Parliamentary Art Collection
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The Parliamentary Art Collection is a collection of around 8,500 artworks held by the United Kingdom Parliament. The works are jointly owned by the House of Commons and the House of Lords. Approximately 80% of the collection is displayed at the
Palace of Westminster The Palace of Westminster serves as the meeting place for both the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, House of Commons and the House of Lords, the two houses of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Informally known as the Houses of Parli ...
and associated buildings of the Parliamentary Estate nearby, but not government buildings in Whitehall, or Downing Street. The collection includes around 7,000 paintings, drawings and other images, 700 sculptures, 600 coins and medals, and around 100 pieces in other media, such as textiles or wallpaper, with a focus mainly on British history and politics, including portrait paintings and statues of Members of Parliament, members of the House of Lords and other historical figures, and paintings of important events. As a rule, no portrait is displayed at the Palace of Westminster until the subject has been dead for at least 10 years, but works considered ineligible for the main building (for example, portraits of Shirley Williams and of Kenneth Clarke which were acquired in 2007) can be displayed elsewhere on the Parliamentary Estate, such as at 1 Parliament Street or in Portcullis House. The earliest pieces in the collection are 14 medieval statues of kings in Westminster Hall, dated to c.1388 during the reign of Richard II, while the oldest picture is an ink drawing of the Palace of Westminster by Jan Lievens, c.1630, but most works date from the 18th century onwards. It includes many works selected by the Royal Fine Art Commission (1840s), Royal Fine Art Commission decorate the reconstructed Palace of Westminster after the Burning of Parliament, catastrophic fire in 1834, which destroyed many historic artworks and tapestries. The new works include many large formal paintings for the public rooms, and statues of kings and queens around the exterior of the building. The Parliamentary Art Collection has a bronze statue of St Andrew from the cupola of the Parliamentary War Memorial, and in 2011 the Parliamentary Art Collection took responsibility for maintaining the cast of Henry Moore's ''Knife Edge Two Piece 1962–65'', displayed on College Green, London, College Green. There is an Advisory Committee on Works of Art, with a panel of advisers for the Speaker of the House of Commons (United Kingdom), Speaker of the House of Commons and the Lord Speaker, alongside the Speaker's Advisory Committee on Works of Art established in 1954 and the Lord Speaker's Advisory Panel on Works of Art. A Curator's Office was established in 1981. The budget to acquire new works was £75,000 in 2019. Separately, the Speaker's Art Fund is a charity founded in 1929 which acquires works of art for the House of Commons. File:WilliamIV.jpg, Portrait of William IV of the United Kingdom, William IV, artist and date unknown File:Cape St Vincent1797 300.jpg, ''Battle off Cape St Vincent, 1797'', by William Adolphus Knell (1846) File:Henry VIII's wives, circle of R.Burchett (1854–1860, Parliamentary Art Collection).jpg, The Wives of Henry VIII by (circle of) Richard Burchett (1854-1860) File:Margot Asquith.jpg, Portrait of Margot Asquith, by Philip de László (1909) File:Ernest-William-Tristram-Reconstruction-of-Medieval-Mural-Painting-Possibly-Queen-Philippa-with-Daughter.jpg, Reconstruction of a Medieval mural painting, possibly Queen Philippa and her daughter, by Ernest William Tristram (1927) File:Knife Edge Two Piece - Henry Moore.jpg, Cast of ''Knife Edge Two Piece 1962–65'', by Henry Moore {{nowrap, (1962-1965)


See also

* Government Art Collection * Royal Collection


References


Art in Parliament
parliament.uk
Art in Parliament
parliament.uk
Parliamentary Art Collection
ArtUK
Collection in focus: Parliamentary Art Collection
ArtUK, 1 March 2013
Parliament's art collection to include more women
''The Guardian'', 15 May 2019 Arts in England Art collections in the United Kingdom Parliament of the United Kingdom