Still, it is delightful, even exhilarating, in its own modest way. The visitor wanders through four rooms of black and white paintings of blurry anonymous snapshots and newspaper photos, punctuated by colour portraits in the corridor, before reaching a bright, heart-warming explosion of colour in pictures of Richter’s wives and children in the final room. Ultimately it confirms that Richter’s portraits — as emotional as they are precise — are up there with the most important series of modern paintings, from Monet’s Haystacks to Warhol’s Car Crashes.