
The story
After war broke out, and with invasion expected in 1940, the National Gallery's pictures were sent away from London. By the summer of 1941 they were hidden in a slate mine in the mountains of North Wales. Someone had suggested shipping them to Canada, and Churchill answered: hide them in caves and cellars, but not one picture shall leave this island. Deep in the Manod quarry, in brick chambers built to keep humidity and temperature stable, van Eyck's Arnolfini Portrait and Turner's Fighting Temeraire waited out the Blitz while the pianist Myra Hess gave lunchtime concerts in the emptied galleries back in London.
The gallery had always belonged to the public rather than a palace. It began in 1824, when Parliament bought 38 paintings from the banker John Julius Angerstein, and it was planted deliberately at Trafalgar Square, in the centre of London, so that a clerk or a carter could reach it as easily as a lord. Its permanent collection remains free to enter.
Through the war the staff kept bringing single masterpieces back from Wales, one at a time, to hang in the bare building as a Picture of the Month for a city under bombing. The same rooms today hold the Wilton Diptych, Van Gogh's Sunflowers and Constable's Hay Wain, open to anyone who walks up the steps from the square.
Collection
265 works
Self-Portrait at the Age of 63Rembrandt, 1669
The Death of ActaeonTitian, 1567
The NativityPiero della Francesca, 1480
The Vision of Saint EustacePisanello, 1440
The Vision of Saint JeromeParmigianino, 1526
WhistlejacketGeorge Stubbs, 1762
Apollo and DaphnePiero del Pollaiuolo, 1470
A Woman Bathing in a Stream (Hendrickje Stoffels?)Rembrandt, 1654
Martyrdom of Saint SebastianPiero del Pollaiuolo, 1475
Minerva Protects Pax from MarsPeter Paul Rubens, 1629
Nativity at NightGeertgen tot Sint Jans, 1490
Saint George and the DragonJacopo Tintoretto, 1555
Saint George and the DragonPaolo Uccello, 1470
Summer's DayBerthe Morisot, 1879
The Agony in the GardenAnonymous, 1590
The Bewitched ManFrancisco Goya, 1798
The Conversion of Mary MagdalenePaolo Veronese, 1548
The Courtyard of a House in DelftPieter de Hooch, 1658
The Family of Darius Before AlexanderPaolo Veronese, 1565
The Graham ChildrenWilliam Hogarth, 1742
Venus with Mercury and Cupid ('The School of Love')Antonio da Correggio, 1527
After the Bath, Woman Drying HerselfEdgar Degas, 1890
Aldobrandini MadonnaTitian, 1532
At the Theatre (La Première Sortie)Pierre-Auguste Renoir, 1876
A View of DelftCarel Fabritius, 1652