Gallery planned for charity's art collection

Artist impression of the gallery with people walking outside a large window with a man inside looking at a painting on display.Image source, Stanton Williams
Image caption,

The building would also be used for musical and literary events, education, outreach and environmental programmes, the application stated

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Plans have been revealed for a new art gallery in Herefordshire that would house paintings by artists including Goya and Gainsborough.

Hellens Gallery would be in the grounds of Hellens Manor, near Much Marcle, which is owned and run by the Pennington-Mellor-Munthe Charity Trust.

It would provide a permanent home to the charity's "impressive collection of paintings” including works by Van Dyck and Hogarth, according to their planning application

The building would also be used for musical and literary events, education, outreach and environmental programmes, it added.

Image source, Stanton Williams
Image caption,

The pavilion would sit alongside an existing duck pond, according to the plans

Those behind the scheme said the new gallery, next to an existing duck pond, would give them the chance to reunite the collection with the estate.

The paintings would be mounted on sliding racks which could be stacked away when the venue was used as a performance space, giving flexibility to how works were displayed, according to the application.

The building, with two further gallery spaces at either end, would include features such as high insulation and heat pumps.

Comments on the planning application can be made until 19 September.

The paintings have been kept Southside House, Wimbledon, in south-west London.

Hellens Manor, dating from the Middle Ages, is described as one of the oldest dwellings in England and is a family home.

It hosts Hellensmusic, an annual classical music festival, in May as well as a programme of concerts and music teaching throughout the year which attracts international figures in classical music.

This news was gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service which covers councils and other public service organisations.

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