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Press release

Eleven Museums and Galleries Long-Listed for £100,000 Art Fund Prize 2010

18/02/10

A long list of eleven museums and galleries are in the running to win the £100,000 Art Fund Prize, the UK’s largest single arts prize. The long list has been selected by a panel of Judges chaired this year by broadcaster Kirsty Young. Traditionally the long list comprises ten, but for the 2010 Prize eleven institutions are nominated, attesting to the high quality and volume of applications received.

The £100,000 prize is awarded to the museum or gallery for a project completed in the last year, that the Judges deem demonstrates the most originality, imagination and excellence. The Prize, which has been sponsored by the UK’s leading independent art charity, The Art Fund, for three years, aims to increase public appreciation and enjoyment of the UK’s museums and galleries.

The eleven long-listed museums and galleries are:

  • The Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
    An ambitious redevelopment of one of the great university museums of the world that extends and enhances public access to its remarkable collections of art and archaeology.
  • Blists Hill Victorian Town, Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust
    The transformation of a fifty-four acre site, part of the Ironbridge Gorge World Heritage Site, which interprets life in a typical town of the East Shropshire Coalfield around 1900.
  • Great North Museum: Hancock, Newcastle
    Three outstanding collections of natural history, Roman and Anglo-Saxon archaeology and Greek and Etruscan Art and Archaeology have been combined for the first time to create a major new museum for the North of England.
  • Hampton Court Palace, Surrey, for Henry VIII: heads and hearts
    In 2009 Historic Royal Palaces celebrated the 500th anniversary of Henry VIII’s accession with the most ambitious programme of exhibitions, events, displays and preparatory conservation work that it had ever staged at the King’s former royal residence.
  • The Herbert Art Gallery and Museum, Coventry
    A long-established regional museum has been transformed through a major redevelopment which is reaching new audiences and has become a fresh focus for local pride.
  • The Leach Pottery, St Ives
    The rescue and restoration of the most influential studio pottery in the world, founded in 1920 by Bernard Leach and Shoji Hamada in the Cornish fishing village of St Ives.
  • The National Army Museum, London, for Conflicts of Interest
    A new exhibition exploring the impact of 40 years of conflict on Britain’s soldiers and civilians worldwide is designed to capture history as it happens and to allow visitors to contribute to its evolution.
  • The Natural History Museum, London, for the Darwin Centre
    An awe inspiring new public space and state-of-the-art science and collections facility that allows visitors to explore world-class science in action. The most significant expansion at the Natural History Museum since it moved to South Kensington in 1881.
  • The Royal Institution of Great Britain, for Science in the Making
    The important scientific collections of the 200-year old Royal Institution have been brought to life in a new exhibition as part of a major refurbishment and enlargement of the Grade I listed building, supporting the Institution’s mission of making science accessible to all.
  • Towner, Eastbourne
    The rebirth of a long-established local authority gallery as a stunning new public art space for Eastbourne and the leading centre for visual arts in the South East.
  • The Ulster Museum, Belfast
    Part of the National Museums Northern Ireland, the Ulster Museum has reopened following a three-year redevelopment that has fundamentally reshaped the character of this major museum.

Kirsty Young, Chair of the Judges comments: “My fellow Judges and I deliberated passionately and at length, and even then it was impossible to select fewer than eleven for the long list. The quality of applications was simply outstanding. We are delighted with our selection and feel that this year’s long list demonstrates a snapshot of the UK’s incredible cultural offerings.”

Stephen Deuchar, Director of The Art Fund, comments: “This year’s long-listed museums and galleries have shown such depth of imagination and drive; they are a testament to the wealth of culture on offer right across the UK. I for one can’t wait to see how the judges’ journeys unfold from now until the end of June when the winner is announced.”

The Judges will travel the UK to visit each of the eleven long-listed museums and galleries before selecting a short list of four, to be announced at the end of May 2010. The winner of the £100,000 prize will be announced on Wednesday 30 June 2010 at the Royal Institute of British Architects in London.

The 2010 judging panel comprises:

  • Kirsty Young (Chairman), broadcaster
  • Kathy Gee, museums and heritage adviser
  • Professor A C Grayling, Professor of Philosophy, Birkbeck College, London
  • Professor J Steve Jones, Professor of Genetics, University College London
  • Sally Osman, communications consultant and former Director of Communications, BBC
  • Lars Tharp, Director, The Foundling Museum and BBC Antiques Roadshow expert
  • Jonathan Yeo, artist

The public can vote for their favourite long-listed institution and leave comments for the Judges on the Art Fund Prize website telling the Judges why they should win. The poll results and online comments will be given to the Judges for their consideration when selecting the Short List and Winner. Visitors to the website can enter an exclusive competition to win a limited edition Jonathan Yeo print.

To vote, comment or for more information about the Prize go to: www.artfundprize.org.uk

Sky Arts returns as the TV Media partner for this years’ Art Fund Prize and will go behind the scenes in a 30 minute documentary that will broadcast on Sky Arts 2 HD throughout May and June. The documentary will take a look at each of the long-listed museums and galleries and follows the developing story as the panel of judges visit the eleven venues all vying for the prestigious £100,000 prize.


Ends


Notes to editors:

  • The Art Fund Prize for museums and galleries is administered by the Museum Prize Trust, a charitable company created in 2002 by The Art Fund, the Campaign for Museums, the Museums Association and National Heritage. Its trustees are Penelope, Viscountess Cobham (Chair), James Bishop (National Heritage), Ylva French, Mark Taylor (Museums Association), Sam Mullins and Sandy Nairne (representing The Art Fund).
  • The Museum Prize is registered as a company in England and Wales No. 421870 and a charity No. 1093174. Registered Office: 24 Calvin Street, London E1 6NW.
  • The Wedgwood Museum in Stoke-on-Trent was awarded The Art Fund Prize in 2009 and the 2008 winner was The Lightbox museum and gallery in Woking. Previous winners of the then Gulbenkian Prize include Pallant House Gallery, Chichester (2007), Brunel’s ss Great Britain, Bristol (2006), Big Pit: National Mining Museum of Wales, Blaenafon (2005), The Scottish Gallery of Modern Art for Landform by Charles Jencks (2004), and the National Centre for Citizenship and the Law at the Galleries of Justice, Nottingham (2003).
  • The Art Fund is the UK’s leading independent art charity. It offers grants to help UK museums and galleries enrich their collections; campaigns on behalf of museums and their visitors; and promotes the enjoyment of art. It is entirely funded from public donations and has 80,000 members. Since 1903 the charity has helped museums and galleries all over the UK secure over 860,000 works of art for their collections. Recent achievements include: helping secure Anthony d’Offay’s collection, ARTIST ROOMS, for the nation in February 2008 with a grant of £1million, and touring the collection throughout the UK in 2009 and 2010; and creating the ‘Buy a Brushstroke’ public appeal which raised over £550,000 to keep Turner’s Blue Rigi in the UK. For more information contact The Art Fund Press Office on 020 7225 4888 or visit www.artfund.org

 

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