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Get all the latest news from the Gallery's Bicentenary year, updates on exhibitions, plus occasional offers and information on how to support us. The Nation's Gallery. The story of European art, masterpiece by masterpiece.
Plan your visit. The National Gallery is free to visit. There is a charge for some exhibitions. Advanced booking is recommended to help plan your visit and to receive updates before you arrive. Open daily 10am–6pm and Friday until 9pm (Closed 24–26 December and 1 January) Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN.
Be blown away by Van Gogh’s most spectacular paintings in our once-in-a-century exhibition. See some of Europe's earliest, most exquisite and most significant artworks. Members get access to all the Gallery has to offer. Join today.
Get all the latest news from the Gallery's Bicentenary year, updates on exhibitions, plus occasional offers and information on how to support us.
Entry to the Gallery to view the collection is free – admission is now through the Portico Entrance. Book your Gallery entry ticket We encourage people to book a gallery entry ticket.
We are home to the national collection of paintings in the Western European tradition from the 13th to the 19th centuries. Our paintings are on show 361 days a year, free of charge.
John Warrington Wood. Austen Henry Layard (1817–1894) commissioned this marble bust of himself from the sculptor John Warrington Wood in Rome in 1881. It was remodelled from a bust sculpted by Wood in London in 1869, which was exhibited the following year at the Royal Academy.
Tickets now available, booking through to 8 December. Be blown away by Van Gogh’s most spectacular paintings in our once-in-a-century exhibition. Walk with a pair of lovers beneath a starry night. Look up at swirling clouds and cypress trees swaying in the wind.
Our exhibition, Hockney and Piero: A Longer Look (8 August – 27 October 2024), brings together threads from David Hockney’s lifelong relationship with the National Gallery. From seeing the paintings for the first time in books to curating a show of his favourite paintings in the Gallery, this current exhibition celebrates these treasured ...
Find out what lies behind the making of 'The Hay Wain' and its iconic status in British art. Through paintings including George Morland’s building storm and the atmospheric light of William Mulready’s farrier shop, we look at how Constable’s contemporaries created rural scenes.