NINETY years of treasures will be displayed at a Worcester art gallery in celebration of the Queen's 90th birthday.

Pictures of some of Worcestershire's most iconic landscapes will feature among the selection on show at Worcester City Art Gallery and Museum.

The display brings together a range of traditional and experimental perspectives of the British countryside as successive decades of artists have pictured it.

It begins with an oil painting by Frank Richards of 'Claines Church, Worcestershire' from the 1920s, includes Laura Knight's 'Portrait of Allardyce Nicoll pictured on the Malverns' from the 1940s and ends in the noughties with Clare Woods' Cross in Hands.

Visitors will be able to pick out little changes in the landscape that it is now rare to encounter, such as the working windmill in the 1930s and the happy pipe smoker in the 1940s.

Philippa Tinsley, Senior Curator at Worcester City Art Gallery and Museum, said: "The British landscape has remained a constant beauty over 90 years, by the hard work, energy and passion of those who work in it and oversee it.

"These artworks celebrate both the Worcestershire and the British landscape in both its change and its enduring loveliness."

Ninety Years of Treasures is free and on display now in the balcony gallery space until the end of December 2016.