21 June 2024

Six Lives: The Stories of Henry VIII's Queens: National Portrait Gallery

I had high hopes for this exhibition, after all, we just can't get enough of the Tudors, can we? It's an intriguing thought, all those characters that still keep showing up in our culture, congregated together once again after a few centuries. So much of our system of government, law and religion still reverberate from the time of Henry VIII and the fate of his six wives. Books, TV programmes and films barely take a break from reimagining and reinterpreting different aspects of the main players, heroes, villains and victims.


As a reviewer, I feel my role is to reflect the scope and scale of an exhibition, the experience of being there, and whether if fulfils it's own brief. Personally, I always like to go to an exhibition knowing as little about it as possible, except that I have a reason or expectation about it. A review is not the exhibition essay or report, and so I will just give a few glimpses for any visitor to enjoy making their own discoveries without spoilers. And, especially in this case, to raise expectations.

I'd like to mention the absolutely exquisite production values on show. The walls are deep jewel colours, the lighting uses shadow and glowing drama, the wall script is informative but concise, and the mounting is perfection.

Perhaps we think we know the stories of the six women, still debated long after they either were divorced, beheaded, died, divorced, beheaded or survived. This exhibition collects a wealth of treasures demonstrating that the myths, herstories and legends they inspired have been swirling around since their own time, and that in their after life, as in life, they were portrayed as political pawns, cautionary tales or archetypes.

I truly love an exhibition with paintings and artefacts together. We are so near to the items these people  knew and touched. There is the painter, the subject, and then yourself, the viewer, with only a glass frame in between. Not even time can separate that immediacy, even if the time is a few centuries. There is such a sense of presence in this exhibition. Many of the images are quite familiar, but this is the first time such a major exhibition about the six wives of Henry VIII has been produced, and the first time these paintings and artefacts have been drawn together. Mammoth bibles, personal books, jewellery, costume, letters, a 1920's film, photography and more, allow the portraits to come to life even more and to really live in the imagination.


I got chatting to a couple of lovely mud larking ladies (hello!) who have found similar items to some  depicted, such as Tudor buttons, on the banks of the Thames. With the river just a few streets away from the NPG, I looked over at another marvellous Holbein painting and was suddenly struck with the thought that all these mighty characters who knew each other in life, who fought to survive, and politicked and manoeuvred, had been gathered in spirit once again in London. What happens at night when the lights go out?

This is a paid exhibition, with a programme of events. There are also some times when you can pay what you want - look online.

National Portrait Gallery, London

20 June to 8 September 2024 

national portrait gallery six lives

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