Press release: #MuseumWeek comes to University of Reading

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The University of Reading’s museums and collections will join museums and galleries from across the UK and Europe on Twitter later this month for the first ever #MuseumWeek, a project that will connect people to artwork, culture, history and science in new and interactive ways.

#MuseumWeek will take place from Monday 24th March – Sunday 30th March and will give Twitter users direct and unparalleled access to some of Europe’s leading museums and the people behind them in 140-characters bursts.

The  Museum of English Rural Life (@MERLReading), the Ure Museum of Greek Archaeology (@UreMuseum), the Cole Museum of Zoology (@ColeZoology) and the Herbarium (@RNGherb) will join other UK organisations already signed up, including the Science Museum (@sciencemuseum), the Natural History Museum (@NHM_London), the Victoria and Albert Museum (@V_and_A), the British Museum (@britishmuseum), Eureka! The National Children’s Museum (@eurekamuseum) and the Tate (@Tate).

The University’s museums and collections will join others across the UK and Europe by including the hashtag #MuseumWeek in their Tweets for the week, meaning users can follow along on Twitter. In addition, every day there will be a different theme including #MuseumSelfies, #AskTheCurator, and #MuseumMemories.

Alison Hilton, MERL Marketing Officer, says “This is an great opportunity for the University’s museums and collections to take part in an international campaign. We are planning some exciting features for the week. Alastair Culham, Curator of the Herbarium will be doing a live #AsktheCurator session from a fieldcourse in Spain, and staff at MERL will be taking followers into parts of the museum not usually seen by the public! We will also be encouraging followers to get involved by tweeting their photos, reviews and questions throughout the week.”

A full list of participating UK organisations can be viewed here

Mar Dixon (@MarDixon), an expert in social media and museums and host of the @CultureThemes project, said: “Every day of the year museums and cultural institutions across the world are using Twitter in exciting and interesting ways to tell the stories of their collections to new audiences.  “#MuseumWeek will shine a light on these activities, giving a real-time glimpse into the workings of museums across the UK and Europe, 140 characters at a time.”

 

Focus on Collections #5: The Miller’s Wagon

written by Katie Wise, 1st year Art History student and MERL volunteer.

Many people see the purpose of museums as educating through the display of historical objects. Whilst museums hold many other roles, one major part of any museum is research, as each object and exhibit has a rich history. It is beneficial for the museum, and also interesting and fun for the researcher to discover a bit more about this history. As a volunteer at the Museum of English Rural Life, I was lucky enough to be tasked with finding out as much information as I could about a miller’s wagon in the collection. I started volunteering at this museum as I am studying art history and want a career working in the museum sector, and one of the best ways to learn how museums work is through volunteering.

My prior knowledge of this wagon was that it intrigued most visitors due to the decorative star symbol that looks very similar to a Star of David but it terms of finding out more information, I didn’t really know where to start. But, in the words of Albert Einstein, “If we knew what we were doing, it wouldn’t be research.”

MERL's Miller's Wagon (51/1295)

MERL’s Miller’s Wagon (51/1295)

I started by looking at the information already collected about the wagon. By looking through the Museum’s description of the wagon on their database, I already had lots of factual information and a detailed description of its appearance and condition. The wagon is definitely one of the more impressive objects in the museum, as it towers above the visitors with its four huge wheels and space enough for two large horses, which it required for the heaviness of its load. The canvas cover is painted with the words ‘B. Cole and Son, the Hyde Steam Roller Mills’ which tells us the name of the miller and the mill it was used at. The blacked out word ‘Luton’ on the side not only shows it was part of the anti-invasion tactics during the First World War, but also shows us where it was made and used. Through looking at the acquisition documents, I had the name of the donor which I could then work backwards from to find out more details about his father, who had owned this wagon.

By using ancestry.com, I was able to discover more information about the miller and his family who owned this wagon. Starting with the miller’s name, Benjamin Cole, and the rough dates of when the wagon was used, I found census records which gave the names, ages, occupation and location of the Benjamin Cole between the ages of 7 and 67. Using these records I could build up a rough timeline of his life and have a more accurate idea of when he moved to different mills. As the wagon had been used at a place called Codicote Mill and then later at Hyde Mill, I could narrow the dates of its acquisition by the family to between 1861 and 1901.

