RA Tours
Tours
Friday 30 March 2018
12 — 1pm
Discover the art, architecture and history of the Royal Academy during these free one-hour tours.
Join our knowledgeable guides as they reveal the stories behind both the familiar parts and hidden corners of Burlington House. Along the way, find out how our building has evolved from a town palace in the heart of London to the purpose-built galleries you see today.
Get an insight into the early years of the Royal Academy, discover more about our collection and see selected works on display.
Tours are free and last an hour. Please meet in the Front Hall of Burlington House.
● Fully booked
● Cancelled
Friday 30 March 2018
12 — 1pm
Meet in the Front Hall, Burlington House, Royal Academy of Arts
Free, no booking required.
- free
- RA Collection
- RA Tours
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- Tours
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Download a guide to Burlington House
Burlington House – A Brief History
A building rarely remains as it was when first built, and at Burlington House the successive transformations enacted by those who have occupied it are especially vivid. This guide, written by Peter Schmitt with Owen Hopkins, provides a brief introduction to this remarkable history, charting Burlington House’s complex and fascinating evolution from its beginnings to the present day.
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Watch a video about the history of the RA
The story of the Royal Academy of Arts
Find out about the history of the Royal Academy, and learn about our exciting plans for our 250th anniversary in 2018.
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Read more about our Collection
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Our Collection
8 days ago
How to read it: Frank Bowling’s Wintergreens
Vast and dense, Frank Bowling’s monumental Wintergreens is one of the modern masterpieces in the RA collection. It is currently on display in ‘Mappa Mundi’, a large retrospective of his work at the Irish Museum of Modern Art.
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Our Collection
17 days ago
The RA Collection in 250 objects: Tales of the unexpected
To celebrate our 250th birthday this year, we’re highlighting 250 beautiful, odd and inspiring objects from the RA Collection across 25 themes. In this edition, curator Annette Wickham talks us through some of the more surprising objects you’ll stumble across down in the depths of the Collection, from a lock of Napoleon’s hair to a rather fancy tea set…
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Our Collection
1 month ago
How to read it: Annie Swynnerton’s The Letter
In 1922, the Royal Academy elected its first female member in over 150 years: Annie Swynnerton. Here’s how to read her enigmatic painting of a young woman, currently on display in Manchester.
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Our Collection
1 month ago
Top picks from the Collection: Emma Stibbon RA
When painter and printmaker Emma Stibbon heard that she’d been elected a Royal Academician five years ago, she was in the middle of the Antarctic Ocean on an artist placement, accompanying a research expedition. Here, the intrepid artist picks out her favourite works from the Collection, featuring early photography, postwar painting and fantastical etching.
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Our Collection
1 month ago
The RA Collection in 250 objects: Mythical monsters
To celebrate our 250th birthday this year, we’re highlighting 250 beautiful, odd and inspiring objects from the RA Collection across 25 themes. In this edition, we’re looking at the fearsome mythical beasts lurking in the shadows of our archives, from the colossal serpents of Norse legend to hideous hydras from Greek myth.
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Our Collection
2 months ago
How to read it: Frank Cadogan Cowper’s Vanity
Combining allusions to both Renaissance and Pre-Raphaelite painting, Frank Cadogan Cowper’s Vanity celebrates beauty while cautioning against excessive self-regard. Unravel the painting’s influences in this three-minute read.
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Our Collection
2 months ago
The RA Collection in 250 objects: Anatomy
The RA will turn 250 on 10 December this year. To celebrate, we’re highlighting 250 beautiful, odd and inspiring objects from our Collection across 25 themes. We’re starting with the study of human anatomy, once a key part of the artistic training provided at the RA Schools. Here’s our head-to-toe guide to what happens when fresh corpses and fine art meet…
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Our Collection
2 months ago
Top picks from the Collection: Tom Kerridge
Top chef Tom Kerridge has a longstanding love of art; his wife is a sculptor and he was a good friend of the late Sir Anthony Caro. Against the bustling backdrop of his two Michelin-starred pub, he tells us about some favourite works in the RA Collection – starting with the gruesome tale of James Legg, a 19th-century murderer whose corpse was skinned, crucified and cast in plaster as a teaching aid for the RA Schools.
