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  • 5
    Jun
    2012
    1:23pm, EDT

    Queen's Diamond Jubilee lights up London

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    The Royal Air Force Aerobatic Team fly in formation over Buckingham Palace as The Royal family stand on the balcony on June 5, in London, England. For only the second time in its history the UK celebrates the Diamond Jubilee of a monarch. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II celebrates the 60th anniversary of her ascension to the throne. Thousands of wellwishers from around the world have flocked to London to witness the spectacle of the weekend's celebrations.

    Andrew Winning / Reuters

    Britain's Queen Elizabeth smiles as she leaves St Paul's Cathedral with its Dean, David Ison and the Canon Pastor, Michael Colclough (right) following a thanksgiving service to mark her Diamond Jubilee in central London on June 5.

    Tal Cohen / EPA

    Metropolitan police officers encourage Royal supporters to cheer before Britain's Queen Elizabeth II Carriage Procession from Westminster Hall to Buckingham Palace in London, Britain, on June 5. The British Royal Family's procession followed a national service of thanksgiving at St Paul's Cathedral, a reception at Guildhall and a lunch at Westminster Hall. This is the final day of the Diamond Jubilee weekend celebrating Queen Elizabeth II's 60 years on the throne.

    Karel Prinsloo / EPA

    The crowd wait to see the Queen after the Carriage Procession from Westminster Hall to Buckingham Palace in London, Britain, on June 5.

    Kevin Coombs / Reuters

    A man holding a girl waving a Union flag stands among other spectators near Parliament Square for a glimpse of Queen Elizabeth, in London on June 5.

    NBC News and msnbc.com staff -- Crowds chanting "God save the queen" and a fanfare of trumpets welcomed the British monarch on Tuesday as she arrived at a church service on the fourth day of celebrations marking her 60 years on the throne.

    But even though she was surrounded by family and greeted by thousands of her subjects, without her husband Prince Philip at her side Queen Elizabeth II cut a lonely figure on the last day of her jubilee celebrations.

    Read the full story: Queen cuts a lonely figure at church service.

    Tal Cohen / EPA

    Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, Camilla Duchess of Cornwall and Prince Charles are seen in the State Landau carriage when they pass The Houses of Parliament and Big Ben during the Carriage Procession from Westminster Hall to Buckingham Palace in London, Britain, on June 5.

    Cathal McNaughton / Reuters

    Guards arrive at Buckingham Palace ahead of a horse-drawn carriage procession carrying Queen Elizabeth and the royal family in London on June 5. Cheering crowds thronged the streets of London on Tuesday for the grand finale to four days of festivities marking Queen Elizabeth's Diamond Jubilee attended by millions across Britain.

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Queen Elizabeth II, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge and Price Harry wave to the crowds from Buckingham Palace during the Diamond Jubilee carriage procession after the service of thanksgiving at St.Paul's Cathedral on the Mall on June 5, in London, England.

     

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    The crowd is escorted down The Mall during the Diamond Jubilee carriage procession after the service of thanksgiving at St.Paul's Cathedral on the Mall on June 5, in London, England.

    Slideshow: Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee

    /

    Her Royal Highness celebrates 60 years on the throne.

    Launch slideshow

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    2 comments

    The Borgias. You don't have this kind of money by being nice. The whole thing creeps me out; especially Camilla.

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    Explore related topics: britain, royal, london, queen-elizabeth, united-kingdom, jubilee
  • 4
    Jun
    2012
    6:23pm, EDT

    Flags wave over large crowd for Queen's Diamond Jubilee concert in London

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    A large crowd fills The Mall in front of Buckingham Palace to watch The Diamond Jubilee Concert on Monday in London, England. For only the second time in its history the UK celebrates the Diamond Jubilee of a monarch. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II celebrates the 60th anniversary of her ascension to the throne. Thousands of well-wishers from around the world have flocked to London to witness the spectacle of the weekend's celebrations. The Queen along with all members of the royal family will participate in a River Pageant with a flotilla of a 1,000 boats accompanying them down The Thames.

    Slideshow: Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee

    Joel Ryan / AP

    See more celebrities and partying as her Royal Highness celebrates 60 years on the throne.

    Launch slideshow

    Msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson reports in the World News blog about the queen's idea of good music:

    Will the queen enjoy it? Her musical tastes are a mystery, and the Press Association news agency reported that she brought a pair of earplugs with her to a similar concert a decade ago. According to The Guardian newspaper, the only song the queen has ever been known to request is "Some Enchanted Evening" from the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical "South Pacific."

