The museum/gallery is run by
Birmingham Museums Trust, the largest independent
museums trust in the United Kingdom, which also runs eight other museums around the city.[4] Entrance to the Museum and Art Gallery is free, but some major exhibitions in the Gas Hall incur an entrance fee.
The
Museums Act 1845 "[empowered] boroughs with a population of 10,000 or more to raise a 1/2d for the establishment of museums."[5] In 1864, the first public exhibition room, was opened when the Society and other donors presented 64 pictures as well as the
Sultanganj Buddha to
Birmingham Council and these were housed in the Free Library building but, due to lack of space, the pictures had to move to
Aston Hall.[6]Joseph Henry Nettlefold (1827–1881) bequeathed twenty-five pictures by
David Cox to Birmingham Art Gallery on the condition it opened on Sundays.[7]
In June 1880, local artist
Allen Edward Everitt accepted the post of honorary curator of the Free Art Gallery, a municipal institution which was the forerunner of the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.[8]
Jesse Collings, Mayor of Birmingham 1878–79, was responsible for free libraries in Birmingham and was the original proponent of the Birmingham Art Gallery. A gift of £10,000 (equivalent to £1,100,000 in 2020) made by
Sir Richard and George Tangye started a new drive for an art gallery and, in 1885, following other donations and £40,000 from the council, the
Prince of Wales officially opened the new gallery on Saturday 28 November 1885.[6][9] The Museum and Art Gallery occupied an extended part of the
Council House above the new offices of the municipal Gas Department (which in effect subsidised the venture thus circumventing the
Public Libraries Act 1850 which limited the use of public funds on the arts). The building was designed by
Yeoville Thomason.[10] The metalwork for the new building (and adjoining Council House) was by the Birmingham firm of
Hart, Son, Peard & Co. and extended to both the interior and exterior including the distinctive cast-iron columns in the main gallery space for the display of decorative art.[11] The lofty portico, surmounted by a pediment by
Francis John Williamson, representing an allegory of Birmingham contributing to the fine arts, was together with the clock-tower considered the "most conspicuous features" of the exterior upon its opening.[12] By 1900 the collection, especially its contemporary British holdings, was deemed by the Magazine of Art to be "one of the finest and handsomest" in Britain.[13]
Until 1946, when
property taxes were voted towards acquisitions, the museum relied on the generosity of private individuals.[6]John Feeney provided £50,000 to provide a further gallery.
Seven galleries had to be rebuilt after being bombed in 1940.[6] Immediately after
World War II "Mighty Mary"
Mary Woodall (1901–1988) was appointed keeper of art under director,
Trenchard Cox. Woodall and Cox, through their links to the London art world, were able to attract exhibitions, much publicity and donations to the gallery. In 1956, Woodall replaced Cox when the latter became
Director of the Victoria and Albert Museum.[14] John Woodward (1921–1988) was Keeper of Art from 1956 to 1964.
The main entrance is located in
Chamberlain Square below the clock-tower known locally as "
Big Brum". The entrance hall memorial reads 'By the gains of Industry we promote Art'.[6] The Extension Block has entrances via the Gas Hall in
Edmund Street and Great Charles Street. Waterhall, the original gas department, has its own entrance on Edmund Street.
In October 2010, the Waterhall closed as a BM&AG gallery as a result of a £1.5m cut to Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery's budget in 2010–11. The last BM&AG exhibition that took place in the Waterhall at that time was the Steve McCurry retrospective that ran from 26 June to 17 October 2010. The Waterhall and the Gas Hall have reopened for exhibitions throughout the year.
Due to the global pandemic, the museum closed in October 2020. The museum remained closed throughout 2021 as part of a project to rewire the Council complex that houses the museum. The museum partially reopened in April 2022 with a number of pop-up exhibitions. It will close again in December 2022 ahead of a full reopening expected in 2024.[15]
The Art Gallery is most noted for its extensive collections of paintings ranging from the 14th to the 21st century. They include works by the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and the world's largest collection of works by
Edward Burne-Jones. Notable painters in oil include the following:
In November 2014, a dedicated gallery was opened to display the
Staffordshire Hoard. Discovered in the nearby village of
Hammerwich in 2009, it was the largest hoard of
Anglo-Saxon gold ever found.
In respect of local and industrial history, the tower of the Birmingham
HP Sauce factory was a famous landmark alongside the
Aston Expressway which was demolished in the summer of 2007.[31] The giant logo from the top of the tower is now in the collection of the Museum.
^Fisher, Mark (2005). "Barber Institute of Fine Arts". Britain's Best Museums and Galleries: From the Greatest Collections to the Smallest Curiosities. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. pp. 205–207.
ISBN0-14-101960-3.
^
abcde'Economic and Social History: Social History since 1815', A History of the County of Warwick: VII The City of Birmingham (1964), pp. 223–45.
Feeney (accessed: 30 January 2008).