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Our Collection
4 months ago
How to read it: Henry Raeburn’s Boy and Rabbit
Take a closer look at Henry Raeburn’s Boy and Rabbit, an intimate family portrait from the RA Collection that is currently on loan to the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow.
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Our Collection
4 months ago
Themes from the RA Collection: Snow is falling
Is it snowing where you are? Here are some of the ways that artists have captured beautiful wintery scenes over the past 250 years – just in case you haven’t seen enough this week.
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Our Collection
4 months ago
Top picks from the Collection: Rebecca Salter RA
“I’ve been drawn to works on paper that really show the thought processes of artists and architects”, says printmaker, painter, and Keeper of the RA Schools Rebecca Salter, as she gives an audio tour of the online Collection.
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Our Collection
4 months ago
Top picks from the Collection: Anne Desmet RA
Anne Desmet is the only current Royal Academician elected for her work as an engraver. In this online tour, she unearths treasures from the Collection including works by Dürer, Piranesi and William Blake.
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Our Collection
4 months ago
Top picks from the Collection: Nitin Sawhney
The award-winning composer Nitin Sawhney offers an audio tour of favourite works from the RA Collection – from John Constable to Antony Gormley.
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Our Collection
4 months ago
Top picks from the Collection: Stephen Farthing RA
“I’ve set out a little curriculum from which you could teach someone to draw,” says artist and teacher Stephen Farthing, as he gives an audio tour of the online collection.
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Our Collection
5 months ago
How to read it: Edward Burne-Jones’s The Summer Snow
Edward Burne-Jones and his fellow Pre-Raphaelites are famed for their paintings, but their illustrations, which were an important part of their early careers, are less well-known. Here’s a closer look at one of Burne-Jones’s wood engravings.
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Our Collection
5 months ago
How to read it: Thomas Banks RA’s The Falling Titan
The Falling Titan depicts the doomed attempt of an earthbound giant to reach Olympus and overthrow Zeus by climbing up a pile of great boulders, only to be crushed by those very stones.
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Our Collection
7 months ago
How to read it: Bill Woodrow RA’s Fingerswarm
Bill Woodrow RA’s Fingerswarm is part of a new display of sculpture curated by Richard Deacon RA. Woodrow held a swarm of bees on his bare hand at a beekeeping course, sparking the idea for this surreal sculpture.
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Our Collection
8 months ago
How to read it: Lawrence Alma-Tadema RA’s A Family Group
This painting-within-a-painting by Lawrence Alma-Tadema depicts his artist wife and her siblings examining an earlier work by the couple, painted to symbolise their marriage.
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Our Collection
9 months ago
How to read it: Charles Tunnicliffe’s Chinese Geese
Pattern and design are as important as accuracy in this wood engraving by Charles Tunnicliffe RA. Come and take a closer look…
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Our Collection
10 months ago
How to read it: Ian Ritchie’s evolving work
Architect Ian Ritchie is known for audacious works such as the 120-metre Spire of Dublin and the world’s largest glass hall in Leipzig, but the poems and etchings that inspire these buildings are not so well known. Here we take a closer look at his unusual early design process.
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Our Collection
12 months ago
How to read it: Henry Tuke’s A Bathing Group
The year 2017 was the 50th anniversary of the partial decriminalisation of male homosexuality, marked at Tate Britain with an exhibition of ‘Queer British Art’, featuring Henry Tuke’s A Bathing Group from our collection. Take a closer look…
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Our Collection
1 year ago
How to read it: Michelangelo’s Taddei Tondo
Currently on display at the National Gallery, the Virgin and Child with the Infant St John, known as the Taddei Tondo, is the only marble sculpture by Michelangelo Buonarroti in a UK collection. It will return to the RA to join our new collections displays for our 250th anniversary in 2018.
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Our Collection
1 year ago
How to read it: Anthony Green’s The Fur Coat: ‘Hazana’
Here’s the story behind a slightly unusual work by Royal Academician Anthony Green.
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Our Collection
1 year ago
How to read it: Meredith Frampton’s Still Life
This meticulous and mysterious work by Meredith Frampton is full of contrasting symbolism. Our Collections team guide you through it in this three-minute read.
