London City Guide

The Courtauld Gallery & Institute of Art

Courtauld Gallery
Where?
Courtauld Gallery, Somerset House, The Strand WC2R 0RN · Tel: 0203 947 7777 · Web: courtauld.ac.uk
Opening times?
10 AM to 6 PM (Mon-Sun); Last entry 45 mins before closing
Visiting hours may change
Price?
Adults £13.00; Children free entry (under-18)
Entry charges may change
Time required?
A typical visit is 1-1½ hours
Parking:
Nearby car parks
Buses:
6, 9, 11, 13, 15, 23, 77A, 91, 176
Bus fares
Child bus fares
Trains:
The closest station is Temple Circle District
Other nearby stations: Covent Garden and Embankment
Train fares · Child train fares

Good for kids? Value for money? Worth a visit?

’s review… When people sit at home planning their itinerary they usually pencil in an hour or two for a gallery (they have to squeeze in a bit of culture), but it tends to be the National or the Tate Modern. That’s where all the guidebooks tell them to go. But if you’re seriously into art then take a tip from me: the best places to visit are the National, Courtauld and Tate Britain (and Buckingham Palace if it’s open). The Victoria & Albert Museum and Wallace Collection are worth a look as well, but chiefly because of their museum exhibits.

Somerset House

The great thing about the Courtauld is that you can have a cup of tea on the forecourt of Somerset House beforehand. When you walk in from the Strand they usually have some metal tables laid out by the dancing fountains, but they must have switched them off today… oh, wait a minute… they’ve decided to switch them on now (just as I spoke). The water has shot straight up like a rocket and collapsed over the top and all the kids have made a beeline for it. They’re slapping their feet in the puddles and their mums have gone into panic mode: Don’t get wet or you’ll die! Too late, they’re wet, and no amount of washing will get that water off.

Medieval and Renaissance art

The ground floor of the gallery has some religious pieces from the 14th and 15th-centuries. Lots of Mary. Lots of Jesus. Lots of altarpieces and scenes of the crucifixion. All very delicate and beautiful. When you head upstairs you can see some more Bible scenes by Botticelli, Caravaggio and Rubens. They’re almost like stills from a movie: here’s the day Jesus did this and here’s him doing that. I wonder if anybody has ever tried to string together a complete set of pictures showing every scene in the Bible? That might make a good exhibition: the entire Bible portrayed in famous paintings.

French Impressionists

The Courtauld is famous for its French Impressionists and they’ve got pieces by Pissarro, Gauguin, Monet, Manet and Cézanne. The only pictures that I actually recognise (bearing in mind that I am no lover of art) are the straight-on shot of a barmaid in a Parisian pub and that one of Van Gogh with his head all bandaged up.

But the most impressive thing about the Courtauld is not the number of famous names on display, but how many pieces they have of each. I mean, how much money does a single Rubens cost? Or a Gainsborough? And the Courtauld has a roomful of both! Then you wander into a room with Michelangelo, Picasso and Leonardo da Vinci. For a relatively small gallery they sure do pack a punch.

Modern art collection

Upstairs is where they hide all of the contemporary art. The Tate can get away with showing this stuff, but when you’ve just been strolling through three floors of Rubens, Renoir and Vincent Van Gogh then a room full of blotches and spots and lines and triangles just doesn’t compare, so they have to hide it upstairs.

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We also recommend… If you enjoy this then try National Gallery (walk it in 12 mins or catch a tube from Temple to Charing Cross); Royal Academy of Arts (walk it in 20 mins or travel from Temple to Piccadilly Circus by underground); Tate Britain (walk it in 30 mins or travel from Temple to Pimlico by underground); Victoria & Albert Museum (take a tube journey from Temple to South Kensington) and Wallace Collection (travel from Temple to Bond Street by tube)

Related articles and events

Today Frank Auerbach’s Charcoal Heads at the Courtauld

Frank Auerbach’s Charcoal Heads at the Courtauld Frank Auerbach's drawings will be shown together for the first time as a group

Today Courtauld Gallery: From the Baroque to Today

Courtauld Gallery: From the Baroque to Today A collection of drawings and prints acquired by the Courtauld since 2018

Next month Vanessa Bell: A Pioneer of Modern Art at the Courtauld

Vanessa Bell: A Pioneer of Modern Art at the Courtauld Bell was one of the leading figures in the avant-garde Bloomsbury Group

Henry Moore exhibition: Shadows on the Wall

Henry Moore exhibition: Shadows on the Wall An exhibition focusing on Henry Moore's celebrated Shelter drawings

Youth: Photographer Roger Mayne at the Courtauld

Youth: Photographer Roger Mayne at the Courtauld Fifty pictures by the acclaimed British photographer Roger Mayne

Monet & London: Views of the Thames at the Courtauld

Monet & London: Views of the Thames at the Courtauld It's been 120 years since Monet's Thames views were last seen together

Drawn to Blue: Artists’ use of blue paper at the Courtauld

Drawn to Blue: Artists’ use of blue paper at the Courtauld Drawings made on blue paper from the Courtauld Gallery's own collection

Your comments and questions

PeterH I've been to all the big galleries like the Tate and National but I've never really thought about going to the other ones around London. How wrong was I! The Courtauld is quite small but the quality of art - especially the Impressionist art - is on a par with the National Gallery.

Patricia Hi, can I bring a bag into the gallery? do they have somewhere where i can leave a big rucksack?

Craig Hi Patricia. They did have a cloakroom before the renovation, but at the time of writing the gallery is closed for a big re-fit until late 2021. So maybe that will change when they reopen