Dr Nicolas Penny To Retire As Director of London’s National Gallery

Dr Nicolas Penny

The Director of the National Gallery, London, Dr Nicolas Penny has announced his intention to retire from his role in 2015. His decision came as he reached his 65th birthday, last December. The exact date of his retirement will be 17 August 2015. The appointment of his successor Gabriele Finaldi was made by Prime Minister David Cameron in March 2015.

Under Dr Nicholas Penny’s Directorship, the National Gallery staged the most successful exhibition in its history, Leonardo da Vinci, Painter at the Court of Milan, as well as major exhibitions on painters including Barocci, Veronese and, this autumn, Rembrandt. In 2013, for the first time ever, annual visitors to the Gallery exceeded 6 million.

Reflecting on his six years as Director, Nicholas said “I have enjoyed my years as Director and am grateful to the Trustees, staff and to the Gallery’s supporters for helping to ensure that the Gallery has continued to prosper despite a steadily declining grant – to flourish both as a great and popular resource and as a home for scholarship, a national gallery admired internationally.”

He added “Following my retirement I have many plans, but chiefly look forward to spending more time with my family, friends and books.”

Mark Getty, Chairman of the National Gallery Trustees, expressed the Board’s gratitude to the Director for all he has done for the Gallery, saying “Nick has been an extraordinarily successful Director of the National Gallery, steering the nation’s acquisition of the two great Titian paintings, ‘Diana and Actaeon’ (pictured) and ‘Diana and Callisto’ jointly with the National Galleries of Scotland, and this year securing the acquisition of the Gallery’s first major American painting, ‘Men of the Docks’ by George Bellows. The Board are hugely grateful to him for his energy, vision and commitment to the Gallery’s work. We will miss him greatly.”  

The Board of Trustees will shortly begin its search for a new Director. Under the Museums and Galleries Act of 1992, the Director of the National Gallery is appointed by the Trustees with the approval of the Prime Minister.

Nicholas Penny has agreed to stay in office for the entirety of that recruitment process, in order to affect a smooth handover to his successor.

 Penny (born 21 December 1949) has been the Director of the National Gallery since February 2008.

After obtaining a doctorate from the Courtauld Institute, he began his career as a lecturer in art history at the University of Manchester. His first museum position was that of Keeper of the Department of Western Art at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford.

Dr Penny was Clore Curator of Renaissance Painting at the National Gallery between 1990 and 2000, and then Andrew W. Mellon Professor at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts from 2000 to 2002. He returned to Trafalgar Square from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, where he was Senior Curator of Sculpture and Decorative Arts from 2002 to 2008.

Dr Nicholas Penny is the author of many books and articles on both painting and sculpture, and on the history of collecting and taste. His works include scholarly catalogues, introductory texts for the student and critical reviews for the general reader.

Photo: P C Robinson © Artlyst 2014

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