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Published: Friday, 03 January 2025 at 14:41 PM


When Great Britain declared war on Germany on 3 September, 1939, the nation’s cultural life was one of the earliest casualties.

In London, theatres, cinemas and concert halls went dark, to make identification of targets by German bombers difficult. At the flagship National Gallery, treasured paintings were packed away and sent to out-of-town locations, their frames left hanging disconsolately in deserted viewing areas. The Gallery’s director Kenneth Clark later recalled ‘the general emptiness’ of what was left behind, and walking round the vacant rooms ‘in deep depression’.

Soon afterwards, however, Clark received an unexpected visitor – the London-born pianist Myra Hess, an artist of international standing. Might it be possible, Hess wondered, to put on an occasional lunchtime concert at the Gallery, now that it lay unoccupied?

Myra Hess in 1941. Pic: Daily Herald Archive/National Science & Media Museum/SSPL via Getty Images – Daily Herald Archive/National Science & Media Museum/SSPL via Getty Images

‘For the enjoyment of beauty’

Clark, who feared the building would be requisitioned for administrative purposes, jumped at the suggestion. ‘Why not give one every day?’, he responded. The Gallery should continue to be used for ‘the enjoyment of beauty’, he reasoned, not ‘the filling in of forms or the sticking up of envelopes’.

The necessary preparations clicked quickly into motion. Despite a general ban on public gatherings, permission to stage the concerts was granted. Hess began compiling a list of musicians who would play, and the Steinway company loaned a piano. A wooden platform was erected in Room 36, a glass-domed, octagonal space which proved acoustically excellent – Hess tested it herself, with passages from Beethoven’s ‘Moonlight’ Sonata.