The Queen has joined in the virtual unveiling of a new portrait of her commissioned by Britain's Foreign Office to honour her services to diplomacy.
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The portrait of the monarch by Miriam Escofet is meant to pay tribute to the Queen's work in promoting UK interests all over the world.
The Queen saw the painting on Friday on her computer screen, and observed that a tea cup in the portrait lacked a key ingredient: tea. Escofet told the monarch that she had included the insignia of the FCO on the cup.
"She seemed to react very positively to it," Escofet said. "She was smiling, asking how long it took and if I had any more projects on the go after this."
The portrait depicts the Queen wearing a blue knee-length dress, pearls and low-heeled black shoes, seated on a chair covered in gold leaf in an ornately furnished room, with a tea cup and a vase of mauve roses on the table beside her.
The unveiling took place during a virtual visit in which the monarch was told about how the Foreign Office handled the shock wave of the coronavirus pandemic and brought thousands of British tourists home from far-flung travels.
Australian Associated Press