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Bristol Museum & Art Gallery

Bristol Museum & Art Gallery is a large museum and art gallery in Bristol, England. The museum is situated in Clifton, about 0.5 miles (0.8 km) from the city centre. As part of Bristol Culture it is run by the Bristol City Council with no entrance fee. It holds designated museum status, granted by the national government to protect outstanding museums. The designated collections include: geology, Eastern art, and Bristol's history, including English delftware. In January 2012 it became one of sixteen Arts Council England Major Partner Museums.[1]

Bristol Museum & Art Gallery
Location within Bristol
Established1823
LocationQueens Road, Bristol BS8 1RL, England, United Kingdom
Coordinates51°27′22″N 2°36′19″W / 51.4561°N 2.6053°W / 51.4561; -2.6053
Visitors467,608 (2015/16)* Ranked 23rd nationally
DirectorJon Finch
WebsiteBristol Museum & Art Gallery

The museum includes sections on natural history as well as local, national and international archaeology. The art gallery contains works from all periods, including many by internationally famous artists, as well a collection of modern paintings of Bristol.

In the summer of 2009 the museum hosted an exhibition by Banksy featuring more than 70 works of art, including animatronics and installations; it is his largest exhibition yet. It was developed in secrecy and with no advance publicity, but soon gained worldwide attention.

The building is of Edwardian Baroque architecture and has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II* listed building.[2]

The standard opening hours are: Tuesday to Sunday, 10am–5pm. The museum is also open 10am–5pm on Bank Holiday Mondays and Mondays during Bristol school holidays.

Events edit

Bristol Museum & Art Gallery run a programme of free and paid events throughout the year that include multi week exhibitions, workshops and drop in gallery curator talks. The biggest annual event is the weekend celebration for Chinese New Year during February which has dancing dragon and lion performances, martial arts, traditional Chinese dances, storytelling, family trails, arts and craft activities. Information on current and past events can be found on the museum's website.

History edit

 
Bristol Museum entrance, 1904
 
A Bristol Biplane replica hangs from the ceiling of the main hall of the Museum. This aircraft was made in 1963 for the film Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines.
 
The museum's natural history galleries include a large selection of taxidermied animals
 
Sarcophagi in the Egyptology collections
 
Assyrian reliefs

The Museum and Art Gallery's origins lie in the foundation, in 1823, of the Bristol Institution for the Advancement of Science and Art, sharing brand-new premises at the bottom of Park Street (a 100 yards (91 m) downhill from the current site) with the slightly older Bristol Literary and Philosophical Society. The neoclassical building was designed by Sir Charles Robert Cockerell (1788–1863), who was later to complete the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, and build St. George's Hall, Liverpool, and was later used as the Freemasons Hall.[3]

In April 1871 the Bristol Institution merged with the Bristol Library Society and on 1 April 1872 a new combined museum and library building in Venetian Gothic style was opened at the top of Park Street.[4] The lease on the former Bishop's College building next door, which had been the Library Society's home since 1855, passed to the local army reserve unit, whose drill hall lay behind it; it became the Victoria (later Salisbury) Club and a restaurant. The old Institution building was sold to the Freemasons. Although the new building was extended in 1877, by the 1890s the Museum and Library Association was struggling financially, and even unable to pay its curator, Edward Wilson (1848–1898). Negotiations with the city corporation culminated in the transfer of the whole organisation and premises to Bristol city corporation on 31 May 1894. Wilson remained Curator until his death – only this time he was actually paid!

However, in June 1899 the site of the Salisbury Club was offered for sale to the city, the tobacco baron, Sir William Henry Wills (1830–1911, later Lord Winterstoke) offering £10,000 to help buy the site and build a new City Art Gallery on it.[5] Designed by Frederick Wills in an Edwardian Baroque style work on the new building started in 1901, and opened in February 1905. It was built in a rectangular open plan in 2 sections each consisting of a large hall with barrel-vaulted glazed roofs, separated by a double staircase.[2] It incorporated a Museum of Antiquities, as it had been decided during the planning stage that Assyrian, Egyptian, Greek and Roman antiquities should be grouped with art in the new structure, rather than remaining with the natural history collections that remained in the old building. Stone tools continued to reside with the geology collections within natural history. Yet more space became available to museum displays when Bristol Central Library moved down the hill to College Green in 1906.[6] The vacant rooms were reconstructed as invertebrate and biology galleries.