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
How to read it: Constable’s Flatford Mill study
Painted quickly to develop ideas before the final work, this is one of 16 oil sketches by John Constable RA in our collection. Here’s an introduction to Flatford Mill from a Lock on the Stour.
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
The 12 days of gifmas
Merry Christmas, art-lovers! This morning we bring you some light entertainment from the RA Collection – which, it turns out, is chock-a-block with pipers piping, french hens and maids a-milking. We’ve made just a few festive alterations…
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
How to read it: When Snow the Pasture Sheets
It’s looking rather balmy in London just now, so we’re seeking out our own white Christmas in the RA collection, with Joseph Farquharson’s snowy Scottish landscape. Did you know the sheep are fake?
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
How to read it: Salix by Gillian Ayres RA
This vast and vibrant work by Gillian Ayres was inspired by the wild canvases of Jackson Pollock.
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
How to read it: “the origin of the Corinthian order”
Sir William Chambers’s beautiful 18th-century drawing tells an ancient story about the beginnings of architecture.
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
How to read it: John Gibson’s Cupid and Psyche
Take a closer look at how one of Britain’s most celebrated 19th-century sculptors tackled an ancient Roman tale in marble.
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
Artist of the month: August 2016
During his lifetime, John Bellany RA contributed to a renaissance in the Scottish arts.
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Our Collection
> 1 year ago
Object of the month: August 2016
Draughtsmanship was an essential part of Lord Leighton PRA’s artistic practice and he placed great value on his drawings.
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Our Collection
< 2 years ago
Artist of the month: July 2016
A French-born painter famed for his detailed naval scenes, the artist had an adventurous early life, before returning to England in the 1750s to embark upon a successful artistic career and become a founding member of the Royal Academy in 1768.
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Our Collection
< 2 years ago
Object of the month: July 2016
Henry Tuke is a British painter known for his accomplished approach to the depiction of outdoor light. He studied in London, Florence, and Paris where he developed his plein-air style, but it was Tuke’s sensitive treatment of the male nude outdoors, of which July Sun is a masterful example, that established his reputation, and led to his election as a Royal Academician.
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Our Collection
< 2 years ago
Object of the month: June 2016
As we celebrate Leonard Manasseh RA’s 100th birthday, we take a look at the architect’s design for Radipole Lake pumping station.
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Our Collection
< 2 years ago
Artist of the month: June 2016
This month sees the opening of the first retrospective of Bill Jacklin RA’s graphic work, tracing his career from his student days at Walthamstow School of Art in the early 1960s to his latest monotypes, created at the beginning of this year.
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Our Collection
< 2 years ago
Artist of the month: May 2016
Augustus Leopold Egg was a talented painter and generous mentor, known for his atmospheric treatment of literary and historical subjects. To mark 200 years since his birth, we take a look at his life and work.
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Our Collection
< 2 years ago
Object of the month: May 2016
Gérard Edelinck’s engraving is the only remaining depiction of a lost mural by Leonardo Da Vinci.
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Our Collection
2 years ago
Artist of the month: April 2016
William Heath Robinson was an illustrator of enormous range and charm. As the RA Library Print Room presents his evocative book illustrations, curator Amanda-Jane Doran takes a look at his life and work.
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Our Collection
2 years ago
Artist of the month: March 2016
As her new series of drawings goes on display at the RA, we take a look at the life and work of one of Britain’s best abstract sculptors.
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Our Collection
2 years ago
Object of the month: March 2016
“All my paintings are ultimately about the human condition, figures doing something or nothing.”
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Our Collection
2 years ago
Object of the month: February 2016
“My paintings are abstract to me.” Basil Beattie RA’s painting suggests a narrative of ascent, but leads nowhere.
