Dulwich Image Gallery in south London will open its newly remodeled sculpture backyard to the general public subsequent month (6-7 September). The house would be the centrepiece of the gallery’s most vital redevelopment in a era, the £5m Open Artwork challenge, which builds on its heritage as England’s first purpose-built public artwork gallery.
Beforehand underused inexperienced house has been reclaimed for the sculpture backyard, which is able to host an ever-changing programme of latest artwork on staggered two-year loans, alongside everlasting additions together with a land artwork work by Kim Wilkie. An ArtPlay Pavilion, designed by HoLD Collective and designers Carmody Groarke will present art-inspired sensory play for younger youngsters, with The Canteen close by offering amenities for faculties and households. The gallery may even open a brand new entrance, following the restoration of parts of John Soane’s 1811 plans for the constructing.
“Our overarching mission is to unlock artwork for everybody,” says the gallery’s director Jennifer Scott, explaining how the Covid-19 pandemic underscored the necessity to make higher use of the organisation’s three acre grounds. “It wasn’t simply that individuals wished our gardens, they wanted them. They have been coming right here for his or her well being and their psychological well-being, and that added this further drive to our imaginative and prescient to have publicly accessible sculpture in our gardens.”
Carmody Groake, ArtPlay Pavilion view
Courtesy Carmody Groake.
In an effort to discover these adjustments, the gallery, which receives no common authorities funding, needed to greater than double its annual fundraising burden of £4m. Alongside an ongoing public marketing campaign, and assist from pals and patrons, the challenge’s principal donor is The Lovington Basis, which has funded the an space of the backyard dubbed the sculpture meadow. Different main donors embrace The Julia Rausing Belief, which helps the ArtPlay Pavilion.
Interesting to the particular pursuits of funders, such because the Manton Basis which has supported an energy-saving floor supply warmth pump, helped to unlock assist and construct a way of partnership, says Scott. Unofficial however vital relationships have additionally been established with the Tree Council, with Fatoş Üstek, the director of Frieze Sculpture, and with sculpture parks across the nation and past.
Catering to its numerous audiences has additionally been key, Scott explains. Regardless of its prosperous location throughout the London borough of Southwark, the gallery is near areas experiencing important deprivation. Along with hyperlinks with 150 native faculties, the gallery works throughout the neighbouring boroughs of Lambeth and Lewisham, and maintains a partnership with an area NHS GP surgical procedure.
Additional alternatives to check and have interaction audiences have been created by way of the momentary pavilions arrange within the gallery’s grounds within the summers of 2017 and 2019. Equally, previous to its buy in 2024, Rob and Nicky Carter’s round Bronze Oak Grove was put in for a three-year trial interval—it would now develop into the brand new sculpture backyard’s “hero piece”.

The gallery is aiming for all of the backyard’s works to have an interactive component
Rob and Nick Carter, Bronze Oak Grove, 2021
“We wished to see how audiences responded to an art work they may sit on and play with”, says Scott. “We have had marriages in the course of that circle, and performances of performs.”
This interactive component is crucial for works coming into the backyard, even for people who have to stay behind limitations. “The intention is that it will all the time really feel actually recent, it would really feel like a vacation spot,” says Scott, acknowledging the gallery’s longstanding issue of coaxing guests to make the 12-minute prepare journey from London Victoria. “Having extra to do when you get right here helps our audiences understand it’s definitely worth the journey.”
Although the up to date focus echoes current programming, particularly the present Rachel Jones exhibition, Scott says there will likely be no wider shift in direction of up to date programming. “Our work have been up to date after they have been made,” she says, “so how we unlock their relevance right now is to talk to that pleasure and innovation—typically we do this via up to date artists.”