The Lost Prince : Storytelling : National Portrait Gallery : Ends 13 Jan : 3+

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Storytelling for Families

Tudor Ruff

10:30 or 13:30

Dress up, sing, laugh and have a fun time in our hands-on storytelling sessions every month. Discover the hidden stories behind some of our famous and not-so famous sitters and find out all about their lives.  After the storytelling, we run art activities – make something to take home inspired by the story.

Storytelling is aimed at children aged 3+ with parents/carers and friends.

Drop-in, no ticket required. Storytelling sessions last approximately 30-45 minutes.

Check the website for opening hours and more …

December & until 13 January : The Lost Prince

Brave, handsome, clever, athletic, noble and cultured, Henry Stuart (1594-1612) embodied all the princely virtues. As the future King Henry IX he was the focus of great hope and expectation and his court was the centre of a revival of chivalry and a renaissance in the arts. Henry’s early death caused widespread national grief, and led eventually to the accession to the throne of his younger brother, the doomed King Charles I.

Marking the 400th anniversary of Henry’s death, The Lost Prince will include some of the most important works of art and culture produced and collected in the Jacobean period, including portraits by Holbein, Nicholas Hilliard and Isaac Oliver, designs by Inigo Jones and poetry by Ben Jonson in his own hand. These will be shown together with a large selection of paintings, drawings, books, armour and other artefacts, gathered from museums and private collections in Britain and abroad, some of which have never previously been on public display.

The exhibition, which explores Henry’s life and image, and the extraordinary reaction to his death, will transform our understanding of this exceptional prince and the time in which he lived.

See the Gallery blog for posts by exhibition curator, Catharine MacLeod.

Supported by The Weiss Gallery and individual exhibition supporters