In 1913, the army reserve's drill hall, which now lay between the rear of the Art Gallery and the rapidly expanding University of Bristol, was purchased by the two institutions, three-fifths of the complex falling to the Museum and Art Gallery, the rest to the University. Unfortunately, the outbreak of war in 1914 put paid to any plans for new building; indeed, the Upper Museum Room (geology) was cleared in 1916 to become a 'Soldiers Room' to entertain convalescents and the Egyptian Room 'served for reading and writing and for the delivery of special demonstrations. However, after being used for storage for over a decade, it proved possible to demolish the Drill Hall to permit a rearward extension of the Art Gallery. This was funded by Sir George Alfred Wills (1854–1928, a cousin of Lord Winterstoke) and completed in 1930.

The 1872–77 Museum building was gutted by fire following a bomb hit on the night of 24–25 November 1940, during the Bristol Blitz, some 17,000 of the natural history specimens being lost. The 1930 extension of the Art Gallery was also hit, but luckily escaped the conflagration, although suffering badly from blast damage. Nevertheless, the Art Gallery partially reopened in February 1941, now also housing some of the Museum's surviving material on a 'temporary' basis. Although now housed in the same building, from April 1945, the Museum and Art Gallery were formally split into separate institutions with the lower floor becoming the Museum and the upper floors the Art Gallery. As part of this restructuring, the archaeology and anthropology collections were transferred from the Art Gallery to the Museum.

In February 1947, the remains of the old Museum building (with the exception of the undamaged lecture theatre) were sold to Bristol University: it was then rebuilt as its dining rooms, later becoming Brown's Restaurant.[7] The sale of the building in 1947 reflected the intention that new premises would soon be provided for the Museum and the Art Gallery; planning began in 1951, but then dragged on for the next twenty years, during which time the old buildings received minimal attention, other than the insertion of mezzanines to gain additional space.

Meanwhile, various proposals had been made for new museum buildings in Castle Park, in the very centre of Bristol, overlooking the river Avon. However, spiraling costs and funding difficulties meant that in 1971 the plans were abandoned and a smaller amount of money was put into upgrading the existing building. Wholesale refurbishment was required, including rewiring, rearranging offices, creating laboratories and dividing up and furnishing the basement to provide proper storage for the reserve collections.

In the summer of 2009 the museum hosted an exhibition by Banksy, called Banksy versus Bristol Museum featuring more than 70 works of art, including animatronics and installations; it is his largest exhibition yet. It was developed in secrecy and with no advance publicity.[8]

Collection edit

 
Interior of Bristol Art Gallery. The large picture Noah's Ark (4 m by 4 m) was painted in c.1710 by the Dutch artist Jan Griffier.

Today, the top floor art galleries include a collection of Chinese Glass and the "Schiller collection" of Eastern Art bequeathed by Max Schiler, the Recorder of Bristol from 1935 to 1946 and collected by his older brother Ferdinand N Schiler. It contains a range of Chinese ceramics wares spanning different dynastic periods. Particularly fine pieces include a number of white, light blue and green-glazed (Ying Qing and Qingbai) wares from the Tang (AD 618–960) and Song (AD 960–1279) dynasties. It also holds a collection of Bristol blue glass.

The Egyptology gallery contains mummies besides other items and a wall decoration made over 3,000 years ago – the Assyrian Reliefs, which were transferred from the Royal West of England Academy. It also has a significant collection of Egyptian antiquities, a considerable number derived from the excavations of the Egypt Exploration Society – such as the stela of Meni – and British School of Archaeology in Egypt. A completely rebuilt Egyptian gallery opened in 2007.