The interior of Hyde Mill, Harpdenden, where the wagon was originally used.

The interior of Hyde Mill, Harpdenden, where the wagon was originally used.

Researching isn’t always as easy as scouring the internet though. Through links with other archives, such as the Mills Archive in Reading, I was informed about a report that had already been written about the Hyde Mill and its owner but getting in contact and receiving this report proved fairly difficult. As I couldn’t find out any information about the company that made the wagon, I hit a dead end. It’s easier to find dates, facts and records about people than why an object was decorated in a certain way or lists of every wagon a company made. But you never finish researching.

Recently, a visitor has shed some light on the ‘Star of David’ symbol on the wagon. They suggested it might be the six pointed Brewers star, known as ‘Bierstern’ or ‘Brauerstern’. As the Cole family didn’t seem to have any Jewish connections, this symbol is more likely to be relating to the carriage of brewing grain sacks. Whilst we still have to research this claim before we can say for definite, this is a step in the right direction.

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My experiences in researching an object have highlighted how important it is for museums to know as much information as they can about their objects. It has also shown me that it’s not always easy to get the information you’re looking for but that with a little research, you can discover a hidden interest.

Weekly What’s On: 10th – 16th March

You can find full details of all our forthcoming events and activities in our What’s On and MERL Families guides, which are now available from the Museum or to download from our website You can also see all events on our online calendar

 

Dark monarchMERL Seminar series: Untouchable England
The Dark Monarch: magic and modernity in British art
Professor Alun Rowlands, Department of Art, University of Reading
Tuesday 11th March, 1pm
In 2010, Tate St Ives mounted an exhibition exploring the influence of folklore, mysticism, mythology and the occult on British art. Professor Rowlands revisits a preformance commissioned from folk dancers and mummers and discusses how art has been used as a vehicle to explore legend and landscape.

For full details of the series, visit our website

 

Spectacular 2008 117Guided tour
Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays, 3-3.45pm
Free, booking advisable
Let our fully trained tour guides tell you the stories behind the objects on display and visit the object store to see MERL’s hidden treasures.

 

 

magic carpetToddler time
Friday 14th March, 10-11am,
£2 per child, drop-in
Suitable for families with children aged 2-4
Come along to the Museum with your little ones and enjoy rhymes, songs and craft activities. 

 

 

Ricordate-croppedItaly at war: a selection from the archives
Tuesday 11th February to 30th March
Staircase hall, MERL
Free, drop-in, normal museum opening times
Highlights from the University’s fascinating records relating to Italian history. 

 

 

greenhamCollecting the countryside: 20th century rural cultures
Until Autumn 2014
Temporary exhibition space
Free, drop in, normal museum opening times
Since 2008 the Museum of English Rural Life has been adding even more objects to its collection, with support from the Heritage Lottery Fund’s Collecting Cultures programme, in order to represent each decade of the last century. (Find out more in Curator, Isabel Hughes’ recent post) This exhibition gives a taste of what has been acquired and challenges visitors to suggest the modern-day objects that the Museum needs to collect for the future. The exhibition will help the Museum to explore how to incorporate more recent histories and representations of the English countryside into its displays as part of the new Our Country Lives project.

 

Volunteers’ Voice #10: Performing Protest: Riots against technological change in the 19th Century

written by Rob Davies, Volunteer Co-ordinator

On Saturday 22nd of this month a team of my volunteers are delivering Performing Protest: riots against technological change in the 19th Century. It is a performance-based event about the Swing Riots in Berkshire, which occurred in 1830-31. The event is part of Reading Science Week, in turn part of National Science and Engineering Week (NSEW), a ten-day national programme of science, technology, engineering and maths events and activities across the UK, aimed at people of all ages from March 14th to 23rd.

The Swing Riots was a national crisis which engulfed the English countryside and resulted in the imprisonment, transportation and in some cases the execution of those involved. The introduction and rise of the threshing machine took vital winter work away from farm labourers, without which many families faced starvation. This sparked riots, and attacks were led against the threshing machines.  In this event, we will explore the causes, events and aftermath of the Swing Riots both locally and nationally.