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Our Collection
2 years ago
Artist of the month: February 2016
Thomas Daniell RA is best known for his images of the Indian subcontinent. More widely travelled than any of his colonial artist counterparts, he earned the nickname of “artist-adventurer”.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Artist of the month: January 2016
Alongside an illustrious career exhibiting at the Royal Academy, Richard Westall RA was the drawing master to a young Princess Victoria, soon to be Queen.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Object of the month: January 2016
“There was always landscape,” George Clausen RA said of his painting.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Artist of the month: December 2015
Edwin La Dell is best known for his printmaking, in particular lithography, which he was a major exponent for in post-1945 British art.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Object of the month: December 2015
By 1880 there was huge competition amongst publishers to employ the best writers, illustrators and designers for books published in the run up to the Christmas holiday.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Object of the month: November 2015
Through his paintings, drawings and engravings, Bill Jacklin RA has obsessively pursued an exploration of light and darkness in all its possible forms.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Artist of the month: November 2015
Andrea Appiani is Lombardy’s most accomplished and well-known neoclassical painter, distinguished particularly in his production of frescoes.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Artist of the month: October 2015
Known as ‘Captain Jones’ by his contemporaries, George Jones RA maintained loyalty throughout his life to his two passions, the Royal Academy and the Army.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Object of the month: October 2015
A 19th-century cast of Francesco Laurana’s bust of Maria Sforza is currently on display in the RA Library as part of Edmund de Waal’s project, ‘white’.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Object of the month: September 2015
The architect’s design for the new Mary Rose Museum in Portsmouth was created to house the remains of the Tudor warship.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Object of the month: August 2015
The artist’s short, vigorous brushstrokes and bright palette of blues, greens and white suggest the fresh, vivid atmosphere of the mountains.
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Our Collection
> 2 years ago
Artist of the month: August 2015
A prominent member of ‘The Birmingham Group’, Charles Gere RA was inspired by the medieval period and lead the revival of tempera painting.
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Our Collection
< 3 years ago
Object of the month: July 2015
The artist’s printmaking combines boldly defined outline with vivid colouring, an approach which the artist also applies to his own self-image.
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Our Collection
< 3 years ago
Artist of the month: July 2015
On the 100th anniversary of his death, we explore the work of one of the most important artists in the resurgence of the decorative arts in Britain.
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Our Collection
< 3 years ago
Artist of the month: June 2015
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Alfred Elmore RA’s birth, an artist who continually explored theatrical and historical scenes.
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Our Collection
< 3 years ago
Object of the month: June 2015
As he observed the daily life of farming peasants, Pisarro illustrated his belief in an idyllic rural community balancing work with leisure.
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Our Collection
< 3 years ago
Object of the month: May 2015
Fishing was often a subject of JMW Turner’s paintings. Here we take a look at his own fishing rod.
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Our Collection
< 3 years ago
Artist of the month: May 2015
From a Continental training, Lord Leighton had a mixed reception in Britain, but went on to be President of the RA.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Artist of the month: April 2015
Today, George Stubbs ARA is best known as a painter of horses. His depictions of famous racehorses and the English sporting and country life have established him as one of the eminent British painters of the eighteenth-century.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Object of the month: April 2015
In this painting, A.K. Lawrence RA captures the mythical figure of Persephone escaping from the cavernous Underworld and dancing into the light, heralding the arrival of spring.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Naked truth: the story of female life models at the RA
What does a 230-year-old household bill tell us about life modelling in the 18th-century? Find out in this article exploring the historical role of the female nude life model at the RA.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
“Striving after excellence”: Victorian women and the fight for arts training
Amy Bluett discovers how 19th-century women aspiring to be artists had an uphill struggle to get equal access to training at the Royal Academy Schools.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Artist of the month: March 2015
A key figure in the revival of line engraving in the 1920s, Stanley Anderson RA (1884–1966) is best known for his series of prints memorialising England’s vanishing rural crafts.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Object of the month: March 2015
As a new exhibition of paintings by Sir Joshua Reynolds opens at the Wallace Collection, we take a look at one of his more experimental pieces in the RA Collection.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Mary Moser and Angelica Kauffman: the RA’s founding women
Amy Bluett discovers how women at the Royal Academy have fought for equality from 1768 up to the present, beginning with a closer look at founding Members Angelica Kauffman and Mary Moser.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
On the Reynolds trail in the RA archive
On the eve of a major exhibition in London dedicated to Sir Joshua Reynolds, we delve into the RA’s archive to learn more about the Academy’s founding president.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Artist of the month: February 2015
The illustrator Charles Stewart’s preoccupation with the past suggests he lead an unusual life.
