Pauline Boty’s stained glass self portrait back on display soon at the National Portrait Gallery

Pauline Boty’s stained glass “Self Portrait”, c.1958 at the National Portrait Gallery. Photo by paulineboty.org

The National Portrait Gallery, closed for extensive refurbishment since 2020, has confirmed that Pauline Boty’s c.1958 stained glass work “Self Portrait” will be on display (in Room 28) when reopening to visitors on 22 June.

“A rare self-portrait in Boty’s oeuvre, this is a beautiful and assured portrait in stained glass, believed to date from 1958 when Boty was a student in the stained glass department at the Royal College of Art. There are conventional borders with floral motifs and quatrefoils. The work incorporates many of the creative techniques associated with the influential stained glass department of the Royal College of Art at that period, including layering, aciding of deep flashed layers, and expressive use of glass painting. The glass leading is experimental, with its eccentric use of arbitrary leads such as the piece cutting across the face of the figure.” [from the NPG’s website]

Detail of Pauline Boty’s stained glass “Self Portrait”, c.1958 at the National Portrait Gallery. Photo by paulineboty.org

The gallery also has a number of portraits of Boty by different photographers including Lewis Morley, Michael Ward and Michael Seymour, which can be viewed on their website at npg.org.uk

Further information is available here: [link]