Volunteers at MERL have been practising hard for the event

Volunteers at MERL have been practising hard for the event

The event has been put together by my family tour guide team who were responsible for our Victorian Christmas event. After the success of the Christmas event and the family tours, we sat down and considered “what shall we do next?” A member of the team, Keith, has a strong interest in working class history and suggested we look into the Swing Riots. “Many have heard of ‘The Tolpuddle Martys’, the Six Men of Dorset transported to Australia for forming a trades union in 1834. Four years earlier hundreds of agricultural labourers were gaoled, many transported and some executed after what has become known as The Swing Riots.”

As a team we sat down and planned the event, thinking about our audience, our aims and the methods to achieve them, it was clear from the beginning that this event was going to be very different from our previous work, so we decided upon these key themes to base our performance upon:

  • To educate our audience about the causes, effects and aftermath of the Swing Riots
  • To use the local story of the Swing Riots in Berkshire as a vehicle to tell the national story
  • Use the museum as a stage for the performance
  • Appeal to new audiences
The Family Tour Guide Team, who previously brought you such hits as 'the MERL tour', and the 'Victorian Christmas tour'

The Family Tour Guide Team, who previously brought you such hits as ‘the MERL tour’, and the ‘Victorian Christmas tour’

With these in mind we have developed a script keeping as close to historical accuracy as possible.  A team of volunteers visited the Berkshire Record Office for research and volunteers have been using the local library and the MERL library.  Several of the team have read the book From Berkshire to Botany Bay by Norman Fox.  What we have been unable to put into the script we will put on the presentation boards that will be on display during the event, along with a leaflet to complement the performance.

In case you missed it, a promotional trailer and poster have been produced by the volunteers with my assistance and the support of MERL’s Marketing Officer.  Protest_poster_small

Rehearsals are now in full swing (excuse the pun)! We’re meeting twice a week and I am really pleased with how much progress we have made. The entire team have really immersed themselves in this very exciting and often overlooked period of our history, and I think we have all developed strong opinions on the matter (with historical arguments to support them!).

Working with volunteers to devise and create an event of this type on a big scale has been both rewarding and at times stressful. I’ve had to harness their enthusiasm and push it in the right direction.  I quickly realised that I needed a clear plan and structure in my mind in order channel their  knowledge and creativity. Of course, there have been days where I’ve had to re-think the structure and sometimes throw it out of the window!

The value of working with volunteers is huge, as their ideas and enthusiasm underpins the event, creating a real buzz and enjoyment to it. They have taken on the roles of researchers, script writers, costume-makers and actors. I really appreciate the time and effort they have put in to every aspect. When the opportunity arose to enter the event into the NSEW competition I leapt at it and hope that we might be lucky enough to win something for this Science Week event with a difference. It would be an amazing reward for their dedication! In the meantime, we hope that visitors will buy tickets and enjoy the event.

For further details and tickets, visit Performing Protest on the MERL website. Book now to avoid disappointment and join us for an entertaining and thought-provoking event.

Read more about the event in our recent press release

Our Country Lives project submitted!

written by Adam Koszary, Project Officer for Our Country Lives.

5MERL’s HLF project Our Country Lives reached an important milestone last Monday when we submitted our bid for second stage funding to the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF).  We will find out whether we have been successful in June.

Our consultants for the design of the new galleries, GuM, provided us with some fantastic visuals to accompany the bid which you can see below. However, most of our plans are still tightly under wraps until we finalise everything and, if we do get the go-ahead, start building in Autumn later this year, with our re-opening then due in late Summer 2015. Our Library and the University Special Collections will be open as usual.  Our events programme will continue until we close, and are currently thinking about possible activities and outreach to take place during our closure period.

A mock-up of how our wagons may be displayed

A mock-up of how our wagons may be displayed

We are looking forward to sharing far more about this project in the coming months, as we have exciting plans for new projects, activities and community events which will accompany our re-display. The designs and thinking behind our new galleries is also looking spectacular, so you should definitely keep an eye on this space for sneak-peeks and previews of what you can expect in the new MERL.

You should also keep an eye out for opportunities for how you can get involved – our local community and wider audiences are at the heart of our re-display and there will be many chances to influence how we explore English rural life.

If you would like more information on the project please contact Adam at a.j.koszary@reading.ac.uk

 

Press release: Arts Council funding brings Reading museums closer to the community

Reading Museum outreachArts Council funding brings Reading museums closer to the community

5th March, 2014

The Museum of English Rural Life (MERL) and Reading Museum have been awarded £129,150 to collaborate on ‘Reading Engaged’, a new joint project aimed at strengthening engagement with local communities.