A natural history gallery contains examples of aquatic habitats in the south west of England and an interactive map of local wildlife sites and a freshwater aquarium containing fish typical of the region.[9]

The museum also holds many of the prehistoric and Roman artefacts recovered before the flooding of Chew Valley Lake,[10] and other local archaeological finds such as those from Pagans Hill Roman Temple[11] and the Orpheus Mosaic from Newton St Loe.

There is a choice of galleries situated upstairs full of artworks: Old Masters, French School, British Collection, Modern Art and the Bristol School.[12]

In 2012, the museum was given the entire 50,000 piece collection of the former British Empire and Commonwealth Museum.[13]

Friends organisations edit

The Friends of Bristol Art Gallery[14] has supported the gallery since 1947, acquiring over 300 works of art for the gallery. The Friends of Bristol Museum and Art Gallery[15] was founded in 1977 (first known as the “Bristol Magpies”) to support the principal sites of Bristol’s museums, galleries and archives service.

Future development edit

 
Bronze sculpture of Kathleen Garman by Jacob Epstein, titled Kathleen and made in 1935, while she was his mistress (they later married). The position of her hands and arms are closely modelled on those of Andrea del Verrocchio's marble bust Lady with Primroses.

On 1 July 2014 Arts Council England announced that Bristol Museums, Galleries & Archives secured its second '' funding for 2015-18 which will see the service receive approximately £4.7 million over three years to help deliver public outcomes.

Related museums and sites edit

Other museums and sites administered by Bristol Culture are M Shed, Blaise Castle House Museum, the Red Lodge Museum, the Georgian House Museum, Bristol Archives and Kings Weston Roman Villa. The Bristol Industrial Museum, which closed in 2006 reopened in June 2011 as a museum called M Shed dedicated to telling the story of Bristol.

See also edit

References and sources edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 June 2013. Retrieved 27 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b "City Museum and Art Gallery and attached front walls". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 10 March 2007.
  3. ^ "Freemasons' Hall and attached cast-iron railings". historicengland.org.uk. English Heritage. Retrieved 10 April 2008.
  4. ^ "Nos.8–18 (Even) Central Chambers". historicengland.org.uk. English Heritage. Retrieved 10 April 2008.
  5. ^ Mellor, Penny (2013). Inside Bristol: Twenty Years of Open Doors Day. Redcliffe Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-1908326423.
  6. ^ . Looking at Buildings. Archived from the original on 14 March 2007. Retrieved 15 March 2007.
  7. ^ "Brown's Restaurant and attached front area walls and railings". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 20 April 2007.
  8. ^ "Homecoming for Bristol's Banksy". 12 June 2009. from the original on 8 February 2015. Retrieved 8 February 2015.
  9. ^ "Bristol's City Museum & Art Gallery". 24 Hour Museum. from the original on 16 February 2009. Retrieved 10 April 2008.
  10. ^ Ross, Lesley (Ed.) (2004). Before the Lake: Memories of the Chew Valley, The Harptree Historic Society. ISBN 0-9548832-0-9
  11. ^ Boon, George C. (1989). "A Roman Sculpture Rehabilitated: The Pagans Hill Dog". Britannia. 20. Britannia, Vol. 20: 201–217. doi:10.2307/526163. JSTOR 526163. S2CID 191406701.
  12. ^ "Bristol Museum And Art Gallery". Culture 24. Retrieved 22 November 2017.
  13. ^ "Bristol museum could revert to rail platform". BBC. 28 March 2012. from the original on 31 March 2012. Retrieved 5 April 2012.
  14. ^ "Friends of Bristol Art Gallery". from the original on 5 December 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
  15. ^ "Friends of Bristol Museum and Art Gallery". from the original on 2 December 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2016.

Sources edit

  • Dodson, Aidan Mark; Sue Giles (August 2007). "Ancient Egypt in the City and County of Bristol, England". KMT. 18 (4): 20–32.
  • Walton, K.M. (1980). 75 years of Bristol Art Gallery: The gift of Sir William Henry Wills, Bart to his fellow citizens, 1905 : a short history. Bristol: City of Bristol Museum & Art Gallery. ISBN 978-0-900199-10-3.

