The National Gallery year ahead round up 2024 and 2025
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, December 26, 2024


The National Gallery year ahead round up 2024 and 2025
Parmigianino (1503–1540), Studies of Saints John the Baptist and Jerome, a Crucifix and Various Heads (recto), about 1525–7. Red chalk on paper, 13.5 × 22.1 cm. The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles (87.GB.9) Image courtesy of the Getty's Open Content Program.



LONDON.- VAN GOGH: POETS AND LOVERS
Until 19 January 2025


To mark its 200th anniversary the National Gallery is staging its first exhibition of the paintings of Vincent Van Gogh. Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers marks the centenary of the Gallery’s acquisition of the artist’s Sunflowers and Van Gogh’s Chair (1888), two of its most famous pictures, in 1924. Groups of Van Gogh’s most ambitious canvases and works on paper explore the artist’s creative process and his sources of inspiration. Dwelling on Van Gogh’s time in Arles and Saint-Rémy in the South of France (1888-90), the exhibition investigates the artist’s fascinating practice of turning the places he encountered into idealised spaces in his art, thus crafting a deeply resonant and poetic framework for his oeuvre.

DISCOVER CONSTABLE AND THE HAY WAIN
Until 2 February 2025


The National Gallery is staging Discover Constable and The Hay Wain, devised around The Hay Wain (1821) by John Constable (1776 –1837). This is the first loan exhibition held at the National Gallery on this artist and the first to explore the social, political and artistic context of the English landscape at the time of 'The Hay Wain’s' production. The exhibition explores how the English landscape was changing physically and politically at the turn of the 19th-century, and how this was understood and represented (or not) by artists at this time. It also looks at where Constable was in his career in 1821 when he produced The Hay Wain and his process of building final works from sketches and studies produced over many years.

Art Road Trip
10 May 2024 – 10 May 2025


Since May 2024 and until May 2025, our travelling art studio programme, Art Road Trip, is visiting 18 places across the UK, working with 24 local arts organisations to create community-led arts projects. In each location, we’re designing events for people with the least access to creative opportunities and the arts, reaching thousands of people over the course of the year to bring art and ideas inspired by the National Gallery Collection right to where they live. You can find out where Art Road Trip is and who they are working with at any given time on our website.

PARMIGIANINO: THE VISION OF SAINT JEROME
5 December 2024 – 9 March 2025


This winter, as part of our 200th anniversary year, the National Gallery celebrates Parmigianino’s Madonna and Child with Saints (1526‒7) which returns to public view for the first time in a decade, following meticulous conservation treatment. A masterpiece of 16th-century Italian painting, it was presented to the Gallery two years after our foundation in 1826.

Also known as ‘The Vision of Saint Jerome’, a title acquired in the 19th century in response to the unusual depiction of the apparently sleeping saint, the altarpiece will be displayed for the first time alongside a selection of some of the most important preparatory drawings. This exhibition offers visitors a rare opportunity to encounter the artist at work, from initial concept ideas to final designs, and delve into the mind of one of the most innovative artists of the Renaissance.

KATRINA PALMER: ARTIST IN RESIDENCE
11 December 2024 – 28 February 2025


Katrina Palmer, a London-born and based artist, is the National Gallery’s Artist in Residence 2024. Palmer has been invited to respond to the collections of the National Gallery and Touchstones Rochdale. She began her residency in December 2023 and has been working over the course of a year in the National Gallery’s on-site artist’s studio, benefiting from the close proximity to the collection and archives.

CENTRE FOR CREATIVE LEARNING
3 March 2025


Part of our Bicentenary capital projects will be a transformed Centre for Creative Learning, allowing us to be far more ambitious with our educational offer and become the nation’s art classroom. This has been designed by Lawson Ward Studios after consultations with and input from children, teachers and families on how they want to use the space and what they want it to look like, to inspire lifelong learning and creativity.

SIENA: THE RISE OF PAINTING 1300 – 1350
8 March – 22 June 2025


Paintings by some of the greatest Italian artists of the 14th century will be reunited at the National Gallery in 2025 - having been dispersed throughout the world for centuries. Some of the most innovative works in the Western painting tradition, many of which were part of larger ensembles before they were separated, are being brought back together. These influential and precious paintings, many in gold ground, will be among the highlights of a rarely staged exhibition of art of the first half of the 14th century. Siena: The Rise of Painting 1300‒1350, which marks the 200th anniversary of the National Gallery and celebrates the earliest pictures in its collection, will open in spring 2025.

