Queen Elizabeth II 334 by Andy Warhol is part of the Reigning Queens series produced in 1985. The portfolio consists of sixteen screenprints, of which there are 4 Queen Elizabeth prints. Warhol depicts these four female monarchs in their own right, rather than as women who were married to a king. Warhol also completed an accompanying series, titled Reigning Queens (Royal Edition), in which the images were accented with diamond dust. Warhol’s intense pop rendering of Queen Elizabeth displays female empowerment through the use of bright red surrounding the figure. The loud and vivid use of color sparks attention to the subject and creates a solid movement around the portrait drawing attention to her dark brown eyes and gentle facial expression. Yellow is added to accent jewelry pieces Queen Elizabeth displays along with a light blue sash shown sitting on her shoulder. The gradient style composition of color from top to bottom allows the eye to go back and forth between solid and bold colors toward the top of the print, to a softer hue at the bottom of the print.
The photograph that Warhol used as the basis of his Queen Elizabeth II prints was taken by Peter Grugeon in 1975 at Windsor Castle, and was released to announce the Queen’s Silver Jubilee in 1977. In 2012, the Royal Collection purchased four prints from Warhol’s series, making them the only portraits in the collection for which the Queen did not personally pose.