MANCHESTER.- Following a manifesto commitment by the current government the Chancellor announced on 25 November that £5 million will support
Manchester Museum (part of The University of Manchester) to create a new South Asia gallery in partnership with the British Museum.
The gallery will form the centrepiece of the Museums new £11.5 million capital expansion which will include a much larger space for temporary exhibitions, a new entrance and expanded public facilities.
The South Asia gallery will draw on some of the best of the national collections from the British Museum to showcase the history and cultures of this pivotal region, in a way that will engage the city-regions diverse communities, day visitors and tourists. It will also be developed in close consultation with local communities.
It is particularly appropriate to site this gallery in Manchester, as nearly 9% of the Greater Manchester population is of South Asian origin. This large population has come about because of the strong historic links between Manchester and the Indian sub-continent through the textile trade. However, their culture and history has been under-represented, and bringing the British Museums collection to northern England provides an opportunity to address this.
The Director of Manchester Museum, Dr Nick Merriman, said I am delighted that the Chancellor has announced this funding. It means that, with a commitment from the University, we have already raised over 50% of the funding needed to deliver the facilities we need for the Manchester Museum to engage with larger and broader audiences. The South Asia gallery will be a great draw for local residents and tourists alike, and is the natural outcome of our partnership work with the British Museum, which has been developing for more than a decade.
Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum said 'We are delighted that the Chancellor has recognised the important role that museums and galleries play in the life of the UK and to Britains role in the world. The South Asia gallery at Manchester Museum is the latest in a series of partnership galleries which the British Museum has undertaken with key UK partners. The £5 million announced by the Chancellor is a significant investment which will benefit local and national and global audiences alike.
Museum of the Citizen
This autumn the British Museum has organised a programme of public discussions at partner museums throughout the country called the Museum of the Citizen. As part of this programme the British Museum and Manchester Museum are holding a discussion on Friday 4 December from 12.30-2.00 for a select invited audience of key political, business, academic and community stakeholders which will take its theme from Manchesters plans to create a large new permanent South Asia gallery in partnership with the British Museum. The event will explore the powerful potential for museum collections to build stronger connections within changing local communities, showing how key loans and partnerships with national museums can open new dialogues with the public.
The discussion panel members include Sir Richard Lambert, Chairman of the British Museum, Dr Nick Merriman, Director of Manchester Museum, and Professor Colin Bailey Deputy President, Deputy Vice-Chancellor of The University of Manchester and Talat Awan, Journalist and Presenter, BBC.