MERL, which is owned and managed by the University of Reading, has received the award as part the latest round of Arts Council England’s Strategic support fund, announced today.  57 organisations will receive a total of £5,715,338 through the Renaissance Strategic support fund, which aims to support excellence, and the potential for excellence, in a wide range of museums across England.

Over the past year the two museums have worked together to reinforce to the local community the contribution Reading and its citizens made during the First World War. This award strengthens that partnership and sees the museums develop closer ties with community groups through displays, partnerships and events.

New display cases in Reading Museum’s ‘Reading: People and Place’ gallery will allow both museums to experiment with innovative community-generated or volunteer-developed exhibitions. MERL will use these displays to test ideas and new approaches to content creation and engagement for ‘Our Country Lives’ – MERL’s redisplay project.

MERL community eventThe funding will also support audience research that will help both museums develop new programmes that reflect the communities they serve.   Other joint activities will include working together on new merchandise for their Museum shops and on staff and volunteer training.

Kate Arnold-Forster, Director of MERL, said: “The Museum of English Rural Life is delighted to have been given this opportunity to strengthen our strategic partnership with Reading Museum. We are confident that this project will mean that people living in Reading will be able to experience more and better opportunities to enjoy what our museums have to offer. We also want to share what we learn through this project with other museums to help show them the benefits of partnership working.”

Cllr Paul Gittings, Lead Member for Culture and Sport at Reading Borough Council, said “It is fantastic that the University and Council’s museums are working so closely together for the benefit of all Reading’s communities. This further funding success builds upon the foundations of their joint work over the last 12 months and will provide more exciting opportunities for local people to engage with the significant museum collections we have here in Reading”.

ENDS

For further information, images and interviews, please contact:

Alison Hilton, Marketing Officer at Museum of English Rural Life on 0118 378 8660.

Notes for editors:

The Arts Council announcement and further details can be found on their website

 

Weekly What’s On: 3rd to 9th March, 2014

You can find full details of all our forthcoming events and activities in our What’s On and MERL Families guides, which are now available from the Museum or to download from our website You can also see all events on our online calendar

 

Museum of british folkloreMERL Seminar series: Untouchable England
The Museum of British Folklore: a new cultural venture
Simon Costin (1-2pm) and Obby Robinson (2-2.45pm)
Tuesday 4th March, 1pm
Simon Costin shares progress of the Museum of British Folklore project which aims to provide a physical home for a heritage which is both tangible and intangible, including British custom, superstition, and tradition.

Followed by a reading in the Museum gallery by Obby Robinson of poems from his recent collection, The Witch-house of Canewdon and Other Poems, inspired by English Folklore.

For full details of the series, visit our website

 

Spectacular 2008 117Guided tour
Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays, 3-3.45pm
Free, booking advisable
Let our fully trained tour guides tell you the stories behind the objects on display and visit the object store to see MERL’s hidden treasures.

 

 

 

magic carpetToddler time
Friday 7th March, 10-11am,
£2 per child, drop-in
Suitable for families with children aged 2-4
Come along to the Museum with your little ones and enjoy rhymes, songs and craft activities.  This week we are making binoculars!!

 

 

 

Ricordate-croppedItaly at war: a selection from the archives
Tuesday 11th February to 30th March
Staircase hall, MERL
Free, drop-in, normal museum opening times
Highlights from the University’s fascinating records relating to Italian history. 

 

 

 

greenhamCollecting the countryside: 20th century rural cultures
Until Autumn 2014
Temporary exhibition space
Free, drop in, normal museum opening times
Since 2008 the Museum of English Rural Life has been adding even more objects to its collection, with support from the Heritage Lottery Fund’s Collecting Cultures programme, in order to represent each decade of the last century. (Find out more in Curator, Isabel Hughes’ recent post) This exhibition gives a taste of what has been acquired and challenges visitors to suggest the modern-day objects that the Museum needs to collect for the future. The exhibition will help the Museum to explore how to incorporate more recent histories and representations of the English countryside into its displays as part of the new Our Country Lives project.

 

Find more events at the University of Reading, including an International Women’s Day lecture on ‘The female role model in 2014’ taking place on Thursday March 6th.