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195:. No attempt had been made to show contemporary decorative arts in London since the Grosvenor Gallery's Winter Exhibition of 1881, which included cartoons for mosaic, tapestry, and glass, and the Society's annual (later triennial) exhibitions at the New Gallery were important events in the
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leaf. At the opening, the West and North
Galleries on the ground floor were devoted to oil paintings, and the first floor balcony around the Central Hall displayed smaller works in oils, watercolours, etchings and drawings. Sculpture was displayed in the Central Hall itself.
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of the first exhibition was held on
Tuesday, 8 May 1888, and the exhibition opened to the public on Wednesday, 9 May, for three months. The private view was a great social success, with former Prime Minister
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The New
Gallery was the setting for a major Burne-Jones retrospective in 1892–93 and a memorial exhibition of his works in 1898. In 1893 the New Gallery exposed for the first time four panels by
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156:, then at the height of his popularity, supported the new venture, serving on its Consulting Committee and lending three large oils for the opening, thus ensuring its financial success.
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and was used as a church from 1953 until the 1990s, although the cinema was occasionally used for religious films. It remained empty until 2006, when it became a
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In 1910, the interior was converted into The New
Gallery Restaurant, but it was converted again in January 1913, this time to a
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Carr continued as co-director until 1908. The Arts and Crafts
Exhibition of 1910 was the last to be held at the New Gallery.
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In
October and November 1888, the New Gallery hosted the first showcase of industrial and applied arts by the
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After World War II the cinema struggled, partly because it was slightly off-West End, and the then owners,
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Habitat surrendered the lease in March 2011, and in
September 2012 the site become a flagship store for
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furniture store. The
Wurlitzer organ remained in place and was restored to its original condition.
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244:. Enlargement and modifications were made to the cinema in 1925, including the installation of a
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furniture store from 2006 to 2011, and since
September 2012 it is a flagship store for
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from 1953 to 1992. After having been empty for more than ten years, the building was a
21:
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The New
Gallery continued the ideals of the Grosvenor, and was an important venue for
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248:. It was the location of the UK showing of the first full-length animated cartoon,
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Building in London, England, originally an art gallery, then cinema, church, store
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Exhibition of the Royal House of Tudor: The New Gallery (London: R. Clay, 1890)
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under the direction of its founding president, illustrator and designer
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to give the impression of "massive marble shafts" topped with gilded
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Ann McEwen, Ernest Radford and the First Arts and Crafts Exhibition
387:, pages 33, 198, 268 & 319, (Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998)
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The gallery was built on the site of an old fruit market. Existing
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446:, pages 71, 76 & 89 (Thames and Hudson, revised edition 2005)
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William Morris and the Arts and Crafts Movement: A Sourcebook
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Art museums and galleries disestablished in the 20th century
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The New Gallery became a Grade II Listed building in 1992.
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In 1890, the New Gallery held an important exhibition of
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Cinema Organs Society - New Gallery (Burberry store)
25:
Central Hall of the New Gallery, from the catalogue
596:Educational organizations disestablished in 1910
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172:transferred their loyalty to the New Gallery.
89:. Carr and Hallé had been co-directors of Sir
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111:columns supporting the roof were encased with
581:Art museums and galleries established in 1888
385:Edward Burne-Jones: Victorian Artist-Dreamer
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206:portraits and relics under the auspices of
444:Textiles of the Arts & Crafts Movement
164:also joined the Consulting Committee, and
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478:(Rizzoli libri illustrati, Milano 2002)
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81:The New Gallery was founded in 1888 by
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407:, pages 12-13 (Portland House, 1989)
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131:above the columns were covered with
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298:New Gallery, Regent Street, London
189:Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society
49:, London, which originally was an
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561:1910 disestablishments in England
261:Theatres. sold the lease to the
199:at the end of the 19th century.
566:Defunct art galleries in London
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426:Of the Arts and Crafts Movement
251:Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
556:1888 establishments in England
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428:(George Bell & Sons, 1905)
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1:
361:(May 1888, Chatto and Windus)
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501:Close of the Arts and Crafts
263:Seventh-day Adventist Church
63:Seventh-day Adventist Church
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236:Later uses for the building
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576:Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
217:, later attributed to the
184:among the early arrivals.
55:The New Gallery Restaurant
61:from 1913 to 1953, and a
571:Arts and Crafts movement
197:Arts and Crafts Movement
43:Grade II Listed building
359:New Gallery Notes No. 1
182:William Ewart Gladstone
140:Artists and exhibitions
59:The New Gallery Cinema
30:
499:Oscar Wilde's essay:
166:George Frederic Watts
24:
363:Retrieved 2008-12-07
158:Lawrence Alma-Tadema
99:Edward Robert Robson
87:Charles Edward Hallé
528: /
465:Accessed 2017-11-23
430:Accessed 2008-12-09
340:Relinked 2015-11-21
323:Relinked 2015-11-21
162:William Holman Hunt
57:from 1910 to 1913,
53:from 1888 to 1910,
532:51.5106°N 0.1390°W
383:Wildman, Stephen:
357:Blackburn, Henry:
320:New Gallery Cinema
154:Edward Burne-Jones
150:Aesthetic movement
77:The gallery period
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318:Cinema Treasure:
301:Linked 2015-11-21
223:Staatliche Museen
95:Grosvenor Gallery
27:New Gallery Notes
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208:Queen Victoria
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117:Greek capitals
91:Coutts Lindsay
83:J. Comyns Carr
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29:, Summer 1888.
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586:1910 in art
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51:art gallery
35:New Gallery
550:Categories
520:51°30′38″N
393:0870998595
283:References
121:architrave
523:0°08′20″W
254:in 1938.
152:artists.
109:cast-iron
476:Masaccio
274:Burberry
221:(now in
215:Masaccio
133:platinum
129:cornices
71:Burberry
267:Habitat
67:Habitat
45:at 121
41:-owned
510:, 1888
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242:cinema
227:Berlin
127:, and
125:frieze
119:. The
113:marble
296:IPA:
204:Tudor
37:is a
480:ISBN
448:ISBN
409:ISBN
389:ISBN
229:).
175:The
168:and
160:and
148:and
85:and
33:The
102:FSA
93:'s
552::
435:^
368:^
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328:^
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276:.
225:,
210:.
123:,
73:.
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