External links edit

  • Bristol Museum & Art Gallery

51°27′22″N 2°36′19″W / 51.4561°N 2.6053°W / 51.4561; -2.6053

  • M Shed

bristol, museum, gallery, large, museum, gallery, bristol, england, museum, situated, clifton, about, miles, from, city, centre, part, bristol, culture, bristol, city, council, with, entrance, holds, designated, museum, status, granted, national, government, p. Bristol Museum amp Art Gallery is a large museum and art gallery in Bristol England The museum is situated in Clifton about 0 5 miles 0 8 km from the city centre As part of Bristol Culture it is run by the Bristol City Council with no entrance fee It holds designated museum status granted by the national government to protect outstanding museums The designated collections include geology Eastern art and Bristol s history including English delftware In January 2012 it became one of sixteen Arts Council England Major Partner Museums 1 Bristol Museum amp Art GalleryLocation within BristolEstablished1823LocationQueens Road Bristol BS8 1RL England United KingdomCoordinates51 27 22 N 2 36 19 W 51 4561 N 2 6053 W 51 4561 2 6053Visitors467 608 2015 16 Ranked 23rd nationallyDirectorJon FinchWebsiteBristol Museum amp Art Gallery The museum includes sections on natural history as well as local national and international archaeology The art gallery contains works from all periods including many by internationally famous artists as well a collection of modern paintings of Bristol In the summer of 2009 the museum hosted an exhibition by Banksy featuring more than 70 works of art including animatronics and installations it is his largest exhibition yet It was developed in secrecy and with no advance publicity but soon gained worldwide attention The building is of Edwardian Baroque architecture and has been designated by English Heritage as a grade II listed building 2 The standard opening hours are Tuesday to Sunday 10am 5pm The museum is also open 10am 5pm on Bank Holiday Mondays and Mondays during Bristol school holidays Contents 1 Events 2 History 3 Collection 4 Friends organisations 5 Future development 6 Related museums and sites 7 See also 8 References and sources 8 1 References 8 2 Sources 9 External linksEvents editBristol Museum amp Art Gallery run a programme of free and paid events throughout the year that include multi week exhibitions workshops and drop in gallery curator talks The biggest annual event is the weekend celebration for Chinese New Year during February which has dancing dragon and lion performances martial arts traditional Chinese dances storytelling family trails arts and craft activities Information on current and past events can be found on the museum s website History edit nbsp Bristol Museum entrance 1904 nbsp A Bristol Biplane replica hangs from the ceiling of the main hall of the Museum This aircraft was made in 1963 for the film Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines nbsp The museum s natural history galleries include a large selection of taxidermied animals nbsp Sarcophagi in the Egyptology collections nbsp Assyrian reliefs The Museum and Art Gallery s origins lie in the foundation in 1823 of the Bristol Institution for the Advancement of Science and Art sharing brand new premises at the bottom of Park Street a 100 yards 91 m downhill from the current site with the slightly older Bristol Literary and Philosophical Society The neoclassical building was designed by Sir Charles Robert Cockerell 1788 1863 who was later to complete the Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge and build St George s Hall Liverpool and was later used as the Freemasons Hall 3 In April 1871 the Bristol Institution merged with the Bristol Library Society and on 1 April 1872 a new combined museum and library building in Venetian Gothic style was opened at the top of Park Street 4 The lease on the former Bishop s College building next door which had been the Library Society s home since 1855 passed to the local army reserve unit whose drill hall lay behind it it became the Victoria later Salisbury Club and a restaurant The old Institution building was sold to the Freemasons Although the new building was extended in 1877 by the 1890s the Museum and Library Association was struggling financially and even unable to pay its curator Edward Wilson 1848 1898 Negotiations with the city corporation culminated in the transfer of the whole organisation and premises to Bristol city corporation on 31 May 1894 Wilson remained Curator until his death only this time he was actually paid However in June 1899 the site of the Salisbury Club was offered for sale to the city the tobacco baron Sir William Henry Wills 1830 1911 later Lord Winterstoke offering 10 