We’ve recently restructured how we present our artists and Collection online and we’d love to know what you think.
We’ve redesigned our search, our artist pages and our pages for paintings, sculptures, artists’ letters and books and brought these into the heart of the RA website. You’ll now see the Collection popping up all across the site. You’ll also find bigger images and these are available to download wherever possible on a Creative Commons licence.
You can search across the RA Collection, including our archive and library. Try searching for an artwork, or looking for a colour, medium or technique. You can also discover all of the artists (Royal Academicians) who have run the Academy since its foundation in 1768 to the present day.
If you’re looking for something more specific, you can search just our artworks, books, archive or names (artists, people or organisations associated with our Collection).
Not every journey starts with a search. We’ve made it easy to explore our collection by using data to draw connections between different artists, media, moods or colours. Start your exploration anywhere and see where you end up.
Bob and Roberta Smith RA
Ever since the Royal Academy was founded in 1768, we’ve been collecting artworks, books and artistic materials. Every artist and architect that’s been elected to join us as a Royal Academician has donated an example of their work, known as a Diploma Work, to our Collection.
Our Collection spans 250 years of British art, from Constable and Turner to Hockney and Emin. It now contains about 935 paintings, 350 sculptures, 700 plaster casts, 25,000 prints and drawings and 5,000 historic photographs. Some were acquired as teaching materials for the RA Schools, or simply to inspire the next generation of artists.
You’ll find works from our Collection on display in new public galleries throughout the RA.
Our Collection Gallery features highlights from the RA Collection. See work by leading early Academicians, together with many of the RA’s examples of earlier art, including Michelangelo’s Taddei Tondo, an almost full-size sixteenth-century copy of Leonardo’s Last Supper and casts of key classical sculptures, notably the Belvedere Torso.
Visit free displays around the RA, including architecture in the Ronald and Rita McAulay Gallery and a public project space for the RA Schools in the Weston Studio.