Collection
Sofía de Grecia [Sofia of Greece]
- 1988
- Oil & pencil on canvas
- 221 x 171 cm
- Cat. P_360
- Comissioned from the artist in 1987
The Banco de España Collection has a pair of oil paintings of the king and queen of Spain: Juan Carlos I (b. Rome, 1938) and Sofia of Greece (b. Athens, 1938). Carmen Laffón was commissioned to paint them in 1983. King Juan Carlos I is the son of Don Juan de Borbón, Count of Barcelona, and the grandson of King Alfonso XIII; Queen Sofia is the daughter of King Paul of Greece. They were married in Athens in 1962 and moved to Madrid immediately afterwards. Juan Carlos became king on 22 November 1975, and abdicated in favour of his son Felipe VI on 18 June 2014.
Light is a characteristic trait of Carmen Laffón's work, in which it often seems to shine directly out of her sitters. This portrait of Sofía of Greece is a case in point. The broken brush-strokes do not close off the forms, but are clearly grounded in drawing. They permit a splendid use of light: the queen is wearing a long dress and is seated in what looks like a porch with glass panels connecting it to a garden. She blends into the setting thanks to an atmosphere which is identical throughout the picture. The depiction of an everyday setting, however, with features which are few in number and sketched so lightly that they are felt intuitively rather than seen, focuses attention on the image of the queen, which is much more clearly resolved. Sofia of Greece sits calmly, with none of the emphatic poses typical of portraits of authority figures of the past. The only sign of royalty is the ribbon of the Order of Maria Louise, which can be glimpsed among her jewels.
The two sitters are positioned symmetrically, almost in profile, though there are contrasts at the meeting point of the two because of the different shades used: lighter for the queen and darker for the king. As mentioned, Carmen Laffón broke away from some of the conventions concerning proportion in such portraits by choosing an almost square format that gives a great deal of space and serves as a backdrop to the two figures. At the same time, she shies away from the stiff poses and abundant royal symbols commonly found in portraits of royalty.
Other works by Carmen Laffón