000 to help buy the site and build a new City Art Gallery on it 5 Designed by Frederick Wills in an Edwardian Baroque style work on the new building started in 1901 and opened in February 1905 It was built in a rectangular open plan in 2 sections each consisting of a large hall with barrel vaulted glazed roofs separated by a double staircase 2 It incorporated a Museum of Antiquities as it had been decided during the planning stage that Assyrian Egyptian Greek and Roman antiquities should be grouped with art in the new structure rather than remaining with the natural history collections that remained in the old building Stone tools continued to reside with the geology collections within natural history Yet more space became available to museum displays when Bristol Central Library moved down the hill to College Green in 1906 6 The vacant rooms were reconstructed as invertebrate and biology galleries In 1913 the army reserve s drill hall which now lay between the rear of the Art Gallery and the rapidly expanding University of Bristol was purchased by the two institutions three fifths of the complex falling to the Museum and Art Gallery the rest to the University Unfortunately the outbreak of war in 1914 put paid to any plans for new building indeed the Upper Museum Room geology was cleared in 1916 to become a Soldiers Room to entertain convalescents and the Egyptian Room served for reading and writing and for the delivery of special demonstrations However after being used for storage for over a decade it proved possible to demolish the Drill Hall to permit a rearward extension of the Art Gallery This was funded by Sir George Alfred Wills 1854 1928 a cousin of Lord Winterstoke and completed in 1930 The 1872 77 Museum building was gutted by fire following a bomb hit on the night of 24 25 November 1940 during the Bristol Blitz some 17 000 of the natural history specimens being lost The 1930 extension of the Art Gallery was also hit but luckily escaped the conflagration although suffering badly from blast damage Nevertheless the Art Gallery partially reopened in February 1941 now also housing some of the Museum s surviving material on a temporary basis Although now housed in the same building from April 1945 the Museum and Art Gallery were formally split into separate institutions with the lower floor becoming the Museum and the upper floors the Art Gallery As part of this restructuring the archaeology and anthropology collections were transferred from the Art Gallery to the Museum In February 1947 the remains of the old Museum building with the exception of the undamaged lecture theatre were sold to Bristol University it was then rebuilt as its dining rooms later becoming Brown s Restaurant 7 The sale of the building in 1947 reflected the intention that new premises would soon be provided for the Museum and the Art Gallery planning began in 1951 but then dragged on for the next twenty years during which time the old buildings received minimal attention other than the insertion of mezzanines to gain additional space Meanwhile various proposals had been made for new museum buildings in Castle Park in the very centre of Bristol overlooking the river Avon However spiraling costs and funding difficulties meant that in 1971 the plans were abandoned and a smaller amount of money was put into upgrading the existing building Wholesale refurbishment was required including rewiring rearranging offices creating laboratories and dividing up and furnishing the basement to provide proper storage for the reserve collections In the summer of 2009 the museum hosted an exhibition by Banksy called Banksy versus Bristol Museum featuring more than 70 works of art including animatronics and installations it is his largest exhibition yet It was developed in secrecy and with no advance publicity 8 Collection edit nbsp Interior of Bristol Art Gallery The large picture Noah s Ark 4 m by 4 m was painted in c 1710 by the Dutch artist Jan Griffier Today the top floor art galleries include a collection of Chinese Glass and the Schiller collection of Eastern Art bequeathed by Max Schiler the Recorder of Bristol from 1935 to 1946 and collected by his older brother Ferdinand N Schiler It contains a range of Chinese ceramics wares spanning different dynastic periods Particularly fine pieces include a number of white light blue and green glazed Ying Qing and Qingbai wares from the Tang AD 618 960 and Song AD 960 1279 dynasties It also holds a collection of Bristol blue glass The Egyptology gallery contains mummies besides other items and a wall decoration made over 3 000 years ago the Assyrian Reliefs which were transferred from the Royal West of England Academy It also has a significant