’s feet and two more corgis stand around the plinth’s base.

A bronze statue of Queen Elizabeth II in flowing robes stands on a plinth in a garden. A bronze corgi stands at the statue’s feet and two more corgis stand around the plinth’s base.

The seven-foot bronze work, by the London-based sculptor Hywel Pratley, shows the queen in flowing robes, with three corgis at her feet. “What most of us remember about Queen Elizabeth is her warmth,” Furness said in a speech. “By showing Queen Elizabeth’s love of dogs, we show her humanity,” she added.

A crowd of corgis and their owners in front of a bronze statue of Queen Elizabeth II.

Fans of the queen, both human and canine, gathered around her statue in Oakham. Credit…Joshua Bright

Eighteen months after Queen Elizabeth II’s death, Britain is beginning to memorialize the former monarch, with municipalities and institutions across the country unveiling statues in her honor.

Sculptors began working on some of these long before the queen’s death, including one at York Minister in the north of England, unveiled in 2022, that presents her in full regalia. Another, at the Royal Albert Hall in London, shows a younger, glamorous monarch on a night out at that concert hall, wearing a fashionable dress and tiara.

But many, including the Oakham statue, are more recent commissions. And most of those, unlike the stern statues of Queen Victoria found across Britain, depict the queen as warm and approachable.

This fall, authorities in the town of Newcastle-under-Lyme plan to unveil a work in bronze by Andy Edwards that shows the queen smiling and clutching flowers. The local government for Test Valley, in southern England, this year plans to unveil two sculptures of the queen by Amy Goodman, one of which depicts a beaming monarch waving at passers-by.

In 2026, a joint committee set up by the royal family and the British government plans to unveil its ideas for a national Queen Elizabeth II memorial.

A statue of Queen Elizabeth, by Poppy Field, outside the Royal Albert Hall in London. Credit…Joshua Bright

Statues of her forebear, Queen Victoria, tend to be sterner and lacking warmth. Credit…Universal Images Group, via Getty Images

Pratley, the Oakham statue sculptor, said in an interview that depicting the queen in a relatable way reflected many Britons’ memories of her as “an almost motherly figure.”

It also reflected a move in public statuary toward sculptures that encouraged interaction, he said, rather than depictions that glared down from high pedestals. (He hoped that children would sit on the corgis in Oakham, he added.)

Furness, the local dignitary, said she came up with the idea for a monument in September 2022, almost immediately after the queen’s death. As the Lord-Lieutenant of Rutland, Furness represents the monarchy at events around Oakham, and she said that residents kept “stopping me in the street, and saying what a shock it was the queen had died and how much she meant to them.”

On a table next to an array of tools, photographs of Queen Elizabeth II at various points in her reign are laid out.

Reference pictures of Queen Elizabeth in Hywel Pratley’s studio in London. Credit…Joshua Bright

After speaking with a local foundry, Furness approached Pratley with a commission.

The sculptor’s first idea was for a statue depicting an elderly queen wearing a pillbox hat, sitting on a bench surrounded by corgis. That idea was “charming,” Furness recalled, but it hadn’t felt right. “If it were a statue of my grandmother, I’d have loved it,” Furness said, “but I thought for the longest serving monarch, and a statue that’ll last for hundreds of years, she had to look like a queen.”

Soon after their first meeting, Pratley changed tack and made a maquette featuring the queen in flowing robes, though he kept the corgis. With that model on view, Furness said, it had been easy to raise the statue’s cost of 140,000 pounds, or about $177,000, from the public.

A man wearing a gray sweater and blue jeans operates a blow torch in a sculpture studio.

Pratley adding a patina to a limited edition maquette of his Queen Elizabeth statue. Credit…Joshua Bright

But in Britain, months of commemorations have also led to some fatigue, said Graham Smith, the chief executive officer of Republic, an anti-monarchist organization. He pointed out that London’s transport authorities had recently named a subway line after Queen Elizabeth, adding that she hardly needed to be carved in stone or remembered in bronze, too. “Maybe we just give it a rest,” Smith said, adding “there were better people to celebrate” in public places.

At Sunday’s unveiling, the popularity of Pratley’s statue in Oakham was clear. After Furness slipped away the sheet covering the art work, the local bishop, Debbie Sellin, gave a blessing — “May it bring joy and encouragement,” she said — a bagpiper played a lament and the crowd sang Britain’s national anthem. (“God Save the King,” these days.) Then, residents and tourists lined up to take selfies in front of the new landmark.

Charlie Farrow, 62, who had brought along her own corgi, Edith, said that she thought the bronze queen looked “a little thick” around the waist, but, overall, Pratley’s artwork was “a really nice piece.”

She especially liked the corgis. “In many respects these dogs symbolize what she was,” Farrow said: “Her Majesty was fabulous, really good-natured and no trouble.”

Out of focus in the left of the photo, a woman stands with her back to the camera, holding a corgi, which looks to the right of the picture. In the distance is the back of a bronze statue of Queen Elizabeth II.

“What most of us remember about Queen Elizabeth is her warmth,” said a dignitary at the statue’s unveiling. “By showing Queen Elizabeth’s love of dogs, we show her humanity.” Credit…Joshua Bright

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