Art at the University of London
Over 300 items designated as ‘artworks’, held mainly at the central University generally and within the Institute of Classical Studies, the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, the Warburg Institute, and Senate House Library.
The University of London's Artwork Collection
Most of these are paintings or other pictures. There are also some pieces of bronze and marble sculpture, items of furniture, and other artefacts, from antique vases, a luristan bronze pin from about the ninth to the seventh century BC, and Roman marble altars to a twentieth-century panel from a train engine.
Much of the art pertains to the working of the University and is a visual testimony to its history: portraits of Vice-Chancellors and Chancellors, regularly commissioned; portraits of other significant figures in the running of the University, such as William Benjamin Carpenter (Registrar, 1856-1879). Models of Senate House, academic robes worn on ceremonial occasions, and trophies awarded for University sports fall into this category.
Some University donors are represented, such as Sir Edwin Durning-Lawrence (1837-1914) and Sir Louis Sterling (1879-1958), whose book collections, including such treasures as the first four Shakespeare folios, works printed by William Caxton, and the first edition of the King James Bible, enrich Senate House Library.
Some works, less integrally connected with the University, are donations, such as a Sèvres vase from the early twentieth century, and seventeen eighteenth-century portraits of eminent British poets assembled for Chesterfield House by Philip Dormer Stanhope, fourth Earl of Chesterfield.
There is also a group of some fifty British paintings and other works of art from the second half of the twentieth century by such artists as Robyn Denny, Patrick Caulfield and David Hockney, brought together by the Council of National Academic Awards (CNAA), placed in the University of London initially as a deposit and then as a gift.
Several paintings and sculptures are available for public viewing. Further visual items are present within the archives.
For further information about specific parts of the art collection, see:
- Chesterfield portraits: eighteenth-century portraits of British poets originally in Chesterfield House
- Council of National Academic Awards (CNAA)(Opens in new window): twentieth-century British art
- Art in the archives