New handwritten text portraits by Annemarie Wright, of well-known figures including leading politicians, pop-stars, footballers and celebrities, are to go on show at Woolff Gallery, London, this May.

Entitled What do you think? An election special, the solo show features many portraits of political figures, such as a life-sized piece of the Queen, made from the opinions of the British public, a portrait of Winston Churchill written in the words of his famous Their finest hour' address to the House of Commons, and Lady Thatcher with the text of her decision that first made her infamous as the ‘milk snatcher’.

Wright cemented her place in history last April when her portrait of Sir Alex Ferguson, made on his retirement from the names of every player who ever played for him, went viral on Twitter and appeared in newspapers around the world. She counts Stephen Fry among her celebrity fans and the singer Adele has commissioned a portrait of herself from her, written in her own lyrics.

It takes her 30-40 hours to hand write each portrait, painstaking attention to detail is essential, always keeping an eye on current events to incorporate her unique style.

Although she developed her technique in at university, it was not until Wright created a portrait of former Prime Minister Tony Blair, made up from the names of fallen British soldiers from the Afghanistan and Iraq conflicts, that she realised the political potential for her work.

Following the 2010 general election, she set up the website WhatDoYouThinkOfDavidCameron.com (no longer active) to garner opinions of the new Prime Minister. The resulting full-length portrait was sold at the 2012 London Art Fair to a member of the House of Lords.

Visitors to the solo exhibition, at Woolff Gallery on Charlotte Street, will be encouraged to share their own opinions of the election outcome in a guest book. The text will be turned into a portrait of the winning party before the end of the show.

"Preparing for this exhibition has been a really enlightening experience, from hung parliaments to hunger for blood; everybody has their own opinion on this general election.

We live in a world made smaller by social media. Everybody has an opinion to be shared, an online footprint that will last forever; the urge to go viral.

'What do you think of?' is my attempt to capture this, to take a snapshot of the thoughts and opinions of the www generation. "