Art Galleries Alphabetical
The National Arts Club was founded in 1898 by Charles de Kay. Charles de Kay was the literary and art critic for The New York Times for 18 years. He and a group of distinguished artists and patrons conceived of agathering place for artists, patrons and audiences in all the arts. American art at the turn of the century had begun to look inward fo…
The National Design Centre is the only major, public centre in Australia dedicated exclusively to design across all its disciplines.
Independent and self-funded, the National Design Centre is a highly responsive, ideas-driven company that combines these attributes with a wealth of experience to implement valuable and relevant design initiativ…
National Gallery of Armenia is situated in the center of Yerevan in the Republic Square. It has been located there since its foundation, in 1921. However, the first two-floor structure built in black tufa has been resurfaced with white stone and, in 1978, a new eight-floor section was opened. In its relatively short period of existence the Galle…
The National Gallery of Australia is the major art gallery and museum in Canberra, holding over 120,000 works of art. It was established in 1967 by the Government of Australia as a national public art gallery.
The National Gallery of Australia …
The National Library of Australia is the country’s largest reference library. Our role is to ensure that documentary resources of national significance relating to Australia and the Australian people, as well as significant non-Australian library materials, are collected, preserved and made accessible either through the Library itself or through…
The National Library of Singapore, as we know it today, has evolved in tandem with the development of Singapore from a subscription library serving the needs of a privileged few, to a library system that aims to reach out to Singaporeans from all walks of life.
The National Library had its beginnings in 1823 and was inextricably tied to the e…