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National Portrait Gallery, London

National Portrait Gallery
London NPG.JPG
Entrance to the National Portrait Gallery, 2006
National Portrait Gallery, London is located in Central London
National Portrait Gallery, London
Location within central London
Established 1856; 161 years ago (1856)
Location Saint. Martin's Place
London, WC2
United Kingdom
Coordinates 51°30′34″N 0°07′41″W / 51.5094°N 0.1281°W / 51.5094; -0.1281Coordinates: 51°30′34″N 0°07′41″W / 51.5094°N 0.1281°W / 51.5094; -0.1281
Collection size 195,000 portraits
Visitors

2.06 million (2014)

Director Nicholas Cullinan
Public transit access National Rail Charing Cross
London Underground Charing Cross; Leicester Square; Embankment
Website npg.org.uk

2.06 million (2014)

The National Portrait Gallery (NPG) is an art gallery in London housing a collection of portraits of historically important and famous British people. It was the first portrait gallery in the world when it opened in 1856. The gallery moved in 1896 to its current site at St Martin's Place, off Trafalgar Square, and adjoining the National Gallery. It has been expanded twice since then. The National Portrait Gallery also has three regional outposts at Beningbrough Hall, Bodelwyddan Castle and Montacute House. It is unconnected to the Scottish National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh, with which its remit overlaps. The gallery is a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

The gallery houses portraits of historically important and famous British people, selected on the basis of the significance of the sitter, not that of the artist. The collection includes photographs and caricatures as well as paintings, drawings and sculpture. One of its best-known images is the Chandos portrait, the most famous portrait of William Shakespeare although there is some uncertainty about whether the painting actually is of the playwright.

Not all of the portraits are exceptional artistically, although there are self-portraits by William Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds and other British artists of note. Some, such as the group portrait of the participants in the Somerset House Conference of 1604, are important historical documents in their own right. Often, the curiosity value is greater than the artistic worth of a work, as in the case of the anamorphic portrait of Edward VI by William Scrots, Patrick Branwell Brontë's painting of his sisters Charlotte, Emily and Anne, or a sculpture of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert in medieval costume. Portraits of living figures were allowed from 1969. In addition to its permanent galleries of historical portraits, the National Portrait Gallery exhibits a rapidly changing selection of contemporary work, stages exhibitions of portrait art by individual artists and hosts the annual BP Portrait Prize competition.


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