British royal Kate Middleton launches book of portraits to remember pandemic | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

Britain's Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge (R) speaks to health workers as she visits the coronavirus vaccination centre at Westminster Abbey, central London on March 23, 2021, to pay tribute to the efforts of those involved in the Covid-19 vaccine rollout
Britain's Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge (R) speaks to health workers as she visits the coronavirus vaccination centre at Westminster Abbey, central London on March 23, 2021, to pay tribute to the efforts of those involved in the Covid-19 vaccine rollout. (Photo by Aaron Chown / POOL / AFP)

LONDON — Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, on Sunday launched a book of photographic portraits taken during Britain’s COVID-19 lockdowns that she said would provide a lasting record of the pandemic.

Kate, who is married to Prince William, the Queen’s grandson and second in line to the throne, began the project with the National Portrait Gallery last year, inviting people to submit photos taken during Britain’s first coronavirus lockdown.

A preview of the new book "Hold Still: A Portrait of Our Nation in 2020" is seen in this handout picture released by the Kensington Palace
A preview of the new book “Hold Still: A Portrait of Our Nation in 2020”, announced by Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, and the National Portrait Gallery, is seen in this handout picture released by the Kensington Palace in Britain. The National Portrait Gallery/Handout via Reuters

 

A panel of judges including Kate chose 100 portraits from over 31,000 entries, which were shown in digital and community exhibitions before the book was announced.

“Through ‘Hold Still’, I wanted to use the power of photography to create a lasting record of what we were all experiencing – to capture individuals’ stories and document significant moments for families and communities as we lived through the pandemic,” Kate wrote in the introduction to the book.

The book, called “Hold Still: A Portrait of Our Nation in 2020”, will be available from May 7, exactly a year after the project began. Net proceeds will be split between the National Portrait Gallery and the British mental health charity Mind.

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