1. Whitechapel Gallery

    1. Whitechapel Gallery

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    Whitechapel Gallery

    3.6 (30 reviews)
    InexpensiveArt Galleries, Museums
    Open 12:00 pm - 2:30 PM

    Whitechapel Gallery Photos

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    Fresh bread to begin ...
    Brion F.

    This is a review for the Whitechapel Gallery Dining Room. What an oasis! We needed to go to Whitechapel and decided to pop into the gallery for a look around. I've not been there for years and had no idea they had a fancy new restaurant. Without reservations, we got a table for two for Sunday lunch. We were lucky, as during the course of our lunch the place filled up. The staff were charming and sincerely friendly and showed knowledge of the gallery and the exhibiting artists. The room looks great, with beautiful wooden chairs and nice lighting and parquet flooring. The menu is broken down into 'To begin' which are like bar snacks (£2 - £3), 'Small plates' (£6- £8) and 'Bigger plates' (£11 - £15). I ordered asparagus with ham and egg and a plate of radishes. I then had the roast beef with full trimmings. I was told that the meat would be medium rare. I wasn't given a choice, but that was fine. My meal ended with salted caramel tart. Each course was freshly prepared and delicious. In my opinion, the surrounding area is pretty awful. But as you enter the gallery you leave all that behind. To then have a wonderful dining room too is such a delight. I will most definitely be back.

    Sinan O.

    The Whitechapel gallery is a quirky little place, where whilst at University, we were constantly told to visit galleries, to help build inspiration and develop our creative young and absorbent minds, so we did. Going the grand and well known galleries can be thrilling but can also be quite annoying as there is too much to see and far to many people. Where as at the smaller lesser known galleries, you can you feel a little more involved. They hold decent exhibitions here, in all art genres. The last one I went to was a photography exhibition, which was great, and I thought the curator did a brilliant job in allowing the audience to really have an insight. To many people, these little galleries are better than the world renowned ones in London, it is somewhere you can meet people with similar interests. They have plenty going on in 2009 so take a visit.

    Qype User (thelon…)

    Whitechapel Gallery Dining Room Pics at The London Foodie (http://www.thelondonfoodie.co.uk ) I have heard some excellent reports on Whitechapel Gallery Dining Room (WGDR) lately, and when I learnt that it had joined TasteLondon, Dr G and I decided to pay it a visit. The restaurant area is surprisingly small and intimate and sits a maximum of 40 diners. Light and airy, the long vertical mirrors on its walls help to create the illusion of a more spacious dining room. I like the nearly minimalist, understated but elegant décor reminiscent of a 1950's Scandinavian home, with its beautiful chairs, parquet flooring and light coloured wood throughout. Head-Chef Maria Elia, daughter of a West London restaurateur, spent a summer working at El Bulli before her ten year stint at Delfina on London's Southbank. She joined WGDR following the gallery's multi-million refurbishment in 2009. Renowned for her vegetarian credentials (she recently published a book called The Modern Vegetarian), Maria Elia is a creative chef who makes the most of seasonal and locally sourced ingredients, and her reassuringly short menu at WGDR, reflects these qualities. On our visit, Dr G ordered the Clementine and jupiter marinated quail, bitter leaf and char-grilled radicchio salad @ £7.50 as a starter. This was an excellent choice the meat was sweet and tender, with a deliciously citric hint from the clementines, contrasting well with the bitter leaf and radicchio salad. My choice of Pan-fried scallops, white bean puree, wild mushrooms @ £8.25 was also good. The white bean puree and wild mushrooms were a nice addition, but despite being very fresh and meaty, the scallops were slightly over-salted. I'd hoped my starter had been a one-off, but we soon overheard from the table next to ours about their nice but a bit salty scallops. For main course, I had the Pot roasted rabbit, confit rabbit baklava, swiss chard, lemon dressing, parsnip skordalia @ £17.75. This was a beautifully presented dish with some interesting gamey flavours balanced by the zesty lemon dressing, but at nearly £18, we felt the portion was slightly ungenerous for such an economical meat. Dr G's Pan-fried duck breast, creamed lentils, January kings, roasted quince @ £18.75 was a lovely choice. The duck was cooked to perfection and combined well with the roasted quince. I wasn't entirely convinced about the texture of creamed lentils, but the flavours were good and, unlike my rabbit, there was plenty of it. As a side dish, we had Truffled parsnips and winter leaves @ £3.75. We were both impressed by the combination of caramelized parsnips and truffle oil - it was a delicious accompaniment to our main courses. Dr G's dessert Rosemary and blood orange crème caramel, citrus salad @ £5.75 was sensational. A light and delicious dessert with some complex flavours at play. The Hot chocolate pudding, cha tea mousse, chocolate dirt @ £5.75 was also good and rich, with a molten chocolate core. The wine list, although short, represented the old and new worlds well, with bottles ranging from £13.75 to £64 (most bottles were priced between £16.50 and £30). We ordered a bottle of Marche Sangiovese 2008 @ £16.50 which was light, fruit driven with a nice balancing acidity, and did not break the bank. Cost: the total bill was £98 including 12.5% service. We paid £64 after the 50% TasteLondon discount on the food was applied to the bill. Likes: Elegant and intimate dining room, very friendly service, seasonal and locally sourced ingredients, and some impressive cooking. We were also impressed by how reasonably priced their large bottle of sparkling water was @ £1. Dislikes: Over-salted scallops, slightly over-priced a la carte, although lunch set menus are excellent value @ £18 (2 courses) or £23 (3 courses) from Tuesday to Sunday. Verdict: Creative cooking and some very interesting dishes made from local ingredients, served by friendly, efficient staff in an attractive setting. Chef Maria Elia is a good proponent of modern British cooking. Not bad value after the discount.

