Yorkshire Museum re-Launch!

Here are some exclusive photos of yesterday’s press viewing of the all new museum.

With 30 minutes to go it was the classic case of everyone running around tidying, brushing, polishing and hiding the power drills. Even the glass was still being put in some of the cases.

(you are free to reproduce these images)

But I think it went amazingly well. Janet, our CEO, and Andrew who has led the project made the introductions standing on the beautiful new floor map of the Roman Empire.

The ladies and gentlemen of the press were then set free to wander around and enjoy the smashing new museum. Some of their stories are here:

BBC

Yorkshire Post

York Press

The Guardian

Michael Binyon of The Times also gave the museum 4 stars – you can read his review if you subscribe to their site.

by Michael Woodward
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Waiting patiently for opening day…

The galleries are filling up at the Yorkshire Museum as we approach opening day on Sunday.

Here’s our moa skeleton, still partially wrapped up, in place in the Extinct gallery.

moa-larger

Along