New Queen Elizabeth coins slammed for making her look like Shrek

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Two coins commemorating the late Queen Elizabeth II have been slammed for making her look like she ‘just ran into a wall’.

The Royal Australian Mint released the two coins to mark 100 years since Queen Elizabeth’s birth and her ‘remarkable life of devotion and humanity’.

The $5 (£2.56) and 50c (26p) silver coins depict the Queen, who died at the age of 96 in 2022, surrounded by symbols her life, such as corgis and horses.

However, social media users said the front-facing portrait ‘doesn’t even look remotely like her’.

Two commemorative coins, released by the Royal Australian Mint and bearing a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II, have been criticised for their lack of resemblance to the late monarch. The $5 (?2.56) and 50 cent silver coins, created to commemorate the centenary of the Queen's birth, were released in an online ballot that closed on Wednesday. "That's got to be the most unpleasant portrait on a coin," said one of several people who reacted negatively online. The Royal Australian Mint defended the portrait, saying: "Our coin images don't always capture the full beauty of a design once it's etched in metal." Queen Elizabeth II died in 2022 at the age of 96 and was the UK's longest serving monarch. "There's a reason most portraits are from the side. Looks like she just ran into a wall," one person commented underneath a Facebook post from the mint. "If I saw that face without the hairdo
The Queen is surrounded by images of her life and passions, but its the portrait which has received so much attention

The artwork was compared to the cartoon character Shrek and Mrs Doubtfire, played by Robin Williams in the 1990s film.

One commentator joked: ‘Did she forget to put her teeth in on the sitting day?’

While another collector said: ‘Is this what happens when the queen is not around to approve the design?’

One Facebook user added: ‘There’s a reason most portraits are from the side. Looks like she just ran into a wall.’

The backlash was so strong that it prompted the Royal Australian Mint to release a statement defending their coins.

They said their ‘coin images don’t always capture the full beauty of a design once it’s etched in metal.’

The organisation stressed the coin was ‘palace approved’, adding that it reflected ‘the many facets of Queen Elizabeth II’s life and legacy.’

WINDSOR, UNITED KINGDOM - JUNE 13: (EMBARGOED FOR PUBLICATION IN UK NEWSPAPERS UNTIL 24 HOURS AFTER CREATE DATE AND TIME) Queen Elizabeth II attends a military ceremony in the Quadrangle of Windsor Castle to mark her Official Birthday on June 13, 2020 in Windsor, England. It was decided that due to the ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic The Queen's Birthday Parade, known as Trooping the Colour, would not go ahead in it's traditional form at Buckingham Palace and Horse Guards Parade, but a small military ceremony in line with the Government's Social Distancing Guidelines would take place at Windsor Castle instead. Soldiers of 1st Battalion Welsh Guards (whose Colour was due to be Trooped this year) will carry out a series of military drills and Royal Salute. (Photo by Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)
Collectors think the Queen looked rather different in real life (Picture: Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)

They continued: ‘At the heart of the coin is a portrait by Royal Australian Mint artist Aleksandra Stokic, rendered with warmth and dignity. One hundred years after her birth, the portrait reflection on a reign that shaped an era.’

Either way the metalwork has been a hit among collectors, with local media reporting the silver proof coins have sold out.

According to the mint’s website, it created 30,000 of the 50c coins and 5,000 of the $5 pieces.

They are all collector’s items and won’t enter general public circulation.

The back of the coins features a portrait of King Charles.

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