the highest balcony in a theatre, containing the cheapest seats
a room or building for the display or sale of works of art
a raised platform at the side of a stage that contains ropes and equipment for moving props and scenery. Also called fly floor
an underground megalithic burial chamber which may be divided into sections but has no separate entrance passage
a place reserved for journalists observing the proceedings in a parliament or law court
a national museum of art at Millbank, London, founded in 1897 by the sugar manufacturer Sir Henry Tate (1819–99) to house his collection of modern British paintings, as a nucleus for a permanent national collection of modern art. It was renamed Tate Britain in 2000, when the new Tate Modern gallery opened
the top gallery in a theatre where the cheaper seats are located
a place containing an exhibition or collection of paintings or pictures
a collection of photographs of known criminals, used by police to identify suspects
an art gallery in Trafalgar Square, London, holding one of the chief national collections of pictures. The collection began in 1824, and the present main building was opened in 1838
a room or fairground booth used for recreational shooting at targets with guns or airguns
an art gallery in Moscow, one of the largest in the world. It houses exhibits ranging from early Russian art to contemporary work, and has a huge collection of icons
a gallery or dome with acoustic properties such that a faint sound may be heard round its entire circumference
act in an exaggerated way in order to appeal to popular taste
an art gallery in London holding the national collection of portraits of eminent or well-known British men and women. Founded in 1856, it moved to its present site next to the National Gallery in 1896