JOSÉ MARÍA VELASCO: A VIEW OF MEXICO
29 March – 17 August 2025


The first monographic exhibition in the UK devoted to José María Velasco (1840–1912), Mexico’s most celebrated 19th-century painter, will take place at the National Gallery early next year.  José María Velasco: A View of Mexico coincides with the 200th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the UK and Mexico. Velasco is famed for his monumental paintings of the Valle de México, the area surrounding Mexico City, the nation’s capital. Painted during decades of tremendous social change, his precise yet lyrical works depicted Mexico’s magnificent scenery and rapid industrialisation.

THE CARRACCI CARTOONS: MYTHS IN THE MAKING
10 April – 6 July 2025


Coinciding with the re-hang of our collection, the National Gallery will present the Carracci cartoons (about 1599) in Room 1. This is a rare chance to see these works which, at nearly four metres wide and two metres tall and in the delicate medium of charcoal and white chalk, are not often displayed. The works came into the National Gallery collection in 1837 as part of a gift by Lord Francis Egerton. They were initially made in preparation for the painted ceiling in the gallery of one of Rome’s greatest Renaissance palaces, the Palazzo Farnese.

NG200: WELCOME
15 May 2025


A suite of capital projects that will benefit all those who visit the Gallery. Sensitive interventions to our building will reshape the National Gallery for its third century and the next generation of visitors. In May 2025 a transformed Sainsbury Wing entrance, public realm and visitor amenities along with a new Supporters’ House, designed by a team led by Selldorf Architects, will open, drawing on the building’s heritage while providing a more inspiring and sustainable experience for our millions of visitors every year.

JEREMY DELLER’S THE TRIUMPH OF ART 26 July 2025

A new commission by Turner Prize winning artist Jeremy Deller, rounding off the National Gallery’s Bicentenary celebrations. The Triumph of Art marks how festivals are part and parcel of art, culture and civic life, and that art and artists can be catalysts of collaboration and joy, with a year of talks, workshops and procession-style performances, happening in partnership with arts organisations all over the UK. The role art plays in our public collections, cultural spaces and museums is the new work’s main theme. Deller has drawn inspiration from the Renaissance painter Titian’s wild processions of the Roman gods, as in his famous Bacchus and Ariadne (1520‒23), as well as folklore, dances, plays, rave culture and popular arts – all culminating in a celebratory performance in Trafalgar Square in July.

MILLET: LIFE ON THE LAND
7 August – 19 October 2025


The first UK exhibition in nearly 50 years dedicated to Jean-François Millet (1814–1875) will open at the National Gallery in autumn 2025. The show coincides with the 150th anniversary of Millet’s death – by which time his works were well known in the UK and beginning to be eagerly collected by an enthusiastic group of British collectors, resulting in a significant body of his work in UK public collections. Millet: Life on the Land will present around 13 paintings and drawings from British public collections. It will include the National Gallery’s The Winnower (about 1847‒8), and the exceptional loan of L’Angelus (1857‒9) from the Musée d’Orsay, Paris.

RADICAL HARMONY: HELENE KRÖLLER-MÜLLER’S NEO-IMPRESSIONISTS
13 September 2025 – 8 February 2026


The first-ever exhibition dedicated to the Neo-Impressionist art movement at the National Gallery will take place in the autumn of 2025. Radical Harmony: Helene Kröller-Müller’s Neo-Impressionists will show works largely drawn from the outstanding collection of the German art collector Helene Kröller-Müller (1869‒1939), at the Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, in the Netherlands. The exhibition will show radical works of French, Belgian and Dutch artists, painted from 1886 to the early 20th century. These include Anna Boch (1848‒1936), Jan Toorop (1858‒1928), Théo van Rysselberghe (1862‒1926) and Paul Signac (1863‒1935) and Georges Seurat (1859–1891) himself. One of the first great women art patrons of the 20th century, Kröller-Müller, assembled what is probably the world’s greatest and most comprehensive collection of Neo-Impressionist paintings just two decades after these works were painted.










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