Two photographs in The Roy Strong Diaries 1967-87 sum up his achievement as museum director: 'The National Portrait Gallery before, and after' - before and after, that is, the 'reign' (his word) of Strong. The first is a predictably gloomy view of a classically old-fashioned museum: wood-block floor, two benches in the centre of the gallery, paintings crammed onto the walls (20 assorted 17th-century portraits are visible in this shot alone), and no trace of an information panel beyond the tiny labels perched under each picture. The second shows the same room after the Strong treatment. There are only six paintings to be seen now; the others have given way to a large slogan blazoning CIVIL WAR, a vast floor-to-ceiling map of England, marking the sites of the major battles, another information panel, plus eight suits of armour fixed like trophies to the wall. The wood-block floor has been covered with some 'period-feel' black and white squared linoleum.
LRB 31 July 1997 | PDF Download
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