May 30, 2026

Art Gallery

Art Gallery

Dingwall Art Group in frame for Alchemist gallery showcase

[ad_1] Storm Approaching Longa by Nicky Beveridge. MEMBERS of a Ross-shire art group are looking forward to a great public showcase for their work in the county town this weekend. Dingwall Art Group (DAG) will stage its 2025 Summer Exhibition in the Alchemist Gallery for the first time this year. The opportunity offered by gallery

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Art Gallery

Inside Dulwich Picture Gallery’s Brand-New Pavilion and Sculpture Garden

[ad_1] The oldest public-built art gallery in England, the 200-year-old Dulwich Picture Gallery, completed its huge £5 million redevelopment in August.  Now the first pictures of the swish new gallery are here. The £5 million project is the biggest renovation the gallery has seen in 20 years, and will open to the public with a celebratory programme

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Art Gallery

Damage to Vermeer painting at National Gallery in 1968 attack revealed

[ad_1] In the photo marks appear around the woman’s head, while a slash runs from her hair to the bottom of her face The damage from an unsolved attack to a Johannes Vermeer painting at the National Gallery has finally been revealed. A photograph of the 1968 attack suggests that the culprit attempted to remove

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Art Gallery

At 86 she started an art gallery. Now almost 98, she’s not stopping any time soon

[ad_1] For those lucky enough to make it to 86 years old, it’s understandable that only a few will remain in workforce.  Audrey Cooper, by her own admission, is a bit different. When she was 86, she opened her first art gallery: Art With Panache. The gallery is located in the Talbot Centre a shopping space in

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Art Gallery

Enter Gallery opens new space and show in Brighton

[ad_1] The Brighton-based gallery opened the show, titled Evolution, alongside its new art consultation and events space at Projects Brighton. The exhibition marks a return to the city and introduces a more bespoke approach to art collecting. Left: Magnus. Right: Hannah. (Image: Enter Gallery) Enter Gallery now offers a personalised consultancy service, allowing collectors to

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Art Gallery

Serpentine Galleries announces its first-ever Hockney exhibition – The Art Newspaper

[ad_1] The popularity of David Hockney exhibitions continues with the announcement of the Serpentine Galleries’ first-ever show by the UK artist, due to launch next year at the Serpentine North gallery (12 March-23 August 2026). The exhibition will feature A Year in Normandy (2020-21), a 90-metre-long frieze inspired by the Bayeux Tapestry, showing the change

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Art Gallery

National Art Gallery Langkawi brings nature into focus with PrintLab series

[ad_1] Beyond Kuala Lumpur, the National Art Gallery is working to make visual arts a highlight for visitors to Langkawi in Kedah, with programmes that connect artists and the local community while boosting the island’s appeal as a tourist destination. “Langkawi is one of the country’s most treasured island getaways, and at the National Art

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Art Gallery

Vermeer’s vandal: the untold story of a vicious attack at London’s National Gallery in 1968 – The Art Newspaper

[ad_1] In 1968 Vermeer’s Young Woman Seated at a Virginal (1670-72) was vandalised at the National Gallery in London. No photographs were released at the time, but they have now been supplied to The Art Newspaper. What makes this attack extremely disturbing is that the vandal attempted to completely remove the most important area of

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Art Gallery

Half of Britons have never been to an art gallery as ‘privileged’ image remains

[ad_1] Over a third of adults in the UK feel that  the arts world is beyond their reach, reserved only for the privileged few. In addition only 26 per cent of respondents felt represented in the arts. The survey of 2,000 Brits found that just 39 per cent see the arts – including filmmaking, television

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Art Gallery

Art gallery restaurants: Why the relationship between food and great artists is now official

[ad_1] Two years ago, at 8am, chef Richard Corrigan visited the Francis Bacon exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts, then went to The Wolseley for champagne and a bacon sandwich with the archivist who had taken him round. “I was gorged, mentally gorged,” he explains. “He was the most horrid creature in the widest

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