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  • Corporate event at the National Portrait Gallery, London.
    National Portrait Gallery.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Fashion designer Zandra Rhodes recreates Portrait of Catrina Hooghsaet in front of the original painting - This is the portrait she reinvents in the upcoming BBC2 programme Rankin Shoots Rembrandt. This is to mark the start of Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Zandra Rhodes Rembrandt GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • The Queen and Prince Philip - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 02.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Helen Lessore - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • Harold Evans and Nell Dunn - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • Graham Greene - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 03.jpg
  • Princess Anne and Prince Charles - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 01.jpg
  • Self-portrait, 1958, by artist and actor, Pauline Boty - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Self-portrait, 1958, by artist and actor, Pauline Boty - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 22.jpg
  • Anthony Blunt (R) - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 30.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • Frances von Hofmannsthal - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 23.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Vita Sackville-West - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Anthony Blunt (R) - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • The Queen and Princess Anne - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • Nell Dunn - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Peter Cook - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Self-portrait, 1958, by artist and actor, Pauline Boty - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 24.jpg
  • Helen Lessore - Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • Snowdon: A Life in View – a new exhibition (curated in consultation with his daughter - Frances von Hofmannsthal)  at the National Portrait Gallery. It celebrates a major gift of photographs from Lord Snowdon (Antony Armstrong Jones) to the Gallery in 2013, and coincides with a new monograph published by Rizzoli.  Highlight portraits on display include: studies of writers such as Nell Dunn and Graham Greene, actors such as Julie Christie and Laurence Olivier, and cultural figures such as newspaper editor Harold Evans and musician David Bowie; the opportunity to see new selections from book Private View (1965), an examination of the British art world created in collaboration with art critic John Russell and Bryan Robertson, then director of the Whitechapel Art Gallery; and a selection of portraits of the Royal Family from the 1950s. The exhibition runs from 26 September 2014 - 21 June 2015.
    Snowdon NPG GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Statesmen of World War 1, 1924-30, by Sir James Guthrie - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 29.jpg
  • Prince Edward, Duke of Windsor (later King Edward VIII) as Prince of Wales, 1917, painted during the First World War by artist Frank O. Salisbury and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Statesmen of World War 1, 1924-30, by Sir James Guthrie and Sir Winston Churchill by Sir William Orpen - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 16.jpg
  • Statesmen of World War 1, 1924-30, by Sir James Guthrie - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 05.jpg
  • Anna Neagle by McClelland Barclay - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 34.jpg
  • The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 33.jpg
  • The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 32.jpg
  • Dame Edith Sitwell, by Maurice Lambert, and Sir Osbert Sitwell, by Frank Dobson, and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 31.jpg
  • Dame Edith Sitwell, by Maurice Lambert, and Sir Osbert Sitwell, by Frank Dobson, and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 28.jpg
  • Dame Edith Sitwell, by Maurice Lambert, and Sir Osbert Sitwell, by Frank Dobson, and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 27.jpg
  • Dame Margot Fontaine, by Maurice Lambert, and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 26.jpg
  • Dame Margot Fontaine, by Maurice Lambert, and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 25.jpg
  • Prince Edward, Duke of Windsor (later King Edward VIII) as Prince of Wales, 1917, painted during the First World War by artist Frank O. Salisbury - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Sir Winston Churchill by Sir William Orpen - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • Prince Edward, Duke of Windsor (later King Edward VIII) as Prince of Wales, 1917, painted during the First World War by artist Frank O. Salisbury and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Prince Edward, Duke of Windsor (later King Edward VIII) as Prince of Wales, 1917, painted during the First World War by artist Frank O. Salisbury and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Statesmen of World War 1, 1924-30, by Sir James Guthrie - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Statesmen of World War 1, 1924-30, by Sir James Guthrie - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Statesmen of World War 1, 1924-30, by Sir James Guthrie - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 11.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 09.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 07.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 08.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 06.jpg
  • General Officers of World War 1, 1922, by John Singer Sargent and Naval Officers of World War 1, 1921, by Sir Arthur Stockdale Cope - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 04.jpg
  • Self Portrait - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Portrait of Frederick Rihil on Horseback - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Self Portrait - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Self Portrait - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Self Portrait - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Dame Edith Sitwell, by Maurice Lambert, and Sir Osbert Sitwell, by Frank Dobson, and other works - The National Portrait Gallery, London opens brand new gallery spaces devoted to its early 20th Century Collection on 4 November 2017. The creation of these new spaces within the Gallery’s free permanent Collection, has been made possible by a grant from the DCMS/ Wolfson Museums & Galleries Improvement Fund. London 03 Nov 2017.
    NPG New Galleries GBPhotos 30.jpg
  • Self Portraits - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Self Portraits - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • Self Portraits - Rembrandt: The Late Works, a new  exhibition sponsored by Shell - the first ever in-depth exploration of Rembrandt’s final years of painting. It features ‘unprecedented’ loans from around the world and is an opportunity to experience the ‘passion, emotion and innovation’ of the great master of the Dutch Golden Age.  The exhibition runs from 15 October 2014 - 18 January 2015
    Rembrandt National Gallery GBPhotos ...jpg
  • FTI hold a dinner at the NPG
    FTi dinner National Portrait Gallery.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 21.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 20.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 19.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 18.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 17.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 15.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 14.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 13.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 12.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 10.jpg
  • Vivienne Westwood, Sadie Frost, John Sauven (Executive Director, Greenpeace UK) and photographer Andy Gotts MBE attend the launch of the Save the Arctic photography exhibition at London Underground’s Waterloo Station, London, UK 13 July 2015. The images show 60 celebrities wearing Vivienne Westwood’s Save the Arctic t-shirt – photographed by Andy Gotts MBE  - most have never been seen before. The exhibition, which includes Pamela Anderson, George Clooney, Kate Moss, Naomi Campbell, Vanessa Redgrave, Sir Ian McKellen, Dame Judi Dench and many more, is in the advertising space running up to the London HQ of oil company Shell, which is due to start drilling in the Arctic this month.
    Save the Arctic Waterloo GBPhotos 09.jpg
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