NOW KING CHARLES IS MISSING OR IN HIDING? WTF IS HAPPENING | REDACTED NEWS
Charles releases a pre-recorded audio message for Easter.
Aristotle writes: "[K]ings are guarded by the citizens in arms, whereas tyrants have foreign guards, for kings rule in accordance with law and over willing subjects, but tyrants rule over unwilling subjects."
What Do You Notice When You Mirror The Image Of King Charles’ Portrait? Do You See It?
Commenters were not kind to the artwork, basically saying ‘It looks like he is in hell’. Even the NY Post called it the ‘ghostly-looking’ Charles portrait, but people went much harder.
Some asked if it was ‘all the blood on his hands?’, or said that they ‘100% thought this was satire’, called it ‘a little creepy’, ‘slightly disturbing’, ‘like he’s bathing in blood’.
“The portrait — which will ultimately hang in Drapers’ Hall — was commissioned in 2020 to celebrate the then Prince of Wales’s 50 years as a member of The Drapers’ Company in 2022.”
A Shock of Red for a Royal Portrait
A new portrait of King Charles III is bathed in symbolism.
King Charles III at the unveiling of the artist Jonathan Yeo’s portrait of the king on Tuesday.Credit...
Royal portraits, as a rule, tend to be fairly staid, predictable affairs. Full of symbolism, sure, but generally symbolism of the traditional, establishment kind: symbols of state, of office, of pomp and lineage.
Which is why the new official portrait of King Charles III by Jonathan Yeo, the first since the king’s coronation, has created such a controversy.
A larger-than-life (7.5 foot-by-5.5 foot) canvas, the portrait shows the king standing in his Welsh Guards uniform, hands on the hilt of his sword, a half-smile on his face, with a butterfly hovering just over his right shoulder. His entire body is bathed in a sea of crimson, so his face appears to be floating.
Though the butterfly was apparently the key piece of semiology — meant, Mr. Yeo told the BBC, to represent Charles’s metamorphosis from prince to sovereign and his longstanding love of the environment — it was the painting’s primary color that almost instantaneously gave new meaning to the idea of “seeing red.” It was practically begging for interpretation.
“To me it gives the message the monarchy is going up in flames or the king is burning in hell,” one commentator wrote under the royal family’s Instagram post when the portrait was unveiled.
“It looks like he’s bathing in blood,” another wrote. Someone else raised the idea of “colonial bloodshed.” There were comparisons to the devil. And so on. There was even a mention of the Tampax affair, a reference to an infamous comment by Charles revealed when his phone was hacked during the demise of his marriage to Diana, Princess of Wales.
It turns out that red is a trigger color for almost everyone — especially given the somewhat meta endeavor that is royal portraiture: a representation of a representation, made for posterity.
In his interview with the BBC, Mr. Yeo noted that when the king first saw the painting, he was “initially mildly surprised by the strong color,” which may be an understatement. Mr. Yeo said his goal was to produce a more modern royal portrait, reflecting Charles’s desire to be a more modern monarch, reducing the number of working royals and scaling back the pageantry of the coronation (all things being relative).
Still, the choice of shade seems particularly fraught given the … well, firestorm the king has endured since his ascension to the throne.
Consider, for example, the continued falling out with his second son, Prince Harry, and the publication of Harry’s memoir, with its allegations of royal racism; the related calls for an end to the monarchy; Charles’s cancer diagnosis; and the furor over the mystery about Catherine, Princess of Wales, whose own cancer diagnosis was revealed only after increasingly unhinged speculation about her disappearance from public life.
Queen Camilla, who has been through her own ring of flames, reportedly told the artist, “You’ve got him.”
It’s hard to imagine Mr. Yeo didn’t anticipate some of the reaction to the portrait, especially in the context of his past work, including portraits of Prince Philip, the king’s father, and Queen Camilla, which are more traditional depictions. Indeed, the last time a royal portraitist attempted a more abstract, contemporary interpretation of their subject — a 1998 portrait of Queen Elizabeth II by Justin Mortimer, which depicted the queen against a neon yellow background with a splash of yellow bisecting her neck — it produced a similar public outcry. The Daily Mail accused the artist of cutting off the queen’s head.
The portrait of King Charles will remain on display at the Philip Mould Gallery until mid-June, when it will move to Drapers’ Hall in London. (It was commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Drapers, a medieval guild turned philanthropy, to reside among hundreds of other, more orthodox royal portraits.)
In that setting, Mr. Yeo’s work may be especially telling: reflective of not just a monarch, but also the evolution of the role itself, the conflicts around the job and a king captured forevermore in what very much looks like the hot seat.
WHERE IS KATE MIDDLETON?
A Kate fan has made an AI Kate Middleton message telling people not to stop asking questions as she has not been seen since the 25th December 2023. Her fans are genuinely concerned and worried for the welfare of Princess Kate and want answers.
An interesting post (below) on X (Twitter) dated December 14, 2023, eleven days prior.
‘Unbelievable’ at the Royal Variety. Both were very lovely and terrific at the meet & greet. Incidentally, when she shook hands with me she pressed a tiny piece of folded paper into my palm. I looked at it later - it just had one word written inside - HELP.
"HELP". A lot shorter than Diana's message:
Can add to the list her mum, Carole Middleton. Carole was in car crash March 2024. One news report wrote about serious injuries leaving her in critical condition; another reports minor injuries. Carole has not been seen since March. Someone on Reddit provided an interesting timeline:
Jan 16th-Kate admitted to hospital
Jan 29th-Kate discharged
Feb 23rd-unusual King's Guards ceremony with black unfurled flag
Feb 25th-death of Thomas Kingston
Feb 27th-William pulls out of his godfather's memorial service
March 2nd-Carole Middleton 'car crash'
March 4th-photo of Kate in car with Carole
March 9th-man is arrested after crashing his car into Buckingham Palace Gates
March 10th-Mother's Day photo
March 16th-skipping farm shop Kate
March 22nd-AI Kate
April 24th-blood-covered horses run wild through London
May 14th-blood-red painting of King Charles unveiled https://www.reddit.com/r/KateMiddletonMissing/comments/1d7g73g/carole_middleton_and_the_car_crash/?rdt=51733
sure is curious @NancyDrewberry
however she may also be ill and avoiding public duties too.
Yes. Very possible. Nevertheless, curious indeed.