Museums of London

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Also known as: Londinium

The British Museum originated in 1753 in the government’s purchase and amalgamation of three collections: the antiquities and natural history specimens assembled by the physician Sir Hans Sloane, the Cottonian Library and antiquities accumulated over 50 years by the Cotton family of Westminster, and the Harleian Collection of Manuscripts built up by the 1st and 2nd earls of Oxford. A public lottery raised the purchase price of the collections and a building in Bloomsbury to house them. This original nucleus was rapidly expanded by purchases and gifts as well as by the plunder of war and colonial conquest. In 1823–46 the Bloomsbury premises were totally rebuilt to the design of Robert Smirke, who graced the south front of the museum with a massive Ionic portico. The heart of Smirke’s design, a large internal quadrangle, was roofed over in the 1850s with an immense copper dome to create the famous Reading Room, in which Karl Marx wrote Das Kapital. In the late 1990s the inner courtyard and the Reading Room were enclosed by a 2-acre (0.8-hectare) square glass roof, transforming this area into one of the largest covered public squares in Europe. Christened the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, it was formally opened to the public in December 2000. The library holdings, established as the British Library in 1972, were moved to St. Pancras in 1998. Other collections also had outgrown the space available at Bloomsbury.

During the 1880s the British Museum’s botanical and zoological materials were reestablished in South Kensington as the Natural History Museum, housed in a richly carved and ornamented Victorian Romanesque building designed by Alfred Waterhouse. It formed part of a precinct of science and art developed at the direct initiative of Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert, on land purchased from the profits of the Great Exhibition of 1851. In 1986 the Natural History Museum incorporated the former Geological Museum located nearby. Its immediate neighbors are the Science Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum, with its immense collection of fine and applied arts.

The full list of London museums includes more than 250 entries and caters to almost every industry, religion, ethnicity, profession, enthusiasm, or foible. Outstanding collections are found at the Bethnal Green Museum of Childhood (1872; toys); the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich (1937; ships and the sea); the Museum of London (local history), with sites at the London Wall (1975) and the Docklands (2003); and the Freud Museum (1982).

Art galleries

Exhibition spaces

London is thought to possess about a third of the nation’s art galleries and perhaps half the total hanging space in Britain. The greatest of the permanent collections is the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square. Behind it sits the National Portrait Gallery, which houses a vast collection of paintings, drawings, sculptures, etchings, photographs, and miniatures of famous faces past and present. Many of the impressive holdings of the Tate galleries are displayed at two London locations: Tate Britain, at Millbank, which exhibits British art; and Tate Modern, at Bankside, where international modern painting and sculpture are housed. (The Tate also has galleries in St. Ives and Liverpool.) Somerset House on the Strand includes the Courtauld Institute of Art Galleries (fine arts) and the Gilbert Collection (decorative arts). The Wallace Collection in Manchester Square combines paintings by great masters from several countries with furniture, ceramics, and goldsmiths’ work in the ambience of an aristocratic town house. South of the river, Dulwich Picture Gallery in Dulwich College is England’s oldest public art gallery, built for collections of 17th- and 18th-century masterpieces, including works by Rembrandt, Peter Paul Rubens, Thomas Gainsborough, and Nicolas Poussin. Its architect, Sir John Soane, also designed his own home in Lincoln’s Inn Fields in 1812–13 to house an extraordinary personal collection of art—especially engravings and paintings by William Hogarth and Canaletto but also including works of art from the Middle Ages as well as classical and Egyptian antiquities. He bequeathed it to the nation, and in 1833 it was established as a public museum; today’s visitors find it as he left it.

Both the National Gallery and the Tate galleries mount special exhibitions. The other main venues for art shows are the aforementioned Hayward Gallery on the South Bank, a sculptural concrete box of 1960s vintage, and the neoclassical Royal Academy of Arts in Burlington House on Piccadilly. The leading commercial galleries are concentrated in the West End of London around the epicenter of Bond Street. Specialist and avant-garde galleries are scattered throughout London, with a preponderance to the north and west.

Artists’ quarters

Artists have long since been priced out of their traditional quarters in Chelsea and Hampstead. Today the prime areas for the bohemian life are the inner industrial suburbs of Hackney and Tower Hamlets to the east and Southwark to the south, where derelict work spaces and plentiful, loosely managed public rental accommodations have attracted many hundreds of artists. Scores of studios are thrown open in conjunction with the biennial exhibit of the Whitechapel Art Gallery in the East End.