This striking exhibition has drawn artists from round the world who see the Queen with traditional and fresh eyes.

For Jacqueline Hammond the future is “twisted but bright”. The Queen (in a moment of privacy) is picking her nose. This irreverent painting, which will be auctioned, is also reproduced on mugs and bags.

Anna Lever is from Oxfordshire. Her earthenware Diamond Queen, pictured, a plump red-lipped monarch, adorned with the Order of the Garter, clutches a Union Flag while her faithful corgi nestles by her side. Corgis figure in Gill Salway’s tongue-in-cheek red, white and blue screen-print. This fractured image of the sovereign has a dark castle in the background; “Walkies with her Maj” captures a solitary moment with only her dogs for company.

In The Royal Females profiles of Elizabeth I, Victoria and Elizabeth II, are superimposed on a background of stamps. Written in gold the play on the words ‘mail’ and ‘female’ is highlighted. This work of art by S. C. Gregg is beautifully mounted.

Erin Robert Singleton’s mixed media assemblage, 60, is a clever memory box reflecting her love of stories and history. She printed a picture of the Queen, on the occasion of her coronation, on to three planks of wood on which she superimposed German newsprint. An old tin inscribed “By Appointment to the late King George VI, purveyor of OXO Ltd” is cut to create the neckline of the Queen. Using only natural materials, Shaun Robinson has made a slate silhouette of The Queen’s Head, as it on stamps. His work is sold in Sandringham and at Kew; this sculpture is his elegant way of acknowledging Her Majesty’s support.

Bampton Gallery, Town Hall, Market Square, until July 1; Tues-Sat 10.30am-4.30pm, Sun 2-4pm.