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Barber Institute of Fine Arts

The Barber Institute of Fine Arts is an art gallery and concert hall in Birmingham, England. It is situated in purpose-built premises on the campus of the University of Birmingham.

Established

The Grade I listed Art Deco building[1] was designed by Robert Atkinson in the 1930s and opened in 1939 by Queen Mary. The first building to be purpose-built for the study of art history in the United Kingdom, it was described by architectural historian Sir John Summerson as representing "better than almost any other building (except, perhaps the RIBA in Portland Place) the spirit of English architecture in the 1930s."[2] The layout of the museum is centred on a central concert hall which is surrounded by lecture halls, offices and libraries on the ground floor and art galleries on the first floor.


The building also features 2 Heraldic Shields on the exterior of the building, one of the University of Birmingham's Shied and one of the Barber Family's Shield. Created by the artist Gordon Herickx and produced between 1936-37 through the medium of painted and gilded Darley Dale stone. [3]


In the 2005 Penguin Books publication Britain's Best Museums and Galleries, the Barber Institute was one of only five galleries outside London to receive five stars for having "Outstanding collections of international significance" (the others were the National Gallery of Scotland, Oxford University's Ashmolean Museum, Cambridge University's Fitzwilliam Museum and the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool).[4]

, Thomas Gainsborough

The Harvest Wagon

, Whistler

Symphony in White, No. 3

The Marriage Feast at Cana (Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, c. 1672)

The Marriage Feast at Cana (Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, c. 1672)

Portrait of Countess Golovina (Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, c. 1797–1800)

Portrait of Countess Golovina (Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun, c. 1797–1800)

The Sun Setting through Vapour (Joseph Mallord William Turner), c. 1809

The Sun Setting through Vapour (Joseph Mallord William Turner), c. 1809

Portrait of a Carmelite Prior (Peter Paul Rubens), c. 1616

Portrait of a Carmelite Prior (Peter Paul Rubens), c. 1616

Two Peasants Binding Faggots (Pieter Brueghel the Younger), c. 1620

Two Peasants Binding Faggots (Pieter Brueghel the Younger), c. 1620

Barber Institute was 'Gallery of the Year' in 2004

Official website

Highlights from the Barber Institute collection

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