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    Explore related topics: london, england, queen, united-kingdom, world-news, jubilee
  • 1
    Jun
    2012
    11:59am, EDT

    Peter Macdiarmid / Getty Images

    Say cheese! A cardboard queen patiently poses for portraits

    A tourist has her photograph taken with a cardboard cut out of Queen Elizabeth II in The Mall on June 1, in London, England. With two days to go before the start of Diamond Jubilee celebrations final preparations are taking place in the capital.

    Related content:

    Slideshow - Fit for a queen: 60 years of style

    Video - From the archives: the queen's life

    Slideshow - Life of a queen

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: britain, london, england, queen-elizabeth, united-kingdom, jubilee
  • 22
    May
    2012
    6:45am, EDT

    Portraits of a queen: When the monarch becomes the subject

    National Portrait Gallery, London

    'Lightness of Being' by Chris Levine, 2004.

    By Peter Jeary, NBC News

    LONDON – She is the most photographed woman in the world and no monarch has been more depicted in portraits.

    Her image is everywhere – from our English bank bills and postage stamps to countless photographs in newspapers and magazines. While not a royalist, I never tire of looking at pictures of Queen Elizabeth II, but I cannot tell you why.

    Until now.


    National Portrait Gallery, London

    Queen Elizabeth II by Hiroshi Sugimoto, 1999.

    Paul Moorhouse, curator of 'The Queen: Art and Image', an exhibition that recently opened at London's National Portrait Gallery, told me my fascination was shared by many.

    "What we all try to do is understand the enigma," he said. "It's a paradox. We have all these images of her, but for most of us, we actually know very little about the queen."

    And it's true. By looking at a range of different images and listening to her occasional public statements, I hope to glean a little more about the woman, the great-grandmother, the human being behind the icon.

    An early visitor to the exhibition, Gareth Jones, from Camden in London, agrees.

    "You think you know things about her," he said. "But it's not until you see it laid-out like this that you start to appreciate the life she has led over sixty years. It's powerful."

    Fit for a queen: 60 years of style

    Jones, a self-described fan of the queen, found one work particularly revealing.

    Looking at Chris Levine's 2004 holographic photograph 'Lightness of Being' was like "intruding on a private moment, as the queen closes her eyes, almost in meditation," he said.

    National Portrait Gallery, London

    Queen Elizabeth II, by Pietro Annigoni, 1969.

    Yvonne Bennett, from Sevenoaks, outside of London, was captivated by the same image.

    "I could stand and look at it all day," she said.

    Among the dozens of varied pictures, photographs and mixed media in the exhibition, one portrait stands out.  Amid the Pop Art, punk art and high art depictions, Hiroshi Sugimoto's 1999 portrait feels wrong and out of place.

    One visitor wondered why it lacked the warmth of other pictures. We then discovered that the photograph is of a waxwork, and not the monarch herself.

    Queen Elizabeth II's lunch for world monarchs sparks controversy

    There was a tangible difference between that portrait and, for example, a much earlier, highly formal painting by Pietro Annigoni, dating from 1954-5, the early years of her reign.

    In the Annigoni, the young queen is noble and remote, like an empress, but also very human.

    While the exhibit tells a story of a changing monarchy, it is also obvious that the queen has carefully controlled her image over the years.

    NBC News

    Kim Dong-Yoo's mosaic 'Elizabeth vs Diana', left, is made up of hundreds of tiny images of Princess Diana. A close-up view is shown at right.

    "But when you compare portraits from one decade with another, you start to understand the preoccupations of the time, and then you appreciate that the queen has had to face some very dark times,” said Bridget Findlay of Portsmouth. 

    Video: Queen seen as inspiration at Jubilee parade

    Findlay’s favorite was a reflection of those dark times: 'Elizabeth vs Diana' is a mosaic of the queen's head created from tiny images of Princess Diana, her erstwhile daughter-in-law who died in a car crash in 1997 after an embarrassingly public split with Prince Charles.

    "It's simply startling," Findlay said.  "I never expected to see that and it took me a while to work out what it was."

    The Queen makes her first televised Christmas broadcast on Dec. 25,1957.

