Jacinda Ardern wasn't available so Archibald Prize winner Yvette Coppersmith painted her own portrait. Photo / Supplied
Jacinda Ardern wasn't available so Archibald Prize winner Yvette Coppersmith painted her own portrait. Photo / Supplied
Melbourne artist Yvette Coppersmith has won Australia's prestigious Archibald Prize for her self-portrait in which she channels Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern.
"I would like to start by saying I want to channel the original inspiration for this portrait, which was the Right Honourable New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. Ithink she would have worn this colour," Coppersmith said at a ceremony at the Art Gallery of NSW in Sydney today.
Coppersmith said she had asked to paint Ardern's portrait.
"Ardern wasn't available but I thought I might channel something of her in my self-portrait,' Coppersmith said.
"I had several reasons for asking Jacinda Ardern, but through her role she expands what an image of a young woman can signify – inspiring others to think beyond any perceived limits of their own image in relation to the contemporary political landscape," the Daily Review reported.
The Archibald Prize is Australia's most celebrated portraiture prize. The exhibition of finalists is a highly anticipated highlight of the art calendar and often features figures from popular culture and current affairs.
Coppersmith's entry was the fifth painting she has entered in the Archibalds.