collection of Egyptian antiquities a considerable number derived from the excavations of the Egypt Exploration Society such as the stela of Meni and British School of Archaeology in Egypt A completely rebuilt Egyptian gallery opened in 2007 A natural history gallery contains examples of aquatic habitats in the south west of England and an interactive map of local wildlife sites and a freshwater aquarium containing fish typical of the region 9 The museum also holds many of the prehistoric and Roman artefacts recovered before the flooding of Chew Valley Lake 10 and other local archaeological finds such as those from Pagans Hill Roman Temple 11 and the Orpheus Mosaic from Newton St Loe There is a choice of galleries situated upstairs full of artworks Old Masters French School British Collection Modern Art and the Bristol School 12 In 2012 the museum was given the entire 50 000 piece collection of the former British Empire and Commonwealth Museum 13 Friends organisations editThe Friends of Bristol Art Gallery 14 has supported the gallery since 1947 acquiring over 300 works of art for the gallery The Friends of Bristol Museum and Art Gallery 15 was founded in 1977 first known as the Bristol Magpies to support the principal sites of Bristol s museums galleries and archives service Future development edit nbsp Bronze sculpture of Kathleen Garman by Jacob Epstein titled Kathleen and made in 1935 while she was his mistress they later married The position of her hands and arms are closely modelled on those of Andrea del Verrocchio s marble bust Lady with Primroses On 1 July 2014 Arts Council England announced that Bristol Museums Galleries amp Archives secured its second Major partner museum funding for 2015 18 which will see the service receive approximately 4 7 million over three years to help deliver public outcomes Related museums and sites editOther museums and sites administered by Bristol Culture are M Shed Blaise Castle House Museum the Red Lodge Museum the Georgian House Museum Bristol Archives and Kings Weston Roman Villa The Bristol Industrial Museum which closed in 2006 reopened in June 2011 as a museum called M Shed dedicated to telling the story of Bristol See also editRoyal West of England AcademyReferences and sources editReferences edit We announce Renaissance Major partner museums and details of Museum Development fund Arts Council Archived from the original on 9 June 2013 Retrieved 27 May 2013 a b City Museum and Art Gallery and attached front walls historicengland org uk Retrieved 10 March 2007 Freemasons Hall and attached cast iron railings historicengland org uk English Heritage Retrieved 10 April 2008 Nos 8 18 Even Central Chambers historicengland org uk English Heritage Retrieved 10 April 2008 Mellor Penny 2013 Inside Bristol Twenty Years of Open Doors Day Redcliffe Press pp 22 23 ISBN 978 1908326423 Central Library Looking at Buildings Archived from the original on 14 March 2007 Retrieved 15 March 2007 Brown s Restaurant and attached front area walls and railings historicengland org uk Retrieved 20 April 2007 Homecoming for Bristol s Banksy 12 June 2009 Archived from the original on 8 February 2015 Retrieved 8 February 2015 Bristol s City Museum amp Art Gallery 24 Hour Museum Archived from the original on 16 February 2009 Retrieved 10 April 2008 Ross Lesley Ed 2004 Before the Lake Memories of the Chew Valley The Harptree Historic Society ISBN 0 9548832 0 9 Boon George C 1989 A Roman Sculpture Rehabilitated The Pagans Hill Dog Britannia 20 Britannia Vol 20 201 217 doi 10 2307 526163 JSTOR 526163 S2CID 191406701 Bristol Museum And Art Gallery Culture 24 Retrieved 22 November 2017 Bristol museum could revert to rail platform BBC 28 March 2012 Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Retrieved 5 April 2012 Friends of Bristol Art Gallery Archived from the original on 5 December 2016 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Friends of Bristol Museum and Art Gallery Archived from the original on 2 December 2016 Retrieved 1 December 2016 Sources edit Dodson Aidan Mark Sue Giles August 2007 Ancient Egypt in the City and County of Bristol England KMT 18 4 20 32 Walton K M 1980 75 years of Bristol Art Gallery The gift of Sir William Henry Wills Bart to his fellow citizens 1905 a short history Bristol City of Bristol Museum amp Art Gallery ISBN 978 0 900199 10 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery Bristol Museum amp Art Gallery 51 27 22 N 2 36 19 W 51 4561 N 2 6053 W 51 4561 2 6053 M Shed Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bristol Museum 26 Art Gallery amp oldid 1209421000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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