    Kim Dong-Yoo's 2007 mosaic – one of several works that would be seen as irreverent if not almost disrespectful – is confirmation that this is not an official exhibition sanctioned by Buckingham Palace. Instead, curator Paul Moorhouse called it a celebration for a diamond jubilee.

    If I had to choose one image that summed up the exhibit for me, it would be a small, rather insignificant newspaper photograph of a family gathered around a TV set watching the queen's first televised Christmas message broadcast in 1957.

    She speaks while we, the observers, look and listen. Six decades on, are we any closer to knowing the most depicted woman in history?

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • UN nuclear chief: Deal reached with Iran over suspected weapons program
    • Death of Lockerbie bomber al-Megrahi 'doesn't close the book'
    • 'Massacre': At least 90 killed as bomber targets military parade rehearsal in Yemen
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    • US student dies after going swimming at Scottish beach

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    72 comments

    I find this one of the more repugnant remnants of a bygone era. For 60 years a woman who did nothing but be born into a family has been worshiped like a god. Her every whim satisfied , protocol just to look at her and be in her presence. The billions she has and the property. And she has had it for  …

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    Explore related topics: london, queen, national-portrait-gallery, uk, featured, elizabeth, jubilee, pete-jeary, the-queen-art-and-image
  • 6
    Feb
    2012
    10:07am, EST

    In pictures: Queen Elizabeth II marks 60 years on the throne

    Jane Bown / Camera Press

    The Queen's 80th birthday portrait, taken in February 2006, is one of 60 photographs included in an exhibition at Windsor Castle's Drawings Gallery to celebrate The Queen's Diamond Jubilee.

    LONDON – It has been 60 years to the day since Britain was shocked by the bulletins: The King is dead; long live the Queen! 

    The 25-year-old Princess Elizabeth was on tour in Kenya when she became queen on Feb. 6, 1952, following the death of her father, King George VI. She was informed by her husband, Prince Philip, as they walked in a garden at the Treetops hotel—after the news had been broadcast to the world.

    Matt Dunham / AP

    Members of The Kings Troop Royal Horse Artillery are seen through the smoke of their firing during a 41 Gun Salute to mark the official start of Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee in Hyde Park, London, on Feb. 6, 2012.

    A storm delayed the queen's departure from Kenya until midnight. Then, there was an unscheduled stop in North Africa to get a black mourning dress aboard. She arrived in London in the fading light of the following day, where she was welcomed by then Prime Minister Winston Churchill. 

    Sixty years on, Queen Elizabeth II promised on Monday to "dedicate myself anew to your service." 

    "I hope also that this Jubilee year will be a time to give thanks for the great advances that have been made since 1952 and to look forward to the future with clear head and warm heart," she wrote to her subjects in a message.

    The queen is now the second longest-serving monarch in British history after Queen Victoria, who reigned from 1837 to 1901.

    To mark the jubilee Windsor Castle is holding an exhibition, The Queen: 60 Photographs for 60 Years.

    Jane Roberts of the Royal Library, who helped to put together the exhibit, told NBC News that the pictures "encapsulate the character of the Queen, her life, her extraordinary duty continuing through the 60 years she has been on the throne, her commitment to her family at all times, her love of life and all sorts of different aspects of official and private duties."

    -- The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report

    UPPA / Photoshot

    The Queen returns to Buckingham Palace after the Coronation, June 2, 1953.

    The Royal Collection

    The Queen with the Duke of Edinburgh and their children (from left) Prince Charles, Prince Andrew and Princess Anne. March 1960.

    The Belfast Telegraph

    The Queen visits Belfast, Aug. 8, 1961.

    John Scott / Alpha Press

    The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh watching competitors at the Badminton Horse Trials, April 20, 1968.

    The Telegraph

    The Queen with Prince and Princess Michael of Kent at Epsom watching as Kahyasi wins the Derby, June 1, 1988.

    Polly Borland / Camera Press

    The Queen in 2001.

    Slideshow: Life of a queen

    Kirsty Wigglesworth / Pool via AP

    View images from the extraordinary life of Queen Elizabeth II.

    Launch slideshow

    NBC's Keir Simmons looks at the Queen's legacy and enduring popularity among her subjects.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    5 comments

    Royalty with no power, that rules nothing and no one,,,not since Winston Churchill,, and the Limeys have to support all of it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: britain, royals, queen-elizabeth, united-kingdom, world-news, featured, royal-family, jubilee

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