    Qype User (Nunhea…)

    We had visited the Whitechapel Gallery Dining Room earlier this year when Maria Elia was the head chef and we had a lovely meal. It's now headed up by Michael Paul but we had heard good things so we decided to jump on the East London line and head across town for a Saturday supper with our old tennis partner Esther and B's university chum, the delightful Carmen. As dining rooms go this is one of my favourites. Situated right next door to Aldgate East tube station you reach the restaurant through the gallery entrance and the main dining room is immediately on the right with a small private room, seating about ten, on your left. It's a small intimate room, with lovely lighting and well-spaced tables which look out onto a very busy Whitechapel High Street. I'd guess it would seat in the region of thirty or so at full capacity but on this particular Saturday it was pretty quiet which is odd given the quality of the food, the excellent dining experience and the reasonable prices. However, this definitely worked to our advantage when Carmen eventually joined us only 45 minutes late with Tory Boy in tow. The lovely waitress Helena, who showed great patience with us all evening, quickly accommodated our unexpected guest by pushing a couple of tables together and we decamped to the other side of the room and set about ordering from the nicely balanced menu which has moved away from the vegetarian focus it had previously when Maria was in control. Esther was slightly gutted as she had been on the web site earlier in the day and had already made her choice from the sample menu they had posted on-line. However, the menu on Saturday night was much changed, with only a couple of the dishes from the sample menu remaining. I took this to be a good sign and there were plenty of great dishes amongst the choice of four starters and four mains to agonize over. Helena was very helpful and provided excellent but unobtrusive advice. I started with the scallops with cauliflower purée and crispy pancetta which was a classic combination, beautifully cooked and presented on a slate platter. I had a nibble of Carmen's choice of ham hock and fois gras terrine with kohlrabi slaw which was rich, robust and full of flavour. B was also pretty pleased with her beetroot and cardamom marinated smoked salmon. We were washing this down with the 2009 Santo Isidro White which was crisp and fragrant at a very reasonable £14.25 per bottle which made a refreshing change to the entry level wine at £20 plus a bottle which seems to be becoming all too common in London restaurants. As Esther was going to Bordeaux next week and she was thinking of taking her pals some English wine we also tried a bottle of 2009 Chapel Down Flint Dry which was fine but I think you can drink much better French wine at £25 a go. Anyway, we were soon onto the mains and my breast of guinea fowl with a madeira jus was just perfect and even better was the little dish of turnip-topped shepherd's pie which came as an accompaniment - a touch of genius and extremely tasty. Food envy could have been the order of the day because all the other mains also looked great and Tory Boy was raving about his sea bass with clam chowder. We shared a couple of sides of potatoes and various vegetables which also went down very well. Presentation and execution was again spot on. Very happy by this point in the proceedings we moved on to desserts and while my bitter chocolate tart with a poached clementine was mighty fine I found myself wishing I had gone for the pear and apple crumble with butterscotch sauce as I watched Esther scraping every last morsel from her bowl. It was an espresso for me while the other guys had a variety of herbal teas and I ordered a single glass of a very tasty Pedro Ximenez Triana so the ladies could have a try of this fine digestif. The icing on the cake was that, even on a Saturday night, we could use B's Taste London card so we got a very helpful £30 off the bill. A great evening and we will, without a doubt, be back before too long.

    Diana as Engine I by Eduardo Paolozzi, 1963
    Michael T.

    The building seems to never end: up these stairs, around this corner, down and then over. I'm not complaining as it is nice albeit a bit confusing. The exhibits were fun and interesting. It is not free (at least it wasn't for me on a Sunday afternoon) but it has a bit of a history so I was fine with it.

    courtesy http://www.whitechapel.org

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    Staff closes the gallery 30m early every time I have visited on my way home from work.

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    Whitechapel Gallery Reviews in Other Languages

    Review Highlights - Whitechapel Gallery

    Its a gem of a gallery in East London, just a short walk from Brick Lane.

    Mentioned in 2 reviews

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    StolenSpace Gallery - from "Wild Fantasies: A Decade of Don't Panic Posters" gallery preview.

