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Just a day after announcing their new YouTube channel, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have released their first full video.
Thursday’s video, titled Shielding Mila-Hold Still, reveals a recorded conversation Kate Middleton had with 4-year-old Mila Sneddon and her mom Lynda during autumn 2020. At the time, the duchess was having conversations with finalists from the National Portrait Gallery’s Hold Still photography exhibition, which chronicled people’s lives in the U.K. during lockdown.
According to the video, the 39-year-old mother of three wanted to speak with some of the finalists to find out more about the stories behind their photos. A week prior to lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic, Sneddon’s family had to isolate in different households to protect the child, who was four months into chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
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Photo by Matt Porteous
The Duchess of Cambridge released a phone call she held with a young girl at the centre of a Hold Still portrait chosen for exhibition last summer, and featuring in a new book of still released this week.
Kate shared a video snippet of her telephone call with Mila Sneddon, a four-year-old girl living with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, who had to shield away from her father and older sister during coronavirus lockdowns last year as she’d only just started chemotherapy treatment.
“Good morning, Your Royal Highness,” Mila says at the beginning of the call, to which Kate replies, “Good morning. My goodness me, you’re so polite, Mila!”
Last modified on Wed 10 Feb 2021 10.03 EST
Since lockdown began last March, the UK has undergone a revolution in its public spaces. With city centres deserted and galleries closed, artists have used urban walls as their canvases, producing a new generation of political street art.
While street art has traditionally been the scourge of local authorities, much of it is now being either embraced by councils seeking to preserve artworks, or commissioned by companies and community groups to brighten up neighbourhoods.
Around the UK, artists have produced everything from political commentary to tributes to NHS workers and local heroes. Captain Sir Tom Moore is popular up and down the country, most notably in Tamworth, Belfast and Southport. Other work – such as the Rebel Bear piece in Glasgow, which shows a couple pulling down their masks for a snog – document the everyday peculiarities of life in a pandemic.