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Our Collection
3 years ago
Object of the month: February 2015
A trip to Pompeii in Italy ignited a preoccupation with Classicism that spanned Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema RA’s career.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Artist of the Month: January 2015
Jean Cooke RA has explored her own image through self-portraiture over many years, including painting herself wearing a heavy brass fireman’s helmet.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Object of the month: January 2015
Though she has travelled from Europe to South Africa and New Mexico, it is the rugged terrain of Scotland to which Barbara Rae RA repeatedly returns.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Artist of the Month: December 2014
Sandra Blow RA created “thrilling harmonies” with bold colours and abstract compositions inspired by the Kent countryside and trips to Rome and St Ives.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Object of the Month: December 2014
Working out of doors, Sir John Arnesby Brown RA used dynamic brushstrokes and a palette knife to capture bovine energy and the drama of dark, thundery clouds.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Video: how we made Mr. Turner
Who was Mr. Turner? A contradiction, Timothy Spall told us at a recent panel discussion on Mike Leigh’s biopic. Watch the event and a behind-the-scenes video about the film here.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Artist of the month: November 2014
Though famous for his vignettes of high society in elegant interior settings, perhaps the most enduring of William Quiller Orchardson RA’s works is of his daughter on a billowy cliff walk.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Object of the month: November 2014
Typical of the work of Allen Jones RA in its examination of the voyeuristic gaze, this print depicts the psychology of human interaction in bold unmodulated colours.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Explore the John Madejski Fine Rooms rehang
Learn more about some of the highlights of our Collection that have recently gone on show in the John Madejski Fine Rooms.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Object of the month: October 2014
Originally cast in 1776 from the corpse of a smuggler fresh from execution, ‘Smugglerius’ was commissioned to improve the teaching of anatomy in the RA Schools.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Artist of the month: October 2014
Inspired by nature, John Constable RA brought landscape art into the public eye at a time when portraiture and historical subjects were much more widely esteemed.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
The RA Collection on the road in Japan
Two members of the RA Collection team have just returned from Japan where they were transferring an exhibition of works from the RA across the country.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Object of the month: September 2014
Combining several elements of his work, this piece features the crowds common to works by Lowry, who often painted from memory or imagination.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Artist of the month: September 2014
A student at the RA schools, John Phillip RA’s association with the Royal Academy began at a young age, stowing away on a ship from Aberdeen to London to visit the Royal Academy Exhibition.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
In pictures: restoring a national treasure
Behind the scenes with the conservators working on our Maclise cartoon.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Object of the Month: August 2014
Taken from one of the artist’s sketchbooks, this captures the Italian town of Nonantola just prior to the beginnings of the First World War.
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Our Collection
> 3 years ago
Artist of the Month: August 2014
George Clausen is remembered for the range of his remarkable accomplishments, both as an artist and as a dedicated Member of the RA.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
James Ward RA’s ‘Defence of the Beard’
A small pamphlet, discovered deep within our archives, shows that the beard as the defining feature of hipster facial fashion has been around longer than you might think.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
RA Collection acquires first film work
The film ‘Love has no reason’ by RA Schools graduate Julie Born Schwartz has been added to the Royal Academy’s historic Collection.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
Artist of the Month: July 2014
As a flamboyantly self-styled “working-class cockney”, Ruskin Spear RA found subjects for painting in the pubs, snooker halls and streets of Hammersmith, Fulham, Shepherd’s Bush and Chiswick.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
Object of the month: July 2014
These two canvases are a study for a panoramic work, ‘A Closer Grand Canyon’, which was made up of 96 individual canvases and painted in 1998.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
Artist of the Month: June 2014
The works of the architect, and subject of our ‘Dream, Draw, Work’ exhibition, recall the now rare traditional skills and techniques of architectural design, from working drawings to beautiful ink drawings.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
Object of the month: June 2014
One of the treasures of the Royal Academy Collection is now on display in a new exhibition about Michelangelo at the Capitoline Museum in Rome.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
Object of the Month: May 2014
One of the most influential figures in twentieth-century British art, Sickert’s Diploma work uses an impasto style to depict the ornate Baroque decorations of the Santa Maria della Salute in Venice.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
Artist of the Month: May 2014
Child prodigy Angelica Kauffman went on to be a founder-member of the Royal Academy. Her paintings and drawings were widely reproduced and were particularly popular in England, often being used in interior decorations.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
‘Deeds not words’: Suffragettes and the Summer Exhibition
On the 100 year anniversary of Mary Wood’s attack on Sargent’s portrait of Henry James, we delve into the Royal Academy’s archive to find out how the Academy, and the public, reacted.
