A talented schoolboy has created a stunning portrait of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak - using hundreds of Rubik's cubes.<br /><br />Henil Soni, 11, used a staggering 1764 cubes costing nearly £2,000 to make the colourful portrait of the Tory leader over five days.<br /><br />Henil said he converts normal photographs such his impressive one of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak into a pixelated drawing.<br /><br />Each picture can be divided into quadrants which shows him how to solve each cube to fit the pattern - the Sunak portrait measuring 42 by 42 or 1764 Rubik's cubes.<br /><br />The creation of the Prime Minister cost the family nearly £2,000 after his mother Priyanka struck up a deal with a supplier in India for 89p per cube and delivery.<br /><br />She said: "It took him five days - he worked on it for about two hours each day after school and between his extra classes.<br /><br />"I am just so excited for him - he is so proud of his portraits and shows them to his all his friends at school."<br /><br />Henil said he chose Prime Minister Sunak as he was a “famous person” and added that he would soon be doing a larger 50 by 50 cube portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. <br /><br />Now Henil has got his sights on setting a new world record by creating the biggest portrait out of 2,500 Rubik’s cubes.<br /><br />Henil Soni, 11, wants to beat the most contributions to a rotating puzzle cube mosaic - which currently stands at 1,228.<br /><br />He hopes to create a portrait out of 2,500 cubes by the end of his time at primary school with mum Priyanka hoping to get the Guinness World Records involved.<br /><br />Priyanka, 35, said: "There are already 2,000 Rubik's cubes in my house and no one is allowed to go in the front room while Henil creating.<br /><br />"We’ve had to move all the sofas out because the portraits are too big and we don't have enough space."<br /><br />The mother-of-two told how Henil, from Harwich, Essex first became a whiz at Rubik’s cubes when he was five, watching YouTube videos on how to complete them.<br /><br />He can solve a standard Rubik's cube in just a few seconds, and more complicated cubes like a 12-sided only takes him about three minutes to complete. <br /><br />Over half-term, he made a Rubik’s cube display of his primary school’s logo with mum suggesting they use leftover skirting boards to keep the artwork straight. <br /><br />Priyanka said she is going to buy a large frame for him for his world record attempt, which she hopes to organise soon.<br /><br />Henil also plans on making an artwork of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi when he next goes to India later this summer.