Life’s not a box of chocolates

Forrest Gump was so obviously wrong…life is nothing like a box of chocolates…life is, quite clearly, a series of opportunities to eat biscuits.  Biscuits tend to carry with them a penalty, such as attendance at a meeting or a promise (if I eat this biscuit I promise to do at least an hours work before I have another) and some turn out to be a little stale, or what you thought were chocolate chips are actually currants.  Then there’s the fact that they often come accompanied by a hot beverage, thus adding a whole layer of metaphorical complexity that boxes of chocolate simply do not have.  See? So much more like life…

by Gaby
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Museums Association First to Use New Hospitium

Hospitium Upstairs

Today is the first time our refurbished historic  Hospitium building has been used in anger.  Well probably not in anger - the first clients are the Museums Association who are holding a conference on collections information management.

by Michael
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Whistlejacket is in the house

Whistlejacket is in the house

We have a horse in the gallery. Stubb’s life-size painting of Whistlejacket arrived last Thursday and to general sighs of relief, fitted through the door (with only millimetres to spare.)

He was wrapped in pinky paper - like the Jumblies feet - and arrived in an enormous, articulated lorry. It transpires that the lorry itself is not quite big enough to accommodate him, so he travels in a sort of horse-box attached to the back!

by Gaby
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Rockingham Centrepiece

This is a porcelain three-tier table centrepiece by Rockingham and stands about 2 feet tall. It was made at Brameld & Co. between 1830-1868 and was decorated by Alfred Baguely in the same design as a dessert service made for William IV in 1830.

It is an incredibly complex decorative piece of 10 parts, combining modelling, matt and burnished gilding, painted scenes on the base (Hawes water from Thwaite force and Lowther Castle and Park) and tiny painted Civil War scenes on the bowl at the top. It is a beautiful though somewhat gaudy piece on its own, but imagine it covered in flowers, fruit and desserts on a Rococo period table….

From the Arthur Hurst Bequest to the Yorkshire Museum in 1940. Currently in store 

 Information by - Helen

YORYM:2000.4708

by Collections Snapshots
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York Art Gallery’s New Look

One of the main spaces at the gallery has been under wraps for the last few months.

Following a problem with falling plaster the South Gallery has been completely refurbished.  A suspended ceiling has been removed to reveal an attractive Victorian roof space.

This is a sneak preview: click here

by Michael
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