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Group    From 10/5/1824 

National Gallery

Categories: Art, History

National Gallery

In the late 1700s national galleries were all the rage in Europe. A number of countries nationalised their royal collections but the British government instead wanted to purchase a major collection when one became available. From 1777 onwards they missed a number of opportunities but finally bought the 38 paintings in the collection of the late John Julius Angerstein (1735–1823). This was displayed in his former townhouse at 100 Pall Mall, opening to the public on 10 May 1824. The house is lost but has a drawing which shows it to have been a not particularly large, traditional, Georgian terraced house.

The house was too small to accommodate all the visitors and in 1832 construction began on a new building by William Wilkins, a short distance away, overlooking the newly constructed Trafalgar Square.

Someone was looking to save expense wherever possible: the portico came from nearby Carlton House, demolished in  1826; when the first duke of Chandos, had to sell off his Canons estate in Little Stanmore it was demolished in 1747 and its colonnade was used on the front of the Gallery; cost-savings on the Marble Arch meant there were spare sculptural elements, some of which were put to good use on the front elevation.

The Carlton House columns were used for the two side porticos which gave access to the workhouse and a barracks immediately behind (the site allowing the gallery to be only one room deep). The eastern half of the building housed the Royal Academy until 1868. Since first construction the gallery has extended northwards and westwards as can be seen in this floor plan from Wikipedia, author Gringer.

Since opening with 38 paintings the collection has been expanded by donations and purchases and now holds more than 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900.

Charles Eastlake was a key figure in the early management of the gallery and expansion of its collection, and in 1855 was appointed its first Director, a post he held until his death, 10 years later.

2024: Richard Rogers' design of the Sainsbury Wing (to the west) was very controversial, with Prince Charles publicly describing it as a "monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much-loved and elegant friend".  It was funded by the Sainsbury brothers. During construction Lord John Sainsbury also took against the design, particularly two unnecessary columns flanking the foyer. His brother Simon convinced him to go ahead with the funding but on condition that John was allowed to place a note inside the columns stating his objection.  Which he did, in 1990, and recently, with the Wing undergoing renovation works, those columns have been demolished and this note found. have the full story and the text of the note.

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This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
National Gallery

Creations i

Muses - Apollo

Osbert Sitwell as Apollo, god of music, dance and lots more, plays a pipe to ...

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Virtues - Anrep

Carved at the top of the gravestone is a portrait of Anrep himself. The image...

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Other Subjects

Sir Kenneth Clark

Sir Kenneth Clark

Broadcaster and art historian. Born Kenneth Mackenzie Clark. He was keeper of the department of fine art at the Ashmolean Museum and Director of the National Gallery from 1934 to 1945. Came to nati...

Person, Art, History, TV & Radio

1 memorial
Arthur Morrison

Arthur Morrison

Writer and novelist. Born at 14 John Street, Poplar. He wrote detective novels and stories about working-class life in London's East End. His best known work was 'A Child of the Jago', set in a fic...

Person, Art, Literature

1 memorial
Sir Charles Eastlake

Sir Charles Eastlake

First Director of the National Gallery. President of the Royal Academy. First President of the Royal Photographic Society. One of the Commissioners for the Great Exhibition. Born in Plymouth, son ...

Person, Art, Politics & Administration, Italy

2 memorials
David Jones

David Jones

Painter and poet. Born Walter David Michael Jones.As a painter he worked chiefly in watercolour, painting portraits and animal, landscape, legendary and religious subjects. He was also a wood-engra...

Person, Art, Poetry

1 memorial
Frank Mowbray Taubman

Frank Mowbray Taubman

Frank Mowbray Taubman was born on 13 June 1868 in Holloway, Middlesex (now Greater London), the second of the four children of Robert Taubman (1840-1905) and Fanny Taubman née Mountain (1845-1932)....

Person, Art, Poetry, Sculpture

1 memorial