| Commissioning
Portraits - Chronology |
1917 |
National Photographic
Record set up, leading
to a collection of over 10,000 commissioned photographic portraits
of leading officeholders in British society, taken 1917-71 by
three nominated photographers, Walter Stoneman, Walter Bird and
Godfrey Argent |
|

Queen Elizabeth II
by Pietro Annigoni, 1969 
Margaret Hilda Thatcher (née
Roberts), Baroness Thatcher
by Rodrigo Moynihan, 1983-1985

Alan Bennett
by Tom Wood, 1993

Madhur Jaffrey
by Barry Marsden, 1998
|
1918 |
Three group portraits
commissioned to commemorate the First World War (given by Sir
Abe Bailey): General Officers by John Singer Sargent,
Naval Officers by Sir Arthur Cope and Statesman by
Sir James Guthrie, the latter completed 1930 |
| 1930 |
Contemporary
Portraits Fund set up,
with support from Sir Joseph Duveen, Mrs Maclachlan and the National
Art Collections Fund, to acquire portraits, primarily drawings,
of distinguished contemporaries, to enter the collection following
their death, leading to six commissioned portraits |
| 1950 |
The Royal Lodge,
Windsor commissioned
from Sir James Gunn |
| 1968 |
Queen Elizabeth
II commissioned from
Pietro Annigoni (given by Sir Hugh Leggatt) and exhibited 1970 |
| 1969 |
Portraits of the
living now admissible to the collection, following relaxation
of rule restricting collecting, but not to be exhibited until
after their death |
| 1972 |
A separate Contemporary
Portrait Collection established to allow the Director to
acquire portraits that would be submitted for inclusion in the
permanent collection in due course. Unsuccessful investigations
of possible commissioned portraits of the Queen Mother, the Prince
of Wales and the Prime Minister |
| 1980 |
Bryan Organ's portrait
of Prince Charles, inaugurates an active programme of
commissions. Annual Portrait Award for painters under
40 introduced and twelve portraits commissioned from Portrait
Award winners 1980-9 with support from Imperial Tobacco |
| 1981 |
First commissioned
sculpture, Franta Belsky's bronze head of Queen Elizabeth
II |
| 1984 |
Portrait of Margaret
Thatcher unveiled |
| 1987 |
First commissioned
photograph, David Buckland's cibachrome of athlete Daley Thompson |
| 1989 |
Fiftieth commission
unveiled, Martin Rose's painting of composer Michael Tippett |
| 1988 |
Kenyon Fund set up, with support from former Gallery
chairman, Lord Kenyon, to commission drawings |
| 1990 |
Fourteen portraits
commissioned from Portrait Award winners with support
from BP, 1990-2006 |
| 1992 |
Two portraits rejected,
depicting William Whitelaw and Alan Bennett, but
versions subsequently accepted |
| 1993 |
Various portraits
unveiled to celebrate the enlarged 20th century galleries in
the newly opened Gallery extension |
| 1994 |
Photographs of
leading scientists commissioned with help from Cable & Wireless
plc |
| 1998 |
Art of Cooking exhibition celebrates first of new series
of photographic commissions |
| 2000 |
Opening of the
Ondaatje Wing commemorated in commissioned painting of opening
ceremony and photographs of the building works |
| 2001 |
The Wellcome Trust
supports DNA portrait of Sir John Sulston |
| 2001 |
Jerwood Foundation
agrees to support portraits of young achievers in the arts, leading
to a portrait of Thomas Adès and a group portrait,
Three Royal Court Theatre Directors |
| 2002 |
Fund for New
Commissions set up, with
support from JPMorgan, leading to portraits of David Beckham
and Dame Judi Dench |
| 2003 |
Deloitte Acquisition
Fund set up, with support
from Deloitte, to acquire and commission contemporary photographic
portraits, leading to photographs of leaders in the world of
telecommunications and other non-commissioned photographs |