Art masterpieces on show in schools

LS Lowry's Market Scene, Northern Town, 1939, at St Matthew's Primary, Stretford. Courtesy The LS Lowry Collection LS Lowry's Market Scene, Northern Town, went to St Matthew's Primary in Manchester. Painting courtesy The LS Lowry Collection
JMW Turner's Dolbadarn Castle, 1799–1800, at Trelai Primary School, Cardiff JMW Turner's Dolbadarn Castle visited Trelai Primary School in Cardiff. Painting courtesy The National Library of Wales
Thomas Gainsborough, Heneage Lloyd and his Sister, Lucy, at Voyager Academy, Peterborough Thomas Gainsborough's Heneage Lloyd and his Sister, Lucy visited Voyager Academy in Peterborough. Painting given by Charles Fairfax Murray
Claude Monet, Le chemin creux dans la falaise à Varengeville, 1882, at Onny School, Shropshire Claude Monet's Le Chemin Creux Dans La Falaise a Varengeville went to Onny School in Shropshire. Painting courtesy The New Art Gallery Walsall

Related Stories

Paintings by LS Lowry, JMW Turner and Claude Monet have been taken out of galleries and into schools in an attempt to introduce children to art.

Some 27 artworks will be exhibited in classrooms, accompanied by curators and security guards, for one day each.

The paintings, worth an estimated £14m, will also include works by Thomas Gainsborough and Stanley Spencer.

BBC Your Paintings said the artworks would provide inspiration for lessons like history and drama as well as art.

Start Quote

How exciting to have an amazing artwork in your school then to go to the art room or classroom and make something amazing yourself”

End Quote Bob and Roberta Smith Artist

LS Lowry's Market Scene, Northern Town, painted in 1939 and now valued at £1.6m, has been taken from the Lowry gallery in Salford.

While that painting is in a school, other classic Lowry works are in one of the most high-profile exhibitions of the year at Tate Britain in London.

The school scheme has been organised by BBC Your Paintings, which has spent the past two years photographing 200,000 publicly-owned oil paintings in an attempt to improve access to the UK's art collection.

Current artists will also accompany the paintings into schools to lead workshops.

They will include Bob and Roberta Smith, who said: "All children deserve not only to appreciate and understand art, but also to have hands on first-hand experience of working with materials.

"How exciting to have an amazing artwork in your school then to go to the art room or classroom and make something amazing yourself."

The paintings will visit primary and secondary schools across the UK between 1 and 18 October.

More on This Story

Related Stories

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external Internet sites

More Entertainment & Arts stories

RSS

Features