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Topics

Houses

  • Summary
Auld Mid Row
Image credit: Scottish Borders Council

Auld Mid Row

unknown artist

Scottish Borders Council

Most of the buildings in towns are houses, so townscapes illustrate the appearance of our most familiar environment. The houses and palaces of royalty and the aristocracy are featured earliest in painting, when only the rich could afford to employ artists. The house-portrait became a recognised specialism.


In seventeenth-century Holland, with a prosperous middle class, ordinary people’s houses in towns and villages were the subject or background of very many paintings.

Read more
Interiors and street scenes were depicted in great detail by de Hooch, Vermeer and many others. Flemish artists such as Teniers and the Brueghels are famous for their views of peasants’ domestic lives. Much later, middle-class Victorians too appreciated records of their comfortable lifestyles.

Artworks

  • Old Slaughter House, Notting Hill Gate
    Old Slaughter House, Notting Hill Gate Herbert William Wright (1912–1989)
    Kensington Central Library
  • Snow, Lansdowne Road
    Snow, Lansdowne Road Timothy Francis Gibbs (1923–2012)
    Kensington Central Library
  • George Primmer
    George Primmer John Emms (1843–1912)
    Southampton City Art Gallery
  • The Yellow Towel
    The Yellow Towel Jean Antoine Carlotti (1909–2003)
    Kensington Central Library
  • Village Scene
    Village Scene Theobald Michau (1676–1765) (attributed to)
    Shipley Art Gallery
  • Landscape
    Landscape Lucas van Uden (1595–1672)
    Temple Newsam House, Leeds Museums and Galleries
  • Market Place, Bishop Auckland, County Durham
    Market Place, Bishop Auckland, County Durham George John Rogers (1885–1996)
    Bishop Auckland Town Hall
  • 3,265 more

Stories

  • The paintings of George Shaw: an unconscious foreshadowing of Britain during quarantine

    Lydia Figes

  • Turner's House: discover the private side of Britain's greatest landscape artist

    Matthew Morgan

  • Harry Bush: painter of suburban South London

    Peter Quartermaine

  • The stark monochromatic paintings of Jack Simcock

    Sonia Roe

  • Stay at home: artist interiors from the Royal Academy

    Helen Record

  • Artists and tenements: depicting the foundation of urban life in Scotland

    Gabriella Bennett

  • The National Trust's modernist marvel: Ernő Goldfinger's 2 Willow Road

    Lucy Ellis

Learning resources

  • sculptors-techniques-erin-dickson-1.jpg
    Video
    Sculptors' techniques: Erin Dickson
    • KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
      KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS4 (ENG)
      KS4 (NI)
      CfE L4 (SCO)
      KS4 (WAL)
      KS5 (ENG)
      KS5 (NI)
      CfE Sen. (SCO)
      KS5 (WAL)
  • screenshot-2021-04-13-at-16-02-33-1.png
    Video
    Sculpture near you: 'Flat Time House' by John Latham
    • KS3 (ENG)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS3 (NI)
      KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
  • sw-mtm-163-990-001-1.jpg
    Lesson plan
    The Superpower of Looking: a view of a South Wales Valley town during the Miners’ Strike
    • KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (WAL)
  • make-a-sculpture-of-home-1.jpg
    Activity
    Make a paper sculpture inspired by home with Lisa Traxler
    • KS3 (ENG)
      KS3 (NI)
      CfE L3 (SCO)
      KS3 (WAL)
      KS2 (ENG)
      KS2 (NI)
      CfE L2 (SCO)
      PS3 (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).