Discover over 8,000 works of art collected over 400 years in the University Art Collection. Our Art collection supports the world-leading research and teaching that happens within the University. Comprised of an astonishing range of objects and ideas, spanning two millennia and a multitude of artistic forms, the collection reflects not only the long and rich trajectory of the University, but also major national and international shifts in art history. A significant and celebrated component of our holdings is the Torrie Collection, which features seventeenth-century Dutch and Italian work, with examples by Ruisdael, ten Oever, Van der Meulen, Pynacker, Rosa and van de Velde. The University also holds the second largest collection of portraits in Scotland, ranging from seventeenth-century depictions of John Napier and John Knox, to the more recent dynamic painting of Nobel Laureate Peter Higgs by Ken Currie. Other portrait artists represented include Sir Henry Raeburn, Stanley Cursiter, Sir George Reid, James Cowie and Victoria Crowe. After the merger in 2011, the Edinburgh College of Art (ECA) collection of prints, drawings, paintings and sculpture also became part of the wider University Art Collection. These works help tell the story of the artistic output of the College, with a particular strength being the early to mid-20th Century work by artists such as Samuel Peploe, John Bellany, Anne Redpath and Elizabeth Blackadder. We continue to actively acquire works for the collection, with the most recent strand of development being the Contemporary Art Research Collection (CARC). Established in 2015 in partnership with Academics in the History of Art Department, the CARC takes Globalisation as its central theme, setting a specific focus in its first years on women's experience and the contribution of feminist thought. Artists acquired to date include, Alberta Whittle, Shona McNaughton, Kate Davis, Melanie Gilligan and Petra Bauer. For more information regarding the Art Collection, please contact heritagecollections@ed.ac.uk Explore the Collections Online Art Collection This article was published on 2024-08-21