The Whitworth reopened in 2015 after a major expansion and it’s one of the best things to happen to Manchester’s art scene in years. The gallery sits on the edge of Whitworth Park, and the new glass extension pushes right out into the trees — you’re looking at art with the park behind it, or looking at the park framed like art. It works beautifully.
The textile collection is . Fabrics, wallpapers and woven pieces spanning centuries, from historical tapestries to contemporary fibre art. It’s the kind of collection that changes how you think about what counts as art. The fine art holdings are strong too — prints, drawings, watercolours, and a growing contemporary collection that gets regularly rotated through the galleries.
Temporary exhibitions are consistently ambitious. The Whitworth takes risks that other galleries in the city won’t, commissioning new work and giving space to artists who need room to do something big. The building itself deserves attention — red brick Victorian front, light-filled modern rear, landscape gallery that opens onto the park.
There’s a cafe with park views and a good art bookshop. Free entry to everything. Getting there is simple — Oxford Road buses stop right outside, or it’s a fifteen-minute walk from the university. Combine it with Manchester Museum for a full free culture day along Oxford Road.