Towner Gallery

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Coordinates: 50°46′00″N 0°16′43″E / 50.7666°N 0.2785°E / 50.7666; 0.2785

Towner Eastbourne
Established 1923[1] in Old Town, moved to College Road in 2009. http://www.eastbourne.gov.uk/leisure/museums-galleries/towner/towner-gallery/  Missing or empty |title= (help)
Location College Road, Eastbourne, East Sussex
Visitors 1,500 (6th April 2009)
Website Towner Website

Towner is Eastbourne's museum of art. From its opening in 1923 the Towner Art Gallery was located in an 18th-century manor house in Manor Gardens, in the Old Town district of Eastbourne. It has been relocated to a new state-of-the-art gallery, adjacent to the Eastbourne Congress Theatre, Devonshire Park which opened in April 2009.

History

The Towner Gallery opened in 1923 following the death of Alderman John Towner who left 22 paintings and £6,000 for the establishment of an art gallery. Victorian narrative painting, mainly of animals and children by predominantly mainstream artists formed the basis of the bequest reflecting its domestic rationale, a tendency that was continued throughout the first 80 years of the Towner’s history, located within the 18th-century manor house. The Towner collection now numbers over 4,000 art objects including oil paintings, watercolours, works on paper, etchings, prints, sculpture, wood cuts and ceramic objects.

The Towner Art Gallery’s first curator started the practice of arranging temporary exhibitions to be shown alongside displays from the permanent collection which have become a major feature of the Towner's programme. As a result of his ‘Pictures of Sussex’ policy the collection gradually increased. Pictures were acquired of subjects relating to Sussex. This scheme was later extended to allow inclusion of pictures executed by Sussex artists regardless of subject matter.

The gallery was originally based in Eastbourne's manor house.

Since the gallery was established it has received donations of work by significant artists including: Walter Sickert, Pablo Picasso, Henry Moore, Victor Pasmore, Alfred Wallis, Frances Hodgkins, Phelan Gibb and David Bomberg.

By 1962 the Observer said it was "the most go-ahead municipal gallery of its size in the country". This was mainly because of the purchase of a group of works by modern abstract artists of the 1950s and 1960s. In 1962, the Rector of Berwick Church gave over 35 studies and sketches for the Berwick Church murals.

A key element of the collection is the work of Eric Ravilious (who studied and taught at Eastbourne School of Art). In 1982 the family of the artist deposited on loan in important body of his work. The Towner holds the broadest collection of paintings, illustrations and commercial designs in the world, by this important modern British artist of the early 20th century.

As a result of an agreement made in 1983 the Towner houses the South East Arts Collection of Contemporary Art. Further bequests in 1988 and 1990 considerably enhanced the collection, and the commitment to purchasing contemporary art was recognised nationally.

Reflecting the state of contemporary art in the 21st century, many purchases have been new media or installation based work, and paintings by many artists illustrate this key development for the Towner collection and help demonstrate its unique status as a comprehensive and contemporary collection of visual art for the region.

Collections

Towner Collection

The Towner Collection is one of the most significant public art collections in the South East. It boasts in excess of 4,000 works of art by historic, modern and contemporary artists including: Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Vanessa Bell, David Bomberg, Alan Davie, Tacita Dean, Olafur Eliasson, Anya Gallaccio, Thomas Jones, Peter Liversidge, Henry Moore, William Nicholson, Julian Opie, Victor Pasmore, Pablo Picasso, Eric Ravilious, Eric Slater, Wolfgang Tillmans, Alfred Wallis, Christopher Wood, Joseph Wright of Derby and Carol Wyatt.

During the moving of the Towner Gallery, the Towner collection has been through a programme of conservation and documentation. A project to digitally photograph the collection has begun, with over a third of the art works now recorded. In the future, a selection of these works will be available to view on a 'search the collection' section on the Eastbourne Council website.[2]

See also

References

External links

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