Constable’s £40m iconic masterpiece 
of Salisbury Cathedral saved for nation

ONE of “the great masterpieces of British art” has been saved for 
the nation in a deal that will
see it go on show across the
country.
'Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows' painted by John Constable.'Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows' painted by John Constable.
'Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows' painted by John Constable.

Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows by John Constable has been bought for £23.1m in a deal arranged by the Tate.

The deal, with the family of the late Lord Ashton of Hyde, includes tax concessions that make it equivalent to an open market sale of £40m.

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Tate director Nicholas Serota said: “Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows is one of the great masterpieces of British art. I am extremely grateful to the owners who have worked with us while we have raised the funds to ensure the painting remains in the UK.”

A grant of £15.8m from the Heritage Lottery Fund was central to the sale of the landscape work.

The acquisition is part of a partnership between the Tate and five other galleries – the National Museum of Wales, the National Galleries of Scotland, Colchester and Ipswich Museums and the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum – who will all exhibit the work.

Jenny Abramsky, who chairs the fund, said the “substantial” investment was a recognition of the painting’s status as a “precious and quintessentially British heritage icon”.

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She said: “It is unimaginable that this particular painting might have ended up anywhere other than a UK public collection”.

The 1831 painting has been on loan to the National Gallery in London for the past 30 years.

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