The National Gallery has banned liquids - except baby formula, expressed milk and prescription medicines - after attacks by activists on its artworks, including Vincent van Gogh's Sunflowers.
Following a slew of attacks in which climate activists splashed soup and other substances on iconic pieces of art, the National Gallery in London is banning liquids and enacting a number of other ...
The National Gallery has announced that it is banning visitors from bringing any liquids into the building from today (Friday, October 18) until further notice. Over the past two years ...
Read our privacy notice. A trip to the National Gallery may start to resemble a journey through Heathrow, thanks to the vandalism of environmental activists. The Gallery announced yesterday that ...
At a National Gallery of Art reception in September ... which is a blank sea of sandy brown, but by their relationships to one another, to work, commerce and the necessities of life.
Join Us The National Gallery in London is cracking down on liquids after recent protests targeting the museum’s works, including two van Gogh paintings “souped” by environmental activists ...
One of the foremost sources for Modern and Contemporary works of art, Alan Brown Gallery advises corporate and private clients, as well as estates, on the sale, purchase, appraisal, and care of ...
She's an emcee at the Cosmic Northside Afrofuturistic Canadian Art conference, which kicked off Friday and continued at the National Gallery of Canada on Saturday. Yanaminah Thullah ...
Catriona Kendall, Associate Editor The National Portrait Gallery most notably houses images of every previous president, allowing visitors to reminisce about each political figure as they progress ...
The National Gallery of Australia's single most expensive artwork, an interactive sculpture in the gallery's forecourt, has been unveiled to the public. Lindy Lee's 13-tonne Ouroboros, based on ...
How would we feel about Constable if he weren’t a staple of the National Gallery but could only be seen in Paris? Would he be the stuff of tea-towels, place mats and rural England then?