    StolenSpace Gallery

    4.4(10 reviews)
    0.0 miWhitechapel, Shoreditch
    £££

    This is a fantastic little art gallery which shows exciting art by contemporary artists such as…read more DFace, Mr Jago, Meryl O'Donoghue and many other great up and coming and established artists. The gallery space itself is quite small. The staff are very friendly and always wiling to help. Private views are usually on a Thursday night here. It's located just off Brick Lane. check it out the next time you are in the East End.

    This is the first gallery I went to as a new resident to London - and, as a total street/guerrilla…read moreart enthusiast, I was really impressed. The gallery is in East London's bustling Brick Lane, sitting quite contentedly in a dank, graffiti-covered alley that on gallery opening nights is filled with hip-looking young folk (many who are also surreptitiously brandishing paste-up materials and paint pens, bent on tagging every open space when no one is looking). The night I went here was the RSVP preview of Stolen Space's "Wild Fantasies" show, which features several posters of the "Dont Panic" tradition - many of which were created by our generation's most well-known street artists, from D*Face to Banksy to Shepard Fairey of OBEY/Obama poster fame. Free drinks abounded and the place was packed to the rafters. Overall, it's obvious that this gallery has a true appreciation for the ethos and philosophy behind street art - many of its founders are street artists themselves. Squabbles about the rammifications of the commercialization of street art aside, this is a reputable spot to sample the work of respected urban/street artists with a political, street-originated bent. A tip: be sure to grab a Don't Panic promo package on your way out. They're free and distributed around the city, but this gallery is the source. They're filled with flyers and posters for London street/nightlife events coming up.

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    StolenSpace Gallery
    StolenSpace Gallery
    StolenSpace Gallery

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    Nelly Duff

    Nelly Duff

    4.5(11 reviews)
    0.9 miShoreditch, Bethnal Green
    ££

    Dropped in here semi-recently and kept forgetting to write a review. They were very friendly and…read morehelpful. I'm not very knowledgable on art, and so I just buy what I like. This place had reasonably priced items by smaller artists that made it very approachable. I bought a piece for like 400, which in the scheme of something hanging on your walls for decades isn't too bad. I visited a bunch of other galleries that were stuffy and had very expensive stuff. This gallery has a lot of things that regular, "non-art", people would buy and hang on their wall. I researched a few of the artists in there and they all seemed like fairly new artists that were getting their feet wet, so it feels good to support them.

    I spent a Saturday mooching a long Columbia Road with a friend and I'd forgotten that there is so…read moremuch down there to see even when the market isn't on. Nelly Duff is one of those places you'll want to stop on by. If you like street art and are looking for something from some very talented up and coming artists, this will be the place to get it. Starting from £100 you can purchase some fabulous prints, they even frame them for you! I love it so much because it really is affordable art. They have a keen eye as to what's on trend right now so you get some of the best up and coming names on display. It's also great for iconic London prints, postcards and small Christmas presents. If you know a Londoner and you are struggling to by them a gift, this shop can help.

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    Nelly Duff
    Nelly Duff
    Nelly Duff

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    Guildhall Art Gallery - Inside the main upstairs Victorian gallery featuring Pre-Raphaelite art. Free entry.

    Guildhall Art Gallery

    4.8(8 reviews)
    1.0 miThe City
    £

    When you are in the City (Square Mile) of London, be sure to think about stopping in the wonderful…read moreGuildhall Art Gallery. This is a free art museum so all you need is the time. There are many British paintings but the largest collection is from the Victorian era ... yes there are lots of Pre-Raphaelites. The 18th Century American painter John Singleton Copley is represented by his huge masterpiece 'Defeat of the Floating batteries at Gibraltar.' And at the lowest lever level of the museum are the discovered ruins of the great Roman amphitheatre in Londinium. Everything is displayed nicely and the Guildhall Art Gallery staff are especially friendly. Don't miss it!

    This gallery is a diamond in the rough. I had no idea this place even existed *bows head in shame*…read more I went online to find free art galleries in London and was lead to this place. Best. Find .Ever! Hallelujah! They have free guide tours on specific times and days - It is so worth checking out. The tour guide was incredibly informative with the history and knowledge of the artist behind each paintings. There was a group of us who was shown around the gallery (it is huge!) and our heads were filled with so much incredible information about the history of London. The highlight of the gallery is the last remains of amphitheatre which is down by the basement. For someone who has a passion for history, this place blew me away. It is certainly worth checking out!

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    Guildhall Art Gallery
    Guildhall Art Gallery - Copley's monumental  'Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar.'

    Copley's monumental 'Defeat of the Floating Batteries at Gibraltar.'

    Guildhall Art Gallery - Roman ruins from the Londinium amphitheatre

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    Roman ruins from the Londinium amphitheatre

    Whitechapel Gallery - galleries - Updated July 2026

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