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January 2003

NEW GALLERIES AT BODELWYDDAN CASTLE OPEN ON 30 APRIL 2003

Supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund

The National Portrait Gallery will reopen the first floor galleries at Bodelwyddan Castle, Denbighshire, Wales, on 30 April 2003 following the complete refurbishment of its displays there. The Castle is one of the Gallery's three regional partnerships and houses over 100 portraits from the 19th-century collections including works by John Singer Sargent and the Pre-Raphaelites. Highlights include the majority of GF Watt's Hall of Fame series and important works by William Holman Hunt and Ford Madox Brown.

There are two principal elements to the redevelopment of the first floor galleries. The first will create three themed rooms containing new permanent, interactive displays which will enhance visitors' enjoyment and understanding of the portraits on display at Bodelwyddan Castle. Secondly, the remainder of the first floor will be converted to provide the Castle with much improved temporary exhibition spaces that can be accessed separately from the rest of the Castle through a new entrance and shop

The three rooms will have the following themes: The Artist's Studio - a series of mises en scènes based upon five self-portraits in the collection; A Sense of Occasion - an interactive exploration of three group portraits; Portraits for All - an exploration of the mass production of portrait photographs during the Victorian period.

A variety of display techniques will be used including computer interactives. One of these is based on the studio practice of Victorian photographer Camille Silvy - visitors will be able to pose for their photograph and create a "virtual" carte de visite using backdrops and props drawn from Silvy's portraits which they can then e-mail to themselves, their friends or their school. The National Portrait Gallery's Woodward Portrait Explorer will also be available, allowing visitors to Bodelwyddan to access tens of thousands of portraits in the Gallery's collection.

Attracting a lively series of exhibitions, the new spaces will be a real asset to both the Castle and the region. The inaugural exhibition, entitled "The National Portrait Gallery Collects" showcases recent acquisitions including Lewis Carroll's photographs of Alice Liddell and a selection of cutting edge portraits from the Gallery's contemporary collection. Like the scheme as a whole, the exhibition spaces will have full disabled access. Further spaces are being adapted to provide facilities for education groups.

The project has been funded through the generosity of the Heritage Lottery Fund, which awarded a grant of £255,500, and through funding of over £200,000 from the Department of Culture, Media and Sport as part of the Gallery's grant-in-aid.

The first-floor galleries have been designed by muf.art/architecture in association with the Bodelwyddan Castle Trust and the National Portrait Gallery. The ground floor galleries, which also house a complementary collection of sculpture and furniture from the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Royal Academy have proved a successful and popular attraction and will continue to complement the National Portrait Gallery presentations.

The National Portrait Gallery was one of the first national museums to establish permanent displays from its collections outside London. There are currently three such regional partnerships in Wales, Yorkshire, and Somerset with significant groups of portraits forming integrated and evocative displays in houses of the appropriate historical period. In 1989 Bodelwyddan Castle won the Museum of the Year Award.

Notes to Editors

1. Bodelwyddan Castle is run by the Bodelwyddan Castle Trust, supported by Denbighshire County Council.

2. The National Portrait Gallery has two other Regional Partnerships. Montacute House, Somerset, which opened in 1975, contains over 60 of the Gallery's Tudor and Jacobean portraits. It is run by the National Trust. Beningborough Hall, Yorkshire, opened in 1979 and is also a National Trust property. Beningborough houses a superb collection of portraits from the period 1688 to 1760. Bodelwyddan Castle opened in 1988

3. muf.art/architecture is a collaborative practise of art and architecture. The practice has substantial experience of designing spaces for the Arts where, alongside scholarship, the presence of the viewer, in all their diversity, is always included. Their recent work includes the Gainsborough exhibition for Tate Britain, and an oyster clad building for the Verulamium museum at St Albans.

For further press information about please contact:

Kevin Mason, Bodelwyddan Castle, Tel 01745 584060 Fax 01745 584563
email enquiries@bodelwyddan-castle.co.uk

Hazel Sutherland, National Portrait Gallery, Tel 020 7312 2452 Fax 020 7306 0058
email hsutherland@npg.org.uk




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