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Art Fund to launch £5m project for UK museums to share their collections

2 days ago
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A £5m project in which 20 museums will share their collections and expertise with each other could revolutionise the touring model in the UK,Going Places has been developed by Art Fund, the charity that secures art for public collections while providing financial support for museums, and will involve local people when the nationwide project launches in May 2026,Billed as “the UK’s largest ever collaborative touring project”, several institutions will work together on themed exhibitions while pooling resources and sharing expertise,Museums that wanted to take part met up and underwent a “matchmaking” process where they identified themes that interested them before splitting into groups,Museums Worcestershire, OnFife and Penlee House Gallery and Museum in Penzance will collaborate on exhibitions focusing on the female artists in their collections.

Aberdeenshire Council, Armagh city, Banbridge and Craigavon borough council and the Open Eye Gallery in Liverpool take on the theme of “journeys”, encompassing “migration and exile to the milestones, traditions and celebrations”.Blackwell Arts & Crafts House, Dovecot Studios, Tŷ Pawb and William Morris Gallery in Walthamstow, east London, reconsider the arts and crafts movement as “a starting point to consider the politics, social values, and new possibilities emerging around contemporary forms of manufacturing”.Art Fund’s chief executive, Jenny Waldman, said the project was a way for museums to reduce costs at a time when many are facing funding squeezes.Waldman said: “Our museum directors surveys told us 63% of museums want to work with other museums on ambitious shows because they bring in new audiences but they are expensive.”“People can see the extraordinary collections we’ve got across the UK, museums can reach new audience and it is done in a sustainable way.

”Local communities will also have the chance to collaborate with curators and decide what will be included in exhibitions.Waldman said the scheme was similar to the highly praised initiative by the Manchester Museum when it involved the local south Asian community in giving input into its £15m galleries that opened in 2023.Waldman said: “The Manchester Museum showed that if the items and stories are interesting to the communities who are making the exhibition then it’s likely they will be interesting to other people too.”Sign up to The GuideGet our weekly pop culture email, free in your inbox every Fridayafter newsletter promotionGoing Places is funded by grants, with £2.86m from the National Lottery Heritage Fund and £1.

5m from the Julia Rausing Trust, the philanthropic organisation.Simon Fourmy, director of the Julia Rausing Trust, said the project represented an “innovative collaborative approach in the creation of touring exhibitions”, while the National Lottery Heritage Fund chief executive, Eilish McGuinness, said Going Places allowed museums to “share diverse and much-loved collections in a unique and dynamic way”.Last week the shortlist for the Art Fund museum of the year 2025 prize was revealed.It featured museums from all four nations of the UK, including Beamish in County Durham, Chapter in Cardiff, Compton Verney in Warwickshire, the Golden Thread Gallery in Belfast and Perth Museum, home to the Stone of Destiny, in Scotland.A prize of £120,000 goes to the winner and an additional £15,000 is awarded to each of the finalists.

Last year’s winner was the Young V&A in Bethnal Green, east London.
politicsSee all
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Disability benefit cuts impossible to support, 42 Labour MPs tell Starmer

More than 40 Labour MPs have warned the prime minister that planned disability cuts are “impossible to support” and have called for a pause and change in direction.The letter from parliamentarians spanning the new intake and veterans, and from the left and right of the party, sets Keir Starmer up for the biggest rebellion of his premiership when the House of Commons votes on the measures next month.There has already been widespread concern among Labour MPs about proposed changes including a significant tightening of eligibility for personal independent payments (Pips), saving about £5bn annually.They would also involve cuts or freezes to incapacity benefits for people who apply for universal credit but are judged unfit to work. According to internal Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) forecasts, the planned disability benefit cuts would affect 700,000 families who are already in poverty

about 19 hours ago
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New UK-US trade deal is a relief for Starmer but doubts, and tariffs, remain

Thursday’s trade agreement between the US and the UK fell far short of the superlatives heaped on it in Donald Trump’s excruciating televised phone call with Keir Starmer. But it is worth having, nevertheless.As Starmer made clear by appearing in front of an audience of Jaguar Land Rover workers in Solihull, reducing the 27.5% tariff on 100,000 car exports will come as a mighty relief for that industry.Steel and aluminium tariffs will also go completely, according to the UK side – though the fact sheet from the White House stopped short of saying that explicitly, instead saying a “new trading union” would be created in these two sectors

about 20 hours ago
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UK politics: Tariffs cut on UK cars, steel and aluminium in US trade deal, says Starmer – as it happened

Keir Starmer is at a Jaguar Land Rover factory. Summing up the deal, he says:This is a deal that will protect British businesses and save thousands of jobs In Britain, really important, skilled, well paid jobs. It will remove tariffs on British steel and aluminium, reducing them to zero. It will provide vital assurances for our life sciences sector, so important to our economy, and grant unprecedented market access for British farmers without compromising our high standards.And he says the deal means US tariffs on cars from the UK will be cut from 27

about 20 hours ago
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Cars, steel, beef and films: the key points of the US-UK trade deal

The UK and US have announced a new trade deal, or at least some elements of it, following a slightly chaotic transatlantic speaker phone call between Keir Starmer and Donald Trump.So what does it involve – and what was left out? Here is what we know and don’t know.With Starmer heading to the Jaguar Land Rover plant in the Midlands to herald the announcement, this was expected to be a major part of the deal, and it is.Tariffs for UK cars imported into the US will be cut from 27.5% to 10%, up to a maximum of 100,000 cars a year, close to total exports last year

about 20 hours ago
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Reform’s success shows how little Labour has offered voters | Letters

Polly Toynbee is right that there will be far worse to come for Labour if it carries on down its road of making the poorest yet poorer (The lesson for Labour? Until it can improve local lives and stop fearing Farage, more losses are coming, 6 May). She says: “They will be challenged by Reform UK in towns such as Barnsley.” Barnsley is the 38th most deprived local authority in England. Almost a quarter of its children live in poverty. Reform is a party with no poverty-alleviation policies and a “contract” with voters that states: “All job seekers and those fit to work must find employment within 4 months or accept a job after 2 offers

about 22 hours ago
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Tell us: how will Labour’s planned disability welfare cuts affect you?

The Labour government has proposed £4.8bn in cuts to disability welfare payments, with a House of Commons vote expected in June.The move would impact about 3 million households and plans, among other things, to tighten eligibility for personal independence payments (Pip) and change universal credit’s health element – such as halving it for new claimants, freezing it for existing recipients, and consulting on raising the minimum age to 22 from 18.We want to hear from you. How will your household be affected by Labour’s planned cuts to disability welfare payments? How would this impact your situation? What are your views on Labour’s proposals?You can tell us how Labour's proposed welfare cuts might affect you by filling in the form below

1 day ago
foodSee all
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How to turn cheese ends into a comforting root vegetable pie – recipe | Waste not

2 days ago
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Pasta and pesto, broth and dumplings, pancakes and chutney: Ravinder Bhogal’s pea recipes

2 days ago
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Zest is best: mandarins and navel oranges among Australia’s best-value fruit and veg for May

3 days ago
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Beyond boiling and steaming: alternative ways of cooking asparagus | Kitchen aide

3 days ago
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Georgina Hayden’s recipe for spring onion and spinach pakoras

3 days ago
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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for crispy chicken with zhoug and jersey royals | Quick and easy

4 days ago