âItâs not goodâ: New royal statue divides opinion
A new statue designed to commemorate Elizabeth II â the UKâs longest-serving monarch â has received a mixed reception.
The bronze sculpture, created by north Belfast artist Anto Brennan, was unveiled in Antrim Castle Gardens on Saturday.
Since then, the statue of the late queen, Prince Philip and two corgis has attracted some criticism on social media and commentary from visitors to the County Antrim gardens.
Antrim and Newtownabbey Councillor Vera McWilliam told BBC News NI: âWe have to be honest, it does not resemble the queen in any shape or form.â
âHope they got it for freeâ
Richard from Antrim said that he was âreally disappointedâ after seeing the statue online and then coming to see it with his wife.
âWhoever signed that off needs their eyes tested. Itâs not good,â he added.
âI would take it away. It doesnât do anything in memory for her majesty so definitely I would remove it.â
Brenda from Lisburn thinks that the statue should have been âmade to look olderâ but âon the whole it is really niceâ and âyou still get what it represents and what it is about.â
âIt caught my eye right away.
âYou can see who they are, but I think definitely it should have been her just before she died to capture the whole meaning of who she was and what she represented.â
Alejandro from London was visiting Antrim Castle Gardens with two friends from El Salvador.
He though the statue didnât âseem like the queen.â
âAs it is in her memory I guess it is a good thing but it doesnât look like her.
âThe dogs and Prince Philip look nice, but the queen, it doesnât look like her,â he added.
âLeave it the way it isâ
Cheryl and Gordon from Saintfield said they liked the sculpture but had some ideas about how it could have been improved.
Cheryl said there is âsomething not right about her upper body posture and her right arm but itâs still lovely to see herâ.
Gordon added: âI wouldnât have noticed that it didnât look like the queen but with seeing it on Facebook and now that I see it yes, it probably isnât a true reflection of her.
âItâs just the face, the rest of the character of her looks correct but the face is maybe not a true reflection of her.
âIt is what it is, we all know who she is and what itâs meant to be so I would just leave it the way it is.â
Francis and Marie from Magherafelt were very positive about the sculpture.
âItâs great, I think they have it down to the tee,â Francis told BBC News NI.
âTheyâve got the queen as sheâs young. I think the two would be very pleased with it. And theyâve got the corgis all round.
âThat is the queen, she loved being outside and thatâs why thereâs a smile on her face.â
Marie added that the statue âlooks like her when you see her out with the horses and dogs. Itâs more of her private life, more down to earthâ.
âItâs down to personal tasteâ
The debate over the sculpture began on the comments section of a social media post by Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council featuring the first photos of the sculpture.
Comments have since been turned off.
The proposal to commission a sculpture of the late queen and her two corgis came in January 2023.
There was already a bronze statue of Prince Philip in the Parterre Garden.
The Deputy Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey Paul Dunlop attended the unveiling of the new statue.
He told BBC News NI: âItâs down to personal taste, everyone has their own opinion but it is what the sculpture represents that is important.â
When the sculpture was unveiled, Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey, Councillor Neil Kelly, described it as a âbeautiful statueâ.
Its creator, Anthony âAntoâ Brennan, is best known for his chess sets of prominent Northern Irish political figures.
BBC News NI has approached Brennan for comment.