Plymouth museum selected to display artworks at Number 10

This article was first published by Museums + Heritage Advisor.

The Box Plymouth has been selected as Museum in Residence at Downing Street for 2026, with nine paintings from the museum to be displayed throughout the year.

The partnership with the Government Art Collection will see works from Plymouth’s collection introduced to world leaders, government officials and distinguished visitors. The paintings have been chosen for the stories they tell about British innovation, resilience and creativity through Plymouth’s lens.

The works include Henry Andrews Luscombe’s The Opening of the New Eddystone Lighthouse (1882) celebrating British maritime engineering, Alfred Wallis’s Two Masted Schooner, Ketch by the St Ives artist whose work influenced British modernism, Stanley Spencer’s Hoe Garden Nursery (1955), a rare Plymouth work by one of Britain’s most important 20th-century artists, and Charles Ginner’s Plymouth Pier from The Hoe (1923) by the Camden Town Group artist. Other paintings document industrial and urban transformation through works by Robert Borlase Smart, Jack Pickup and Reginald Brill.