Masterpieces From London’s National Gallery, Now on Display at Home With LG Gallery+

LG debuted LG Gallery+, a visual curation service that lets users display works by artists including Claude Monet, Paul Gauguin, and Georges Seurat from the National Gallery’s collection

Courtesy of LG Gallery+.

The National Gallery, London, is world-renowned for its wealth of important masterpieces, from Claude Monet’s iconic paintings of his Giverny garden in France to still lifes by Paul Gauguin and genre scenes by pointillist pioneer Georges Seurat. A lifetime could be spent exploring the museum’s vast collection—but now, you can explore the National Gallery’s collection from your own home with LG Gallery+.

A still-life painting showing a bowl filled with colorful fruit on a wooden table beside a ceramic tankard and a knife. Behind the bowl, several pears rest on a white cloth near a window, with rooftops of a town visible outside in the background. Part of the art collection that can be digitally explored with LG Gallery.

Paul Gauguin, Bowl of Fruit and Tankard before a Window (probably 1890). Collection of the National Gallery, London, bequeathed by Simon Sainsbury.

LG Gallery+, an initiative of LG Electronics, is a recently established visual curation service that lets users customize the atmosphere of their living space through the gallery’s expansive library of images, including works by some of art history’s most significant artists..

“We believe great art should be part of everyday life,” said National Gallery Global Chief Commercial Officer Susan Noonan. “Through LG Gallery+, homes around the world now have access to our curated masterpieces, offering moments of reflection, inspiration, and beauty beyond the gallery walls.”

A sunlit living room with mid-century style furniture, including a green sofa, a brown leather lounge chair, and a wooden sideboard. Above the sideboard hangs a large painting of a white arched bridge over a pond with water lilies, reminiscent of Monet’s garden scenes. A coffee table with books and glass decanters sits in the center, while soft afternoon light enters from the side. Courtesy of LG Gallery.

Courtesy of LG Gallery+.

The partnership heralds a new way to engage with and experience important art and opens the door for both those new to the world of art and art history and longstanding art enthusiasts alike to explore and discover a breadth of collection pieces at the National Gallery. Unhindered by time or proximity, users can not only tailor and modify their personal environment with a catalogue of images but survey a range of masterworks in a more intimate setting.

The process of exploration has been designed to make browsing the library of more than 4,000 curated images as seamless as possible with LG Gallery+ Shelves. Through this system, each digital shelf functions much like a playlist—but instead of songs, it’s artworks. Through this interface, users can easily find and “play” artworks that fit their space or mood—and among the shelves are ones specially curated by the National Gallery.

An Impressionist landscape painting of a calm lake surrounded by lush trees and vegetation. Soft brushstrokes depict reflections in the water and distant hills beneath a cloudy sky, with plants and grasses growing along the lake’s edge in the foreground.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Lakeside Landscape (about 1889). Collection of the National Gallery, London, bequeathed by Helena and Kenneth Levy, 1990.

The partnership also reflects LG’s enduring commitment to collaborating with the art world, fostering and promoting artists and cultural institutions that bridge art and technology, offering new ways to experience creative expression in the digital age.

“We are proud to support the National Gallery at this transformative juncture, where modern and contemporary art meet the digital frontier,” said LG’s head of Experiential Marketing Kate Oh. “Through LG OLED’s unrivaled display technology, we are honored to collaborate with visionary artists and help reimagine the gallery experience for a new generation. In recent years, LG OLED ART has become the standard for digital art, working with some of the world’s greatest living artists to create installations around the world—we’re excited to see how this new partnership can lead to incredible new works in the future.”

Learn more about LG Gallery+ here.

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