Навчальний посібник для студентів ос «Бакалавр» галузі знань 03 «Гуманітарні науки»



Pdf көрінісі
бет75/143
Дата23.11.2022
өлшемі4,66 Mb.
#159442
түріНавчальний посібник
1   ...   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   ...   143
Байланысты:
babenko country study

History 
In 1823 a collector called Sir George Beaumont offered to give his famous 
collection of paintings to the British Government to start a public art gallery. 
In 1824 another famous collection of paintings was on sale. The owner, John 
Julius Angerstein, had died. It looked as if his paintings would be sold outside 
England. Then there was another offer of paintings from a third collector, The 
Reverend Holwell Carr. The Parliament had to make a quick decision. 
The Parliament voted that a national collection should be started and a 
gallery should be built. They gave 60,000 Pounds Sterling to buy the 
Angerstein paintings. They got 38 pictures and were able to display them 
publicly in the Angerstein House. 
The collection grew quickly with the Beaumont and Holwell Carr paintings, 
and others, being bought or given. A new gallery was needed. In 1831 the 
plans of the architect William Wilkins were accepted. The site which looks 
over Trafalgar Square was chosen, old buildings were demolished and the 
magnificent new gallery was opened on April 9, 1838. 
When 
the National Gallery
opened, there was a strong opinion that 
paintings 
of 
the 
High Renaissance period 
of 
the 
late 
1400s 
to Baroquepaintings of the 1600s were the finest type of art. The 
word 
primitive
was used to describe Italian paintings from the 1300s and early 
1400s. Luckily, the director of the Gallery, Sir Charles Eastlake, thought it 
was important to collect some of these 
primitive
paintings, as well as the more 
popular High Renaissance paintings. That is how the 
National Gallery
came 
to own so many very rare works from the Late Middle Ages and 
Early Renaissance periods. 
In the 1870s the Gallery was lucky to get two collections of paintings 
by famous Dutch artists. The building had to be made larger to house them. 


151 
The Gallery was also given paintings by famous British artists; soon there 
were so many that most of them were moved out to a new gallery called 
the Tate. 
By the 20th century, it was getting more difficult to buy very important 
paintings; there were other galleries in the United States and Germany who 
were trying to buy the same paintings. So the 
National Gallery
began to buy 
works by more modern painters and soon had a collection of 19th and early 
20th century paintings. This is not a large part of the 
National 
Gallery's
collection, but it does show small works by many very important 
artists, particularly the Impressionists. 


Достарыңызбен бөлісу:
1   ...   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   78   ...   143




©engime.org 2024
әкімшілігінің қараңыз

    Басты бет