The Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum is a museum in the city of Glasgow, the third most populous city in the whole of the United Kingdom and the economic capital of Scotland. The Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum is located adjacent to Kelvingrove Park and close to the main campus of the University of Glasgow at Gilmorehill.
The building was designed by Sir John William Simpson and EJ Milner Allen and opened in 1901.
The Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum houses an important art collection born from the union of that of the McLellan Galleries with that of the Kelvingrove House Museum in Kelvingrove Park. For this reason it is a heterogeneous collection with objects ranging from natural history, to weapons and armor, it also includes important works of art from the Scottish, Italian, French and Dutch schools.
Among the works on display are the Annunciation by Sandro Botticelli (c. 1490), Christ and the adulteress by Titian (1511), Madonna between saints Girolamo and Dorotea (1516), The Christ of San Juan de la Cruz by Salvator Dalì , his only work of a religious nature.