The successful museums and galleries are part of the 13th round of funding from the DCMS/Wolfson Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund.

Jointly funded by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport and philanthropic charity, the Wolfson Foundation, the fund has so far given £48m to help 382 projects at 114 museum groups and galleries since it was started in 2001.

Our longstanding partnership with DCMS [is] an excellent example of how we as a charity can work together fruitfully with government

Paul Ramsbottom, Chief Executive of the Wolfson Foundation

Among the successful museums receiving funding was the Horniman Museum and Gardens where Minister for Arts, Heritage and Tourism, Michael Ellis and Paul Ramsbottom, Chief Executive of the Wolfson Foundation announced the news yesterday.

The Horniman will receive a grant of £90,000 to redevelop its Music Gallery to support the ‘Music in the Making’ project. Musicians from a range of genres including classical, grime and R&B will be commissioned to create and perform works inspired by the Horniman’s collection, transforming the way in which audiences interact with the museum.

“Our museums and galleries are among the best in the world and we are rightly proud of these institutions,” said Michael Ellis. “The DCMS/Wolfson Fund demonstrates how the government and philanthropic organisations can work together to boost our museum sector. We want people up and down the country to enjoy culture and heritage wherever they are. The 35 grants awarded today will make important contributions towards improving the visitor experience; ensuring our wonderful collections are open to as many people as possible.”

Geffrye Museum has been awarded £90,000 towards its major capital project Unlocking the Geffrye and specifically its Collections Study Room and Reading Lounge

The fund aims to provide capital funding to deliver projects in the following key areas:

Material improvements to the display and interpretation of collections, in both permanent galleries and exhibition spaces

Improvements to access and/or interpretation for visitors with disabilities

Physical improvements to public spaces to enhance visitor experience

Improvements to environmental controls, collections storage and conservation facilities to enhance the care of collections

“Our longstanding partnership with DCMS [is] an excellent example of how we as a charity can work together fruitfully with government, said Paul Ramsbottom, Chief Executive of the Wolfson Foundation. “One of the great treasures of this country is the sheer quality and range of our heritage collections – stored and displayed in wonderful museums and galleries. This funding will help to provide even better visitor experiences and greater awareness of these fascinating collections. A particular joy of this funding round has been the impressive mix of the projects supported: from a dress collection at Carlisle’s Tullie House to temporary exhibition space in Falmouth’s National Maritime Museum.”

Other successful museums include three museums in Manchester who are set to receive a joint total of more than £240,000 to support projects at the Manchester Museum, the People’s History Museum and Chetham’s Library. Manchester Museum will receive £190,000 for their project ‘hello future’, which will create inclusive and imaginative exhibitions on zoology, earth sciences and archaeology.

Tullie House in Carlisle has received a grant of £252,000 for their project ‘Dressed to Impress’. The Museum looks after an outstanding collection of fine art, natural science and archeology and this project will significantly improve access for visitors to an exhibition looking at changing fashion styles dating from 1720 onwards. The DCMS/Wolfson funding will allow the museum to conserve and display 40 outfits for the first time.

The Museum of East Anglian Life looks after 17 historic buildings and their successful project, Heritage Farm, will receive £250,000. The project is the first part of a 10-year plan to become the national museum of food and will help to address issues such as childhood obesity, conservation conscious farming and increase the number of visitors to Suffolk.

The Black Country Living Museum’s Forging Ahead project aims to save landmark community and commercial buildings from demolition and rebuild them at the open air museum. It has been awarded £90,000 towards its Cast-Iron Houses
Back to top

Successful projects by region:

East of England
Museum of East Anglian Life, Heritage Farm: enabling the masterplan – £250,000


West Midlands
Black Country Living Museum, BCLM: Forging Ahead, Cast-Iron Houses – £90,000
Potteries Museum, Stoke-On-Trent, ‘Operation Spitfire’ – £210,000


North West
Chetham’s Library, Manchester, Opening up Chetham’s Library – £25,500
Manchester Museum, Manchester Museum: hello future – £190,000
People’s History Museum, Manchester, Improving Storage at the People’s History Museum – £25,000
Tullie House, Carlisle, ‘Dressed to Impress’: Showcasing a collection of national significance; transforming a historic space – £252,500


South West
Dorset County Museum, Tomorrow’s Museum for Dorset: Collections Care and Access – £175,000
National Maritime Museum, Cornwall, Investment in infrastructure to develop major temporary exhibition programme – £96,500
Russell-Cotes, Bournemouth, Reinterpretation and Reconnecting Project – £115,500
Southampton City Art Gallery, Lighting Up – £98,000
SS Great Britain, Bristol, environmental monitoring improvements and Conservation in Action display – £50,000
Tank Museum, Wareham, Second World War Galleries Redisplay (Phase 1) – £120,000
The Wilson, Cheltenham, Observation, Imagination and Making; 100 years on – Ernest Gimson and the Arts and Crafts Movement – £100,000


Yorkshire and the Humber
Cannon Hall Museum, Cracking Ceramics! – £60,000
Hull Maritime Museum, Hull: Yorkshire’s Maritime City – £150,000
Weston Park, Sheffield, Stories from Ancient Egypt to Sheffield – £187,000


East Midlands
Derby Silk Mill, Museum of Making – Enhancing the temporary exhibition space – £90,000
National Holocaust Centre and Museum, Nottingham, Enhancing the Visitor Experience – £31,000
Nottingham Castle Museum and Art Gallery, The Story of Nottingham Lace: a new Lace Gallery – £200,000


North East
Stephenson Railway Museum, North Shields, Pioneers from the Dawn of Railways: Killingworth Billy & the Willington Waggonway – £94,500
Sunderland Museum, Sunderland Museum, Library and Winter Gardens Development (Phase 2 – Increasing Audiences) – £156,000
Oriental Museum Durham, Silk Road Gallery – £50,000


South East
Bucks County Museum, Touch of Bucks Gallery Redevelopment – £200,000
Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust, Essential Enhancements to the Victorian Ropery Gallery and Visitor Experience – £100,000
Luton Culture, Hat Works – The renovation and reanimation of the heritage of Luton’s Industrial past – £100,000
Pitt Rivers, Oxford, Engaging the senses: activating the museum’s Photograph and Sound Collections through digital audio-visual technology – £70,500


London
Courtauld Gallery, Courtauld Connects – £100,000
Geffrye Museum, Unlocking the Geffrye: Collections Study Room and Reading Lounge – £90,000
Horniman Museum and Gardens, Music in the Making – Gallery Improvements – £90,000
IWM London, Transforming IWM London: Phase 2 – £100,000
London Transport Museum, London’s Transport at War – bringing the story to life – £82,500
Petrie Museum, London, Petrie and Edwards: Gateway to the World of Egyptology – £110,000
Science Museum, London: Science City – £70,000
Tate Britain, Tate Britain New Displays 2020: Gallery Improvements – £70,500