Category
page 1British art

pop art
art movement
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood
group of English painters, poets, and critics, founded in 1848
Tate Modern
modern art gallery located in Bankside, London, England
Arts and Crafts movement
international design movement
Tate Britain
art museum on Millbank, Westminster, London, UK
Ophelia
painting by John Everett Millais
Mariana
painting by John Everett Millais
Yale Center for British Art
largest collection of British art outside the United Kingdom in New Haven, Connecticut
Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing?
collage by Richard Hamilton
British art
art of Britain from ancient to modern times
Royal Society of British Artists
British art body established in 1823
Acceptance in lieu
provision in British tax law under which tax debts can be written off in exchange for the objects of national importance.
Artists Rifles
regiment of the British Army Reserve
Royal West of England Academy
art gallery in Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Art Workers' Guild
organization of British artists
Art-Language the journal of conceptual art
thumb|Cover of Art-Language Volume 5 Number 1 by Art & Language showing a drawing of Mel Ramsden
thumb|Cover of Art-Language the journal of conceptual art by Art & Language with texts by Michael Baldwin, Sol LeWitt, Dan Graham, Lawrence Weiner, and David Bainbridge
thumb|Cover of Art-Language Volume 5 Number 2 by Art & Language showing a drawing of Victorine Meurent
Art-Language: The Journal of Conceptual Art (1969-1985) was a magazine published by the conceptual artists of Art & Language. Involving more than 20 artists in the United States, Europe, and Australia, and covering almost 20 years

British Institution
art society
Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours
one of the societies in the Federation of British Artists, based in the Mall Galleries in London
creamware
thumb|Josiah Wedgwood: Tea and coffee service, c. 1775. Transfer-printed in purple enamel by Guy Green of Liverpool. Victoria & Albert Museum, London
Creamware is a cream-coloured refined earthenware with a lead glaze over a pale body, known in France as faïence fine, in the Netherlands as Engels porselein, and in Italy as terraglia inglese. It was created about 1750 by the potters of Staffordshire, England, who refined the materials and techniques of salt-glazed earthenware towards a finer, thinner, whiter body with a brilliant glassy lead glaze, which proved so ideal for domestic ware that i
Scottish art
visual art made in what is now Scotland, or about Scottish subjects, since prehistoric times