Above Ground on the London Underground–Day 36: The National Gallery

Every Friday I take a virtual walking tour ‘above ground’ on the London Underground. Using my Tube guide & my fitbit® device, my goal is to walk 10,000 steps a day roughly following along the Underground route, reporting back here on Fridays with my findings. Here are the days that came before. TOday we're still walking the Piccadilly Line route. This is Day 36.

Okay, enough with lolly-gagging at Trafalgar. Last week I flashed back to hanging out with the pigeons in Trafalgar Square with my big bro. Time to get back to the tour.

Time to get inside the National Gallery and my timing couldn't be better. 


Painters' Paintings: From Freud to Van Dyck is on exhibit through September 4th. The exhibit looks at paintings that artists such as Freud, Matisse, Degas, Leighton, Watts, Lawrence, Reynolds, and Van Dyck themselves owned. The why, whether for inspiration, to support a fellow artist, as a financial investment or even, what the National Gallery calls, obsession.



Was it obsession that drove Matisse to buy Cezanne's Three Bathers (above) painted in 1879? Coincidence that drove him to paint his own take on Three Bathers (below) in 1907? 



The Freud in the exhibit, is Lucian Freud, Sigmund Freud's grandson, a British portraitist who died at age 88 in 2002. Freud was known for his honest portrayals, depicting his subjects without rose colored glasses, bumpy skin, ill-fitting garments and all.

 Ali by Lucian Freud via www.the-athenaeum.org


Beyond Painters' Paintings

While the National Gallery's current collection of over 2300 works of art isn't huge—the Louvre, for example, features over 35,000 pictures—the National Gallery's collection boasts some of the most famous paintings in the world.


 Vincent Van Gogh's Sunflowers

Rembrandt's Self Portrait at age 34


Vermeer's A Young Woman standing at a Virginal

Turner's The Fighting Temeraire

The Toilet of Venus by Diego Velázquez


and several more 'Bathing' paintings including
Monet's Bathers at La Grenouillère and 

Georges Seurat's Bathers at La Grenouillère

And many more. The museum got it start in 1824 with the purchase of 38 pictures owned by banker John Julius Angerstein by the House of Commons. Because there was no museum in which to house them, the paintings remained on view at Angerstein's home at 100 Pall Mall, much to the embarrassment of the Brits. Not exactly the Louvre is it?

The original collection at 100 Pall Mall 
before the museum at Trafalgar Square was ready in 1838.

And I'm sure you noticed The National Gallery is FREE as are many of its talks and tours. I could spend hours there. Certainly all the time I need to get in my 10,000 steps per day. I know London is full of attractions, ancient towers and charming pubs along the Thames, Dicken's museum and Sherlock Holme's home but I hope the National Gallery is part of your itinerary. If I ever When I get to London for real, it will be on mine.



•••••••••••


Trafalgar Square, London WC2N 5DN





Counting the Fitbit steps



Day 1-35:                                                                              
 249,190 steps/111.50 miles      


Day 36:  National Gallery                                                  10,000 steps /4.25 miles    
                                                           

Total Imaginary Miles to Date                                         259,190 steps/115.75 miles 





Days 1 —35

Every Friday I link up with Joy Weese Moll for 

British Isles Fridays





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