
© Pallant House Gallery
British Landscapes: A Sense of Place
30 May 2026 — 1 November 2026
On NowA landmark survey of 60+ artists exploring British landscapes from Romanticism to postwar abstraction. Landscapes express memory, identity, and emotion—shaping our collective sense of belonging.
From Pallant House Gallery
This landmark exhibition explores how artists from the 18th to the 20th century have responded to the landscapes of the British Isles. Bringing together works by more than 60 artists, the exhibition reveals landscape not simply as scenery, but as a powerful expression of memory, identity and emotion. Spanning Romanticism, Modernism and postwar abstraction,...
Read more at Pallant House Gallery →Critic Review
The Telegraph
Alastair Sooke
How our best artists captured the beauty of Britain
"The best work, by contrast, finds strangeness in the familiar, and summons a forceful, idiosyncratic poetry. Paul Nash and Ivon Hitchens are the stars, although a couple of free-and-easy drawings by Peter Lanyon, inspired by gliding above Cornwall, are thrilling – and don't deserve to be stuffed in a corner."
Read full review →Visit
Chichester, West Sussex·View on artmap
Sunday10am–4pm
MondayClosed
Tuesday10am–5pm
Wednesday10am–5pm
Thursday10am–5pm
Friday10am–5pm
Saturday10am–5pm
© Pallant House Gallery
British Landscapes: A Sense of Place
30 May 2026 — 1 November 2026
On NowA landmark survey of 60+ artists exploring British landscapes from Romanticism to postwar abstraction. Landscapes express memory, identity, and emotion—shaping our collective sense of belonging.
From Pallant House Gallery
This landmark exhibition explores how artists from the 18th to the 20th century have responded to the landscapes of the British Isles. Bringing together works by more than 60 artists, the exhibition reveals landscape not simply as scenery, but as a powerful expression of memory, identity and emotion. Spanning Romanticism, Modernism and postwar abstraction,...
Read more at Pallant House Gallery →Critic Review
The Telegraph
Alastair Sooke
How our best artists captured the beauty of Britain
"The best work, by contrast, finds strangeness in the familiar, and summons a forceful, idiosyncratic poetry. Paul Nash and Ivon Hitchens are the stars, although a couple of free-and-easy drawings by Peter Lanyon, inspired by gliding above Cornwall, are thrilling – and don't deserve to be stuffed in a corner."
Read full review →Visit
Chichester, West Sussex·View on artmap
Sunday10am–4pm
MondayClosed
Tuesday10am–5pm
Wednesday10am–5pm
Thursday10am–5pm
Friday10am–5pm
Saturday10am–5pm



