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King Charles’ New Portrait Vandalized With ‘Wallace and Gromit’ Cartoon

King Charles New Portrait Vandalized With Wallace Gromit Cartoon
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King Charles III‘s official royal portrait got a new look courtesy of protesters in London.

Activists from an organization called Animal Rising paid a visit to the Philip Mould Gallery, covering the painting with two large stickers. In an Instagram video shared Tuesday, June 11, a blown-up image of Wallace from the Wallace & Gromit cartoons was placed over Charles’ face. A second person placed a speech bubble on the painting which read, “No cheese, Gromit. Look at all this cruelty on RSPCA farms!”

“‼️BREAKING: No Cheese Gromit! King Charles Portrait Redecorated‼️” the video was captioned.

The organization referred to Charles, 75, as a patron of the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA), a British charity promoting animal welfare. The caption also encouraged the king to “drop the Assured Scheme,” which seeks to provide ethical food labels and protect farm animals.

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Prior to the death of Queen Elizabeth II, King Charles III had been the heir apparent to the British throne for seven decades. Charles held the position longer than anyone in the monarchy’s history. While waiting for his ascension, he served his country as the Prince of Wales. After serving in the military and founding […]

Animal Rising has also shared a link to a petition against the RSPCA and a report claiming “animal suffering and widespread regulation breaches” have occurred on RSPCA Assured farms throughout the U.K.

Charles’ first portrait since his coronation, painted by British artist Jonathan Yeo, was unveiled in May and will remain on display in the London gallery until later this month.

When fans got their first glimpse of the portrait, which shows Charles standing stoically in a Welsh Guards uniform with a butterfly hovering over his shoulder, its vibrant red color scheme was met with mixed reactions. Yeo, 53, subsequently attempted to clarify his vision.

“The red was inspired by the Welsh Guards, but I wanted the painting to be a little more contemporary and not get in the way of seeing the face and the personality,” he explained last month, per Hello! “The color was an early experiment and then I sketched it out and worked on the face, and the face and background worked so well. … It was a nice mix of the traditional and the contemporary.”

King Charles New Portrait Vandalized With Wallace Gromit Cartoon

Wallace of “Wallace & Gromit”
Aardman

The internet had a field day with theories about the artist’s inspiration, and Yeo has enjoyed following along with the conversation.

“My [17-year-old] daughter was much too keen to show me all the crazy stuff about the painting on TikTok,” he told The Sunday Times in a May 19 interview. “She’s … had the best day of her life with all of the conspiracies about the painting, saying I’m a Satanist and Illuminati.”

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Chris Jackson/Getty Images For Buckingham Palace It has been an eventful year since King Charles III was officially blessed and anointed as the monarch of the United Kingdom and its Commonwealth territories. Charles assumed the British throne in September 2022 after the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, at the age of 96. “My […]

While there have been plenty of hot takes online, Yeo’s most important critic — Charles himself — was pleased with the final product.

“When I showed it to him back in November, when it was sort of three-quarters done … certainly the face was done, body was sketched and the color was mostly pretty much as it was, in the end,” Yeo said on Hello! magazine’s “A Right Royal Podcast” last month. “If he’d been appalled, I think, I might have rethought it and toned it down a bit. But he didn’t seem that way.”

Yeo had also braced himself for Queen Camilla‘s reaction. “When [Camilla] looked at it and smiled straight away, I thought, ‘OK, phew!’ That’s the important one,” he told the Boston Globe in May.

Originally Published Here.

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