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Archive for the 'Museums' Category

Ask a Curator

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

Definitely worth looking at: “Ask a Curator brings together passionate experts from museums and galleries around the world to answer your questions on art, history and science.”

Museums Association Renaissance Survey

Friday, September 17th, 2010

The Museums Association Renaissance Survey research report has been published.   “The Museums Association recently surveyed the nine Renaissance Hubs to assess the potential impact of cuts to the Renaissance in the Regions programme. The results of the survey points to a future of declining services, falling visitor numbers and potential mothballing of collections if funding for Renaissance in the Regions is cut.”  Read the rest of the Renaissance Survey.

Portsmouth Natural History Museum

Monday, September 6th, 2010

Engaging with audiences.

What does a curator do?

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

What does a curator do? Careers information on the Guardian’s website http://bit.ly/bSfH2H

National Brewery Centre

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

The National Brewery Centre, managed by our sister company, gets a mention in the LA Times.

Culture Grid

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Culture Grid is an online resource which brings together over one million objects from a range of libraries, museums and archives.  This has the potential to engage with new audiences who may not traditionally have visited a museum or archives.  Culture Grid

Training grant

Friday, August 13th, 2010
The Heritage Lottery Fund has awarded the museum and botanic garden arm of the University of Oxford a £400,000 grant. This grant will provide placements for graduates to train as education officers for the heritage sector. Twelve trainees will spend 18 months working with collections, understanding new technology and working in volunteer management. The training will take place across five different sites, inlcuding The Ashmolean Museum, the Oxford Unviversity Museum of Natural History, the Pitt Rivers Museum, the Oxford Botanic Garden adn Harcourt Arboretum, and the Museum of the History of Science.

Sea City Museum

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Southampton City Council are planning to develop a new museum.  The Sea City Museum will be located in the Cultural Quarter and will focus on the City’s maritime and archeological heritage, including links to the Titanic.  The project has received £4.6 million in funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

Ulster Museum

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

The £100,000 Art Fund Prize, for museums and galleries, has been awarded to the Ulster Museum, Belfast. The museum has undergone a £17.8m refurbishment, which took three years. The refurbishment included new galleries – interactive learning zones, the Applied Art Gallery, Window of Our World and the reconfiguration of the listed building.

SS Robin

Friday, July 16th, 2010

SS Robin, is thought to be the oldest steamer in the world (launched in 1890) and has completed a two year £1.9m refit and will be transported to its new home on the River Thames as a floating museum.  SS Robin has a strong education and learning offer. The steamer is listed on the National Historic Fleet register. Image credits: Top black and white archive image Ambrose Greenway and lower image Kampfner Ltd.

Havering Museum

Friday, July 16th, 2010

The former Romford Brewery has been transformed with the help of a £990,000 Heritage Lottery Fund grant. The museum will be run by Havering Museum Ltd, supported by the borough council. Artefacts are split in to themes including farming, transport and childhood. It will have two permanent exhibitions, a temporary exhibition, event space, learning space (education and family activities and workshops) and a gift shop.  Visit the Havering Museum’s website.  You can also visit the Museum’s Facebook page.

The 10 best museum websites

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

The Times has a great article on the The 10 best museum websites.  The top 10 websites are:

Louvre

The State Hermitage Museum

Victoria and Albert Museum

Rijks Museum

Museum of the History of Science

Culture 24

The Smithsonian

The National Archives

museumstuff.com

The Science Museum

Museum of WiganLife

Monday, January 25th, 2010

The new Museum of WiganLife is set to open this spring, transforming the former History Shop into a ‘heritage hub’ for the Lancashire town.  The museum has received £500,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund and match funding from Wigan Council and Wigan Leisure and Culture Trust.  Displays tell the story of Wigan from the Roman period to today, including displays of Wigan at War and Wigan Sport. There will also be a genealogical area where people can be helped to research their ancestry.

Surfing Museum

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Talks are in place over the possibility of developing a permanent home for the proposed Museum of British Surfing at a site close to Saunton Sands, North Devon. The museum has received approval for 2 development grants, Leader 4 initiative and the North Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty’s sustainable development fund.

National Museums Liverpool

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

National Museums Liverpool (NML), which operates eight museums and galleries in Liverpool, is worth more than £115m to the local economy and supports 2,274 full time jobs in the city.  A study conducted by the North West Research Service (NWRS) revealed that a total of 2.74 million people visited NML museums and galleries during 2008, a 36% increase on 2007. The report also revealed that NML generated £79.3m worth of direct and indirect visitor spend in the local economy. NML directly employs 624 full time jobs while supporting 174 jobs in the area by using regional suppliers.  NML is the only English national museum group based entirely outside of London. The new Museum of Liverpool is under construction and is due to open in 2010-2011. It is expected that over 750,000 will visit the museum annually.

Great North Museum

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

The Great North Museum: Hancock in Newcastle upon Tyne has opened to the public following a £26m restoration.
The museum is located in the former Hancock Museum, which was closed 3 years ago to undergo the redevelopment.
The natural history museum houses 3,500 items from collections from the original Hancock Museum, Newcastle University’s Museum of Antiquities and the Shefton Museum.   The museum includes a planetarium, a bio-wall displaying the diversity of life on Earth, a life-size replica T-Rex skeleton, Ancient Egyptian mummies and a large scale model of Hadrians wall.

Tudor House Southampton

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

Southampton’s oldest museum has been awarded a £3.5m grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund, to carry out restoration work that will safeguard its future.

Tudor House dates back to the 15th century and will undergoa refurbishment programme that will enable the Grade 1 listed building and scheduled Ancient Monument to be removed from the ‘Heritage at Risk Register’.

It has been closed since 2002 to allow the first stage of a restoration scheme to take place, including structural stabilisation.

The second phase of work is led by Southampton City Council and includes repair and restoration of the Tudor House Museum and Tudor Merchants Hall, as well as the creation of new visitor facilities, such as toilets, café and a shop. The Tudor Merchants Hall is to become an education base.

Ripon Museum Trust

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Ripon Museum trust has been awarded £823,500 by HLF for the refurbishment of a museum at the city’s former workhouse. The Ripon Workhouse Museum will be enlarged and upgraded. Empty parts of the gatehouse will be brought back into use and a new entrance to the museum will be created. Items currently in storage will be put back on display and a series of temporary exhibitions will be created from a collection of photographs. There will also be a new local studies research centre, toilets and room for research. Work is to begin in the next few months and the museum is to reopen in August.

British Museum

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

A record number of people visited the British Museum in London last year to see China’s Terracotta Army exhibition. More than 850,000 people viewed the attraction, the highest attendance figures since the Tutankhamun display in 1972. The overall visitor figures from 2007-8 was 6 million. It was so popular that the museum had to extend its opening hours.

Natural History Museum

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

The new wing of London’s Natural History Museum has been unveiled. The Darwin Centre Phase Two is designed around an 8-storey “Cocoon”, encased within a glass atrium.

The temperature controlled Cocoon with house 20 million of the museum’s 34 million plant and insect specimens and laboratories for up to 200 researchers. Visitors can watch the researchers in action, when the centre opens in September 2009. It will be the only place in the UK where visitors can interact daily with natural science experts.

The building, costing £78 million, is designed by C F Moller and by HBG Construction. The building will link the Waterhouse building with the existing Darwin Centre Phase One and the museum’s gardens.


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