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We have a new book coming in July! Gallery Director, Elizabeth Scott, has selected her personal favourites from the City of London's art collection. We're taking pre-orders now: https://t.co/mTGDeo6n6x #SustainingCulture
We've had some great submissions for #GalleryFromHome #GettyMuseumChallenge Today's recreation comes from Gallery volunteer Janet Mortimer. Thanks Janet! Keep up the #CreativityFromHome
On a Fine Day (1903)
Elizabeth Adela Stanhope Forbes (1859–1912)
It's April and we've spotted some welcome signs of spring in Evelyn De Morgan's painting The Hourglass.
#GalleryFromHome #TheEnchantedInterior
How many of London's famous bridges can you spot in this panorama by David Thomas? Image © Guildhall Art Gallery #ArchitectureOfLondon
The first four bridges of #IlluminatedRiver are going to be lit this summer. Visit the Guildhall Art Gallery to see original architectural drawings and animations of the project displayed alongside historic Thames paintings. https://t.co/vUvQpZoOms #FantasticFeats
Something for the weekend - see Sir John Everett Millais' 'Lorenzo and Isabella' in the Visions and Visionaries exhibition. This artwork is a stunning example of a new pre-Raphaelite style where fable and realism merge https://t.co/kJz6sjvRld
Searching for last minute gifts? Visit Visions and Visionaries and pick up the companion guide in the shop - the perfect stocking filler for art history buffs. Open 10am-5pm today. #arthistory #JohnLatham #GraysonPerry #GabrielDanteRossetti #Christmasgifts https://t.co/beTDdWhY4p
Day 2 - This is a portrait of Sir John Everett Millais’ five year old daughter Effie at her first sermon, painted in 1863. Can you guess what she is doing in the portrait of her second sermon? Find out tomorrow #12DaysOfChristmas #SeenandHeard
Less than a week to go! If you’re in London over the next few months be sure to visit our #SeenAndHeard exhibition to learn about how social and political reforms in the Victorian era were reflected in art, particularly in terms of poverty and the treatment of children #art
#DidYouKnow increased economic prosperity in the nineteenth century meant that the idea of the ‘weekend’ emerged - working families began taking day trips to the seaside and parents began to spend more time with their children #SeenAndHeard https://t.co/AlnHCrYfnI.ukseenandheard