Wallace Collection, in London, England, a collection of fine and decorative artworks bequeathed to the British government in 1897. It is housed in Hertford House at Manchester Square, in Westminster.
The fine, eclectic Wallace Collection was built up by the Seymour-Conway family, marquesses of Hertford, during the 18th and 19th centuries. In 1870 it was bequeathed by the 4th marquess of Hertford to his son, Richard Wallace, who adapted the house to receive the collection and added to it himself. Wallace’s widow left both the house and collection to the nation upon her death. The house, built in 1776–88 and acquired in 1797 by the 2nd marquess of Hertford as his town home, was opened to the public in 1900.
The Wallace Collection is particularly notable for its 17th- and 18th-century French and British paintings and sculpture. There are also works by Dutch, Flemish, Italian, and Spanish artists, as well as a large holding of paintings by the 19th-century British artist Richard Parkes Bonington. A French furniture exhibit includes a number of important pieces, and there are many rare clocks. The armoury includes choice European arms and armour, as well as Asian material. The Sèvres porcelain includes representatives of each phase and style of the 18th century. And there are examples of 16th-century Italian majolica. Among the miniatures is a self-portrait of Hans Holbein the Younger.