
Sudley House

Sudley House
Sudley House, Aigburth
, Liverpool
, England
is an art
gallery which contains the collection of George Holt in its original
setting. It includes work by
Thomas Gainsborough,
Joshua Reynolds,
Edwin Landseer,
John Everett Millais and
J. M.
W. Turner.
Built in the early 1800s for Liverpool Mayor
Nicholas Robinson, Sudley became
the house of
Victorian ship owner and
merchant George Holt in 1883. It was all bequeathed to the city in
1944 by Holt's daughter
Emma Holt. It is
now run by
National Museums
Liverpool. After a period of two years of work, it was reopened
on
26 May 2007 following
a £1 million refurbishment including many new attractions.
These recent additions to Sudley House are:
Introductory display: the Holt family – George and
Elizabeth Holt and daughter Emma from 1884 to 1944. Set in the
ground floor library, the display includes an introductory film,
family portraits and a model of the steamer Verdi, which belonged
to Holt's
Lamport & Holt
company.
Two childhood rooms: how Victorian children
learned and played. Exhibits include a huge Victorian dolls' house,
educational toys, fashion dolls and pots used at mealtimes by rich
and poor children.
Costume room: clothes worn by three daughters of
Walter Holland, George Holt’s neighbour and business partner who
lived at nearby Carnatic Hall. The clothes date from the 1880s to
the 1920s and were bought in Bold Street, Liverpool, and
Paris.
Temporary exhibition gallery:
A Sweet
Life – follows the lives of Emily and Philip Tinne and their
seven children through Emily's extraordinary clothing collection
acquired between 1910 and 1940 and a recently discovered collection
of letters. The exhibition runs until Spring 2010.
External links