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Our Collection
< 4 years ago
From aquatints to woodcuts: a visual glossary of original prints
We take a look at the main printmaking techniques and some of the terminology you’ll encounter when looking at original prints.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Object of the Month: April 2014
The influence of Aitchison’s travels to Italy is evident in this representation of the Crucifixion, presented to the Academy on his election.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Artist of the Month: April 2014
Born in Florence, Italy, the son of a goldsmith, Bartolozzi trained with his father before enrolling at the Florentine academy in 1742.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Restoring a masterpiece
Thanks to a grant from Arts Council England, Daniel Maclise’s monumental ‘Waterloo’ cartoon is to undergo conservation treatment in time for the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo in 2015.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Special delivery
Helen Valentine, our Senior Curator, and Edwina Mulvany, our Registrar, have just returned from Australia where they were installing the exhibition ‘Genius and Ambition’.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Object of the Month: March 2014
In 1910, C. Lewis Hind in the Art Journal, summarised Mark Fisher’s working practice thus: ‘He just walks out, sees something, feels an irresistible desire to paint it, and proceeds to paint it in the open air.’
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Our Collection
4 years ago
A chance discovery
A recently discovered drawing turns out to be a design by Richard Norman Shaw RA for the biscuit barrel that he presented to the Academy in 1883.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Artist of the Month: March 2014
Born in Bradford in 1937, Norman Stevens enrolled at the city’s art school to study painting aged only 15.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
History returns
A slice of history has recently returned to the Royal Academy after over 200 years, in the form of an intriguing drawing by John Flaxman RA.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Object of the month: February 2014
Terry Setch painted ‘Smoked Out’ for the exhibition Images of Paradise held at Harewood House, Yorkshire, in 1989. The exhibition was organised by Survival International, a group dedicated to protecting the lives, culture, and land of tribal peoples.
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Our Collection
4 years ago
Artist of the month: February 2014
George Frederic Watts RA was an influential and pre-eminent painter during his own lifetime. He became known for his portraiture and his Symbolist allegorical paintings, frequently depicting scenes from mythology, history, literature, and the Bible.
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Our Collection
> 4 years ago
Object of the month: January 2014
Joseph Farquharson RA was a landscape painter who was celebrated for his winter scenes, which he infused with a strong sense of atmosphere and mood.
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Our Collection
> 4 years ago
Artist of the month: January 2014
Robert Anning Bell presented ‘The Women Going to the Sepulchre’ to the Royal Academy as his diploma work on his election as a Royal Academician in 1922.
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More events
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Friends events
Friends excursion: Pope’s Grotto
● Fully booked
● Cancelled
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Talks
Access and community programme – artist presentations
InPractice
● Fully booked
● Cancelled
Friday 1 June 2018
6 — 8.30pmThe Reynolds Room, Burlington House, Royal Academy of Arts, Piccadilly
At this event we invite disabled artists and creative people facing barriers accessing the art world to share their practice with others.
Free, no booking required.
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Tours
Audio described tour and handling session: ‘Tacita Dean: LANDSCAPE’
InTouch
● Fully booked
● Cancelled
Monday 4 June 2018
9 — 11amMeet at the Learning Desk in the Front Hall, Burlington House, Royal Academy of Arts.
Join us for an audio described tour of the exhibition, followed by refreshments and a handling session. This event is designed for blind and partially sighted visitors.
Free, booking required.
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Workshops
Open Saturdays: Demonstrate & Create
● Fully booked
● Cancelled
Saturday 9 June 2018
2 — 3.30pmThe Learning Studio or The John Madejski Fine Rooms, Burlington House, Royal Academy of Arts, Piccadilly
Join us at the RA on the second Saturday of every month for an artist-led taster workshop, focusing on a specific artistic technique each session.
Free, sign-up on the day in the Front Hall.