Exhibitions/ The British Galleries

The British Galleries

At The Met Fifth Avenue
March 2, 2020–Ongoing

Exhibition Catalogue

With stunning new photography, this Bulletin place the works in the reopened British Galleries in a uniquely British context while also examining their global significance.

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Exhibition Overview

The re-opening of The Met's British Galleries is one of the highlights of the Museum's 150th anniversary—11,000 square feet devoted to British decorative arts, design, and sculpture created between 1500 and 1900. The reimagined suite of ten galleries provide a fresh perspective on the period, focusing on its bold, entrepreneurial spirit and complex history.

The British Galleries exhibit almost seven hundred works of art, including a large number of new acquisitions, particularly objects made in the nineteenth century that were purchased with this project in mind. A prominent new entrance provides direct access from The Met's medieval galleries, creating a seamless transition from the Middle Ages into the Tudor Renaissance.

A seventeenth-century staircase with exquisite naturalistic carvings—brought to The Met in the 1930s from Cassiobury House, a now-lost manor house—has been meticulously conserved and re-erected like an enormous jigsaw puzzle. Three magnificent historic interiors from Kirtlington Park, Croome Court, and Lansdowne House have been transformed by painstaking restoration and new lighting, and remain at the heart of the galleries. The visual exuberance of the eighteenth century is explored through one hundred English teapots displayed in two twelve-foot-tall semi-circular cases, as well as a huge "retail case" containing an array of enameled candlesticks, silver toys, nécessaires, and gold boxes.

Accompanied by a publication and an Audio Guide.


Featured Media

 

Time-Lapse: De-installation and Reconstruction of a 17th-Century British Staircase

 

"The showcase is, above all, a celebration of the innovation and entrepreneurship of artisans and craftspeople in Britain over four centuries…" —Artnet

"The new narrative emphasis on commercial forces provides a strong thread of social history, making the space as a whole feel like a fresh and evocative trip through both time and design." —House & Garden

"…an evocatively illuminated, four-century cinematic sweep…" Apollo Magazine


Funding for the renovation included leadership commitments from Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Chilton, Jr., Howard and Nancy Marks, the Estate of Marion K. Morgan, the Annie Laurie Aitken Charitable Trust, Irene Roosevelt Aitken, Mercedes T. Bass, Candace K. and Frederick W. Beinecke and The Krugman Family, Drue Heinz, Alexia and David Leuschen, Annette de la Renta, Kimba Wood and Frank Richardson, Denise and Andrew Saul, and Dr. Susan Weber.


On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in

 

The Primer

An image of an ornate bright chandelier illuminating a room of British paintings with the following text over the image: There's a Revolution in Your Teapot; Five unexpected themes in the new British galleries of decorative arts and design

The Primer is a new digital feature that sets the stage for selected exhibitions before you go.
Check out the Primer

 

Audio Guide

What do coffee shops have to do with the Enlightenment? Or teapots with colonial expansion? Hear curators, conservators, and contemporary artists uncover the surprising stories and politics behind British art, craftsmanship, and consumerism—then and now—in the Audio Guide.

Audio Guide Production Credits

 

 

 

Exhibition Objects




A vast array of teapots viewable in the British Galleries.