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Topics

Ruins

  • Summary
Ruins of a Villa near Rome (Hadrian's Villa)
Image credit: Nottingham City Museums & Galleries

Ruins of a Villa near Rome (Hadrian's Villa)

Richard Wilson (1713/1714–1782) (after)

Nottingham City Museums & Galleries

Ruins in art are full of symbolism. They are common settings for Northern European depictions of Christ’s Nativity, where they represent the old order and religion out of which Christianity grew and which it superseded. In the Italian Renaissance, the true origins of Roman ruins were understood and they were also seen as a warning that even the grandest and most important die and decay.


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By the eighteenth century, ruins had become a standard feature of the souvenir view-paintings brought back from the Grand Tour. Artists and landowners then grew to appreciate the ruined castles and monasteries of Britain – both for their historical importance and as an essential part of a picturesque landscape. We still share these feelings today.

Artworks

  • Hawking Party
    Hawking Party Abraham Hondius (c.1625–1691)
    The Fitzwilliam Museum
  • Castle and Moat
    Castle and Moat Norman Wilkinson (1878–1971)
    Mansfield District Council
  • Conway Castle
    Conway Castle Charles Tattershall Dodd I (1815–1878)
    Nottingham City Museums & Galleries
  • Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire
    Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire Arthur Spooner (1873–1962)
    Nottingham City Museums & Galleries
  • Arundel Castle, West Sussex, and Stream
    Arundel Castle, West Sussex, and Stream Edmund John Niemann (1813–1876)
    Nottingham City Museums & Galleries
  • Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, from Upper Lake
    Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire, from Upper Lake George William Taylor
    Newstead Abbey
  • West View of Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire
    West View of Newstead Abbey, Nottinghamshire Moses Webster (1792–1870) (after)
    Newstead Abbey
  • 570 more

Stories

  • When in Rome: an artistic obsession with the ancient city

    Jonathan Hajdamach

  • The beginning of The End II – Evening
    George Little: the Welsh artist imaging the industrial landscape

    Peter Wakelin

  • George Cuitt: etching the rundown, neglected and obscure

    Jessie Petheram

  • The Neo-Romantic works of Alan Sorrell

    Sacha Llewellyn

  • Joseph Wright of Derby and Dale Abbey, Derbyshire

    Christopher Wright

  • 'Edward King: A Life in Art' at Portsmouth City Museum

    Susan Ward

  • Sites of ancient power: the enduring magic of standing stones in British art

    Eleanor Affleck

  • The dramatic works of Desiderio Monsù (aka François de Nomé and Didier Barra)

    Christopher Wright

Learning resources

  • img-2758-1-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    Lorna Graves and sculpture in relief
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      KS3 (WAL)

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® is a registered trade mark of the Public Catalogue Foundation.
Art UK is the operating name of the Public Catalogue Foundation, a charity registered in England and Wales (1096185) and Scotland (SC048601).