[Skip to content] [Skip to main navigation] [Skip to quick links] [Go to accessibility information]

Art UK
Menu
SIGN IN
Search
Shop
  • About
  • Discover
  • Learn
  • Stories
  • Donate Donate

Main menu

Close
  • Home
  • Search form

    • Discover

      • Artworks
      • Artists
      • Topics
      • People
      • Art terms
      • Stories
      • Curations
    • Learn

      • Learning resources
      • The Superpower of Looking
      • Visual literacy
      • Write on Art
    • Participate

      • Tagger
      • Curate
      • Art Detective
    • Visit

      • Venues
    • Support us

      • Become a Patron
      • Our funders
    • About

      • What we do
      • Our impact
      • Who we are
      • Who funds us
    • For collections

      • Partner collections
      • Digital skills for collections
    • Shop

      • Prints
      • Art themes
      • Books
      • Gifts
      • About the shop
  • Sign in
  • Register

Remember me (uncheck on a public computer)

By signing up you agree to terms and conditions and privacy policy

Forgotten password?

Enter your email address below and we’ll send you a link to reset your password


Cancel

I agree to the Art UK terms and conditions and privacy policy

Sign up to the Art UK newsletter, a weekly edit of insightful art stories


Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Donate Finding Art UK useful? Support us to keep it free.

Topics

Buildings and fortifications

  • Summary
Aberystwyth Castle
Image credit: Amgueddfa Ceredigion Museum

Aberystwyth Castle

Alfred Worthington (1834–1927)

Amgueddfa Ceredigion Museum

Castles and fortified houses are still among the most prominent buildings in our urban and rural landscapes. In unsettled times, castles were essential protection for those who could afford them and town walls were necessary for the general population.


Castles may feature as focal points in early battle scenes, but in the history of landscape painting they form part of the idealised ‘classical’ landscape, perfected by Claude in the mid-seventeenth century and influential for a hundred years.

Read more
From the mid-eighteenth century, as antiquarians began to understand the history of ancient ruins, they were valued as picturesque and romantic reminders of the past. Functional military buildings obviously feature in the records made under the war artist schemes of the twentieth century.

Artworks

  • Surrealist Defences
    Surrealist Defences Christopher Foss (b.1946)
    Guernsey Museum & Art Gallery
  • Castle Cornet
    Castle Cornet Christopher Foss (b.1946)
    Guernsey Museum & Art Gallery
  • Warwick Castle
    Warwick Castle Richard Bankes Harraden (1778–1862)
    Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum
  • A Landscape with a Ruined Castle and a Church
    A Landscape with a Ruined Castle and a Church Jacob van Ruisdael (1628/1629–1682)
    The National Gallery, London
  • Scarborough Castle
    Scarborough Castle John Wilson Carmichael (1799–1868)
    Scarborough Art Gallery
  • The Battery, Portsmouth
    The Battery, Portsmouth British School
    National Maritime Museum
  • The Tower of London
    The Tower of London Christopher Clark (1875–1942)
    National Railway Museum
  • 210 more

Stories

  • 1.jpg
    Castles and colleges: recording sculpture in the Highlands and Islands

    Sophia Sheppard

  • Joining the dots: researching Castle Howard using Art UK

    Charles Saumarez Smith

  • A view of Delft and its painters in the seventeenth century

    Rachel Bates


Do you know someone who would love this resource?
Tell them about it...

https://artuk.org/discover/topics/buildings-and-fortifications Copy
Link copied to clipboard!
  • bloomberg
  • dlb foundation
  • Supported by

    Arts CouncilArts Council
  • heritage fund
® 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).

Follow us

    • Join us on Facebook
    • Follow us on YouTube
    • Top
  • Subscribe to newsletter
  • Donate to Art UK

Quick links

  • Contact us
  • FAQ
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy policy
  • AI policy
  • Use of cookies
  • Copyright notice
  • Accessibility
  • Shop
  • Disclaimer
  • Jobs
  • Website credits
® 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).