This is about "The Winner's Story - Painting Hannah Fry" and the very last episode of Series 12 of Portrait Artist of the Year (2025)
I include this here, because of course this is not painting so much as printmaking. I guess that the good people at Storyvault Films forget that artists and painters are not interchangeable words - and one is a subset of the other.
Either that or they made up this graphic in advance of the series on the basis you might as well get all the titles done at the same time.....
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| Title frame for the Winner's Story - Episode 11 of Series 12 of PAOTY (2025) |
That illustrates how much a PAINTER is expected to be the winner.
Yet this year Chloe Barnes, who is a mono printmaker, won and hence this winner's story is about the process of moving from winning to getting the commission to create a portrait of Professor Hannah Fry for the Royal Society started, worked on, done and then unveiled - as a MONOPRINT.
The portrait was commissioned by the Royal Society as part of a year-long celebration of the 80th anniversary of the first women elected to its Fellowship, Kathleen Lonsdale FRS and Marjory Stephenson FRS.
The Sitter and the Unveiling
We'll start at the very beginning and then the end - with the Sitter and the Unveiling
Every year the last episode in each series of the "Portrait Artist of the Year" programmes, made by Storyvault Films and broadcast on Sky Arts, is about the £10,000 Commission awarded to the winning artist.
The Commission
- create a portrait of a specific individual - who is typically well known and has contributed in a significant way to public life.
- for a particular organisation - who would like to have a portrait of that individual.
The Client
- formally founded in 28 November 1660 and formally known as The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge,
- It is a learned society and the United Kingdom's national academy of sciences. It is also known as
the oldest scientific organisation in continuous existence in the world
The Sitter
- first ever Professor of the Public Understanding of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge. Previously she was the Professor of the Mathematics of Cities at University College London (UCL)
- President of the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications
- a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering
- has received various awards, including latterly the Royal Society's David Attenborough Award and Lecture 2024 in recognition of her significant work in public engagement with science and for her prolific role in popularising mathematics. The medal is bronze, is awarded annually and is accompanied by a gift of £2,500.
- plus she has 1.7 million followers on Instagram @frysquared
The Unveiling
First we all wait,
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Left: Royal Society people and programme presenter Right: Chloe Barnes and Prof. Hannah Fry with her two daughters |
Then we all take a jolly good look
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Keith Moore, Head of Library at the Royal Society comments on the
fact this is the first print portrait of a living female scientist at the Royal Society |
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Posing for photographs - Hannah Fry and her daughters with the monoprint by Chloe Barnes |
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..and then we get to see the portrait
- Hannah's head is good - except for the fact the parting is on the wrong side. (Should artists doing portraits in monoprint allow for the fact they need to work in reverse. I know a lot of other people who know how to work in reverse so that the printed pic looks OK)
- I like the articulation in the hands and fingers - it's not perfect but at least they look like hands - even if they are much too long.
- Chloe has a VERY distinct tendency to make the torso and limbs too big and long relative to the head (as in divide the size of the head into the size of the body and does it come out at about the height of one head = repeats 7 times in the body? I think not) She did the same thing with her portrait of her housemate. I'm left wondering if she has the same eye condition as Stuart Pearson Wright which means he sees faces longer than they actually are. In this instance does Chloe see torso and arms longer than they actually are - or is it just a stylistic device?)
- I know Hannah is good - but does she deserve the classical heroic proportions that we see in this portrait?
- she included the necklace with the initials of the names of Hanna's daughters daughters - which will mean a lot to Hannah
London SW1Y 5AG between 15-19 December 2025 from 3pm to 5pm GMT.
- Visitors can view the portrait outside of these times by appointment by emailing library@royalsociety.org.
- Entry to the Royal Society is free but sign in may be required.
Observations on the Portrait Process
“Through multiple sittings, I really enjoyed building a connection with Hannah to develop her portrait. It's been an honour to paint a leading figure in science who is making the industry more accessible and empowering the next generation of young women to enter STEM. With innovation at the forefront of the Royal Society, I am also grateful to showcase my process and be the first female artist to produce a portrait of a living female scientist at the society!” Chloe Barnes
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Chloe Barnes with Hannah Fry at the Royal Society |
Many of us would need to go and lie down just at the thought of that.
- Meet the artist and learn more about their life and how they work
- Meet the client - and find out what they want. In this instance
- First sitting - the getting to know you time + quick sketch
- More studies
- Visit to the studio and looking at how a print is produced
- Second Proper Sitting
- Working out the final commission
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| The artwork produced in Series 12 of Portrait Artist of the Year - prior to the commission |
More about the artist
More about the Client
- a rather novel portrait of Tim Berners-Lee by award winning artist Jennifer McRaw described thus
The main portrait forms part of a double canvas. The inner work sits over a base canvas of paint and collage in which McRae combines the intellectual content of its subject’s work on the World Wide Web with her own journey to paint Berners-Lee in a flow-chart of preliminary sketches, souvenirs and snatches of conversation. This nimbus from the information age is a playful framing device, nodding to the gilded frames of the Society’s earlier portraits.
this is a the first time the Royal Society has commissioned a female artist to do a portrait of a living female scientist
The First Sitting - then more studies
- not intended to be photo realistic
- essentially about capturing the emotion of the individual
- and then finding a balance between the two
- if you were meeting an eminent scientist for the first time
- and drawing them
- while at the same time being filmed and having to converse for the "film"
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| A charcoal life study - developed with reference to photographs |
"Print allows art to very accessible - for more people to own it" Chloe Barnes
A visit to the Studio
Hence we had a very good look at the inside of Thames Studios at Woolwich - and saw a print being pulled after it went through the printing press.
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| Woolwich includes a fully equipped print studio |
Second Proper Sitting
Working out the Final Commission artwork
Our Etching Ink is 100% natural and non toxic. Every colour is highly pigmented, delivering impressive covering power even after dilution.and that her website indicates she produces her monoprints using Arches Huile paper which is made on a cylinder mould.
Like oil paints, Charbonnel inks absorb oxygen to dry. Depending on the colour, the drying time is between 2 and 3 weeks.
The slow turning of the cylinder enables the fibres to be deposited evenly and spread in all directions over the wire. The paper is homogeneous, with a flatter surface and better wet strength and stability, giving the artist more control. Only papermaking on a cylinder mould can produce paper with deckle edges..
Every red in our Intaglio Etching Ink range is made from azo and quinacridone pigments. The quinacridones are powerful and deep, with an excellent light fast quality. They are very transparent. The azos deliver medium colouring power and are well coloured. The typical drying time for our reds is between 15 – 20 days. This varies depending on the colour.The nature of the aluminium support is that the ink can be moved around on the surface until the artist is ready to print - due to its drying time. However it seill needs to be wet enough that a good quality print can still be pulled.
The final final print!
Chloe's account of the process
I wanted to create an artwork that embodied warmth and openness, reflecting how Hannah engaged the world in science, and also how she was with me. It would be of a woman with great scientific achievement, and within an industry where there were barriers to our gender, it felt important to me that this portrait held presence and embodied feminine strength.
Previous PAOTY Commission blog posts
- 2024: PAOTY 2024 - The Commission and the Reveal
- 2023: PAOTY 2023: Commission Painting of Dr Jane Goodall
- 2022: PAOTY Commission - Painting Sir Lenny Henry (aka Len)
- 2021: incorporated in this post Calum Stevenson wins Portrait Artist of the Year (Series 8 Autumn 2021)
- 2020: PAOTY Commission: Curtis Holder draws Carlos Acosta
- 2019: ncorporated in this post Duncan Shoosmith is Portrait Artist of the Year 2019











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