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Discover the Victorian family who grew up in the National Gallery, and other lesser-known histories, as NG Stories launches this week

NG Stories: Making a National Gallery
4 October 2024 – 12 January 2025
Ground Floor Galleries 
The National Gallery
Online at nationalgallery.org.uk/exhibitions/ng-stories
Admission free

The lives of 14 Victorian children who grew up living in the National Gallery will be among human histories brought into the spotlight, as NG Stories: Making a National Gallery launches this week, an immersive digital experience with online and in-person elements. 
 
'NG Stories: Making a National Gallery' will be open to the public from 4 October 2024 to 12 January 2025, and will blend the digital and physical worlds to shed light on the people and ideas that shaped the history of the National Gallery as we now know it – many of whom worked behind the scenes or whose names have been forgotten. 

Taking over two rooms of the Gallery’s ground floor, and accompanied by histories shared online and on social media, 'NG Stories' is one of the key strands of NG200's digital engagement programme, supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies. 

'NG Stories' provides a contemporary exploration of the Gallery’s 200-year history, highlighting lesser-known people using inventive digital methods to make use of rich archival material. Stories range from the Gallery’s first housemaid and the Keepers and porters who lived in the basement of the Gallery to keep the paintings safe around the clock, to the public appeals and key people that have helped acquire new works for the nation. 

The on-site experience weaves poignant stories from the public with major milestones from the 200-year history of the Gallery. Online visitors will also have the opportunity to read and share their own experiences; a selection of these will also feature in the Gallery's new digital display when the Sainsbury Wing reopens in May 2025.
 
The on-site experience will consist of two rooms, one with interactive and immersive elements that put the visitor ‘in the frame’ as they explore the content, the other providing a large-scale audio-visual digital journey that brings the Gallery’s rich history and connections with the public to life.  

A cluster of screens will highlight a rotating selection of historical images, showcasing the Gallery's staff and contributors – including the talents of artists, conservators, copyists and performers – and through a spectacular projection sequence, visitors and historical figures will be brought to life. Both rooms will be unified with a soundscape that enriches the narrative-led screen displays and combines ambient recordings of the Gallery’s bustling public areas with unique behind-the-scenes recordings of the vital work that staff conduct in various departments. 

The famous wartime concerts of pianist Myra Hess are reimagined as part of the 'NG Stories' projection experience, bringing together archive footage with a newly commissioned soundscape that transports the visitor back to wartime at the Gallery. Online, the people that made her concerts happen are in the spotlight: composer Howard Ferguson, who helped with programming; Hess’s niece Beryl Davies assisted with correspondence; and actor and musician Joyce Grenfell, who worked in the canteen during the concert days. She later wrote, ‘We made sandwiches that became justly famous for being complementary to the music.’

The digital experience also focuses on people that lived in the building from the very start, such as the first Keeper of Paintings William Seguier, the first housemaid Martha Hirst, to Ralph Nicholson Wornum and his family who lived in the building from 1855 to 1871. Wornum was a keen artist himself and kept extremely detailed diaries of his time living and working in the Gallery. He was the father of 14 children, many of whom grew up living in the Gallery in Trafalgar Square. 

'NG Stories' will be free to enter to all Gallery visitors, and the audience responses will have a legacy at the Gallery. The Gallery is currently preparing for a new entrance to the Gallery’s Sainsbury Wing, and the redisplay of the collection, both due to be unveiled in May 2025 at the end of the Gallery’s Bicentenary year, and contributions from 'NG Stories' will become part of the digital welcome audiences will receive.

Rosemary Leith, National Gallery Trustee and chair of the Digital Advisory Board, says: ‘'NG Stories', along with our other digital offerings in our 200th anniversary year, is a culmination of years of fantastic work by the Gallery and Digital teams to engage with our audiences more deeply. We’re excited to be bringing the National Gallery to the forefront of digital leadership in the gallery and museum sector within the UK and internationally.’

Alan Crookham, Research Manager and Archivist at the National Gallery, says: ‘It’s been a great pleasure to bring the Gallery’s fascinating archives to life in an innovative way. Alongside familiar stories and people, we’ve unearthed many more that are less well known such as Martha Hirst, the Gallery’s first housemaid, or the early history of our brilliant colleagues in the Scientific Department. We’re delighted to share their Gallery journeys with our visitors but also to receive new stories from members of the public. In this way we are both putting our historic archives on display at the same time as we are generating the archives of the future.’

Notes to editors

'NG Stories' continues the work done in recent years to transform audiences’ experiences of the paintings of the collection. This has included the creation of NGX – a virtual production studio and innovation programme – growth of an in-house digital content team, production of interactive apps for children, immersive digital exhibitions, and innovative use of social media, guided by the Gallery’s Digital Advisory Board.

'NG Stories' is one of a series of Bicentenary digital engagement projects supported by Bloomberg Philanthropies. The NG200 digital programme aims to bring the Gallery's collection to new, diverse audiences around the world; provide the foundation for creative interpretations of world-famous art; and share more about the people, history and processes behind the Gallery.

About Bloomberg Philanthropies

Bloomberg Philanthropies invests in 700 cities and 150 countries around the world to ensure better, longer lives for the greatest number of people. The organization focuses on five key areas for creating lasting change: the Arts, Education, Environment, Government Innovation, and Public Health. 

Bloomberg Philanthropies has invested $43 million in the Digital Accelerator Program to help strengthen arts organizations through strategic improvements to technology infrastructure. The program supports leadership development and infrastructure investment that builds audiences, increases fundraising, drives revenue, delivers dynamic programming, and helps develop best practices to share across a network of nonprofit cultural organizations. The program currently includes institutions in the US and UK. 

Exhibition credits

Room 1 Experience Design Lead: The Workers
Installation Design: de Pass Montgomery
Room 2 Experience Design Lead and Installation Design: The Office of Future Interactions
Sound Design and Composition: Nick Ryan Studio

The National Gallery is one of the greatest art galleries in the world. Founded by Parliament in 1824, the Gallery houses the nation’s collection of paintings in the Western European tradition from the late 13th to the early 20th century. The collection includes works by Bellini, Cezanne, Degas, Leonardo, Monet, Raphael, Rembrandt, Renoir, Rubens, Titian, Turner, Van Dyck, Van Gogh and Velázquez. The Gallery’s key objectives are to enhance the collection, care for the collection and provide the best possible access to visitors. Admission free. More at nationalgallery.org.uk 

On 10 May 2024 the National Gallery reached its 200th birthday, and the start of our Bicentenary celebration, a year-long festival of art, creativity and imagination, marking two centuries of bringing people and paintings together. 

Donate to NG200 at nationalgallery.org.uk/support-ng200

More information and book tickets for events at nationalgallery.org.uk

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Features and film are at nationalgallery.org.uk/stories

Also on display at the National Gallery at the same time:

Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers (14 September 2024 ‒ 19 January 2025 )

Discover Constable and The Hay Wain (17 October 2024 ‒ 2 February 2025)

Parmigianino: The Vision of Saint Jerome (5 December 2024 – 9 March 2025)

Press enquiries

Imogen Sebba, Press Manager NG200,  imogen.sebba@nationalgallery.org.uk
National Gallery Press Office on 020 7747 2865 or email National Gallery Press Office press.external@nationalgallery.org.uk  
Publicity images can be obtained from https://press.nationalgallery.org.uk/