QUEEN'S GALLERY


Meaning of QUEEN'S GALLERY in English

small public art gallery at the queen's official London residence, Buckingham Palace, in the borough of Westminster. Opened in 1962, the gallery is on the site of a private chapel destroyed during an air raid in 1940. The gallery was established to make the Royal Collection more accessible; approximately three art exhibitions are arranged annually, in addition to exhibitions held at other venues, both in Britain and abroad. The Royal Collection has been formed mainly since the time of Charles II in the mid-17th century. It contains an outstanding collection of oil paintings, watercolours, drawings, and prints, as well as many items of gold, silver, jewelry, furniture, and other decorative art. Much of it is used to furnish the various palaces, and many pieces are on loan to different national museums. A review of some of the exhibitions arranged in the Queen's Gallery gives an indication of the extent and quality of the collection. They have included shows on individual artists such as Michelangelo, Sir Anthony Van Dyck, Hans Holbein the Younger, Canaletto, Thomas Gainsborough, and George Stubbs. There have also been exhibitions of Svres porcelain and Faberg decorative worksthe latter comprising more than 400 pieces. Geoffrey D. Lewis

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