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News Archive 2021

Blog: A glimpse behind the scenes of The Courtauld’s reopening

13 Oct 2021
by Dr. Karen Serres

Read time: 3 minutes

By Dr Karen Serres (MA 1999, PhD 2004), Curator of Paintings

Karen Serres looking at the proposed lighting track in the empty and freezing gallery with the rest of the team, September 2019

The opportunity to consider anew the hang of an entire gallery is a rare occurrence in the life of a curator. The challenge faced by the Courtauld team was to use the refurbishment to address a number of long-standing practical issues, improve the displays and offer new insights to visitors while retaining the Gallery’s special character.

Our first consideration was less about the works of art themselves than what had been hindering their display: poor lighting, creaky and unstable floors, an unwieldy hanging system, the difficulty of maintaining good environmental conditions in a historic building, complex access on every level. The invisible issues that matter a great deal.

Next, we considered the collection and the spaces. We knew early on that it was important that The LVMH Great Room be restored to its full glory and that it should hold the Impressionist collection, as one of the highlights of the visitor’s journey.

‘This past year has certainly shown us that art matters more than ever, offering pleasure, enrichment and solace.’

Mocking up lighting and new wall colours (painting is a reproduction), September 2019

Elsewhere, we set out two goals for the displays, building on what makes The Courtauld unique. Firstly, we wanted to promote close looking and encourage visitors to have personal encounters with masterpieces such as Cranach’s Adam and Eve (1526), Rubens’s Landscape by Moonlight (1635-40), and Gainsborough’s Portrait of Margaret Gainsborough (c.1778). This means having a more sparse hang in certain rooms to allow these works to shine. Secondly, we wanted to show art in all its variety and richness. To do this we included, for example, lively preparatory sketches that reveal the artist’s creative process, and juxtaposed paintings with decorative arts, sculpture, furniture and drawings.

It has been difficult to be without the Gallery for a few years, and even more so to be separated from the collection and the spaces because of the lockdowns. In a slightly surreal way, my living room is strewn with floorplans, paint swatches for the walls and paper samples for the new labels as we continue to make decisions remotely. Despite these difficulties, I am confident that even seasoned visitors to The Courtauld will feel that they are rediscovering the collection and that newcomers will have a revelatory experience. This past year has certainly shown us that art matters more than ever, offering pleasure, enrichment and solace.

The Courtauld Gallery will reopen on 19 November 2021. Book your visit now to visit one of the UK's finest collections of art.

A painting of three women in conversation. The woman on the left leans into the other two in earnest discussion. They sit in front of an open window with a bouquet of flowers visible.

Display, The Courtauld Gallery, What's On Highlights

Vanessa Bell: A Pioneer of Modern Art

25 May – 6 Oct 2024 

This display will be the first devoted to The Courtauld's significant collection of Vanessa Bell’s work, including her masterpiece A Conversation, and the bold, abstract textile designs she produced for the Omega Workshops....

Two groups of men and boys on Southam Street, North Kensington, London. A young West Indian boy looks straight at the camera.

Exhibition, The Courtauld Gallery, What's On Highlights

Roger Mayne: Youth

14 June – 1 Sep 2024 

An exhibition of works by photographer Roger Mayne, bringing together his evocative documentary images of communities and neighbourhoods of 1950's inner London, alongside intimate images of his own family at home in Dorset in the 1970s....

A pen and ink drawing with coloured pencils of four figures standing in a setting with brown walls

Exhibition, The Courtauld Gallery, What's On Highlights

Henry Moore: Shadows on the Wall

8 June – 22 Sep 2024 

This exhibition, a collaboration with Henry Moore Foundation, considers Henry Moore’s (1898 – 1986) celebrated Shelter drawings as the point of departure for a new reading of the artist’s fascination with images of the wall. ...

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