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Tate Britain

Tate Britain Clore Gallery

Wander through these rooms dedicated to the world’s largest collection of JMW Turner’s paintings

Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG
Interior view of the Clore Gallery, Tate Britain with paintings by J.M.W. Turner displayed ion the wall

Photo © Rikard Österlund

Changing displays in the Clore Gallery feature work from the Turner bequest which comprises 300 oil paintings and many thousands of sketches and watercolours (including 300 sketchbooks). The Bequest, including all works left behind in Turner’s studio at his death in 1851, forms the vast majority of the Turner collection at Tate.

Joseph Mallord William Turner
Norham Castle, Sunrise (c.1845)
Tate

Joseph Mallord William Turner
Peace - Burial at Sea (exhibited 1842)
Tate

Joseph Mallord William Turner
Self-Portrait (c.1799)
Tate

The paintings showcase the breadth of Turner’s output in oils and contain many celebrated works. They range from Turner’s Self-Portrait, perhaps painted to mark his election as an Associate of the Royal Academy at the young age of twenty-four, through to large-scale exhibition pieces including Rome, from the Vatican. A number of canvases never exhibited in Turner’s lifetime and presumed unfinished, such as the well-known Norham Castle, Sunrise, are also included.

Providing an insight into Turner’s methods, the drawings, watercolours and sketchbooks allow us to track the development of Turner’s ideas and to document his travels around the UK and Europe. Examples are showcased through temporary displays in a dedicated works on paper room.

In the Clore Gallery

Location

The Clore Gallery can be accessed inside Tate Britain. Entry to the building is via the Manton Entrance ramp on Atterbury Street or via the steps from Millbank.

Tate Britain
Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
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  • JMW Turner

    Tate Britain houses the world’s largest collection of Turner’s work which can be seen in changing displays in the Clore Gallery

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