Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (BM&AG) is one of the United Kingdom’s foremost civic cultural institutions, holding a collection of international importance that spans fine art, ceramics, metalwork, jewellery, natural history, archaeology, ethnography, and local industrial history. Opened in 1885 in the heart of Birmingham’s Chamberlain Square, its Neoclassical building and remarkable holdings — including the world’s largest public collection of Pre-Raphaelite paintings — draw hundreds of thousands of visitors each year.
At a glance
- Type
- Civic museum and art gallery
- Period
- Opened 1885; building extended 1912
- Style
- Victorian Neoclassical / Renaissance Revival
- Location
- Chamberlain Square, Birmingham B3 3DH, England
- Coordinates
- 52.4802° N, 1.9036° W
- Managed by
- Birmingham City Council
- Notable collection
- World’s largest public Pre-Raphaelite collection; Staffordshire Hoard
Overview
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery (BM&AG) is a museum and art gallery in Birmingham, England, with a collection of international importance covering fine art, ceramics, metalwork, jewellery, natural history, archaeology, ethnography, local history, and industrial history. The institution has long been regarded as one of the great provincial museums of Britain, reflecting the wealth and civic ambition of Victorian Birmingham. Among its internationally significant holdings is the Staffordshire Hoard, the largest hoard of Anglo-Saxon gold and silver metalwork ever found.
History
The museum’s origins lie in the philanthropic culture of industrial-era Birmingham, where civic leaders sought to use cultural institutions to educate and uplift the population. The building opened in 1885 as part of the redevelopment of Chamberlain Square, designed in a grand Victorian idiom befitting a city at the height of its manufacturing power. An extension was added in 1912. The museum became renowned in the late 19th century for its systematic acquisition of Pre-Raphaelite paintings, a commitment championed by local collectors and the gallery’s trustees.
What you see
The Round Room and Gas Hall provide dramatic settings for temporary exhibitions, while the permanent galleries span antiquities from ancient Egypt and the Greco-Roman world to Renaissance masterworks and the celebrated Pre-Raphaelite galleries containing works by Burne-Jones, Millais, Rossetti, and Holman Hunt. The Edwardian Tea Room, with its stained-glass windows and ornamental ironwork, is itself a listed interior. The Staffordshire Hoard gallery displays the extraordinary Anglo-Saxon gold and silver objects discovered in a Staffordshire field in 2009.
Cultural significance
BM&AG holds a singular place in the history of British art collecting: its Pre-Raphaelite holdings represent the most comprehensive public assemblage of the movement’s works anywhere in the world, making it essential for understanding Victorian painting. The Staffordshire Hoard further establishes the museum as a keeper of objects that transformed scholarly understanding of early medieval England.
Practical information
- Address
- Chamberlain Square, Birmingham B3 3DH
- Opening hours
- Check official website for current opening times; museum has undergone phased closure and reopening in recent years
- Admission
- Free entry to permanent collections
- Website
- birminghammuseums.org.uk
Getting there
Birmingham New Street station is approximately 10 minutes’ walk from Chamberlain Square. The nearby Birmingham Snow Hill and Moor Street stations also offer good connections. By metro, the West Midlands Metro stops at Grand Central/New Street. Multiple bus routes serve the city centre. By car, the museum is well signposted from the M6 and M5; the nearest car parks are at the Mailbox or Brindleyplace.
