The portrait of The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge has caused quite the stir - it's a rather marmite painting.
Some have said it looks just like the pair, with others remaining a little more sceptical about it.
Art critic A.N. Wilson said it fails to capture Kate's magic in the Daily Mail.
He referred to the painting as 'dead as the dodo' and said in the commission, Kate looks like a 'strangely boring doll.'
He added: "The real Duchess of Cambridge cheers everyone up with her radiant smile.
"However the figure in this painting is wistful, slightly petulant and actually unrecognisable as Our Kate. It has also made her body a rather weird shape inside the glossy green dress."

Get the news you want straight to your inbox. Sign up for a Mirror newsletter here
Rachel Campbell-Johnston wrote in The Times : "Here is a swagger portrait for the modernday monarchy. They can't look too flashy. They mustn't dress too flamboyantly. Nor, like the swashbuckling princelings in Van Dyck's portraits of royal predecessors, can they survey their viewers with a sneer of arrogant privilege.
"Instead they must stand obediently, in dark suit and lurid satin, stiff as the columns which, picked out from a featureless background, serve both a stylistic (they attenuate the figures) and symbolic (they are pillars of society) purpose.
"The couple pose like mannequins made to advertise a modern monarchy. But if you want to meet them in replica you would probably do better to go to Madame Tussauds."
The Telegraph's art critic Alastair Sooke was a little kinder saying there are "flashes of charm but this portrait for the Instagram age plays it too safe.
"Who has caught their eye? Someone - perhaps their four-year-old, Prince Louis, who fidgeted so memorably during the Platinum Jubilee - is making the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge smile.
"With this charming device, the British artist Jamie Coreth introduces a vital note of informality into a picture that could otherwise have been so stiff. Prince William twinkles benevolently; Catherine appears almost quizzical.
The art critic then suggested that the portrait bore resemblance to an Instagram-filtered photo, also quipping that if William opts for another portrait in the future, to not play it as safe.
What do you think of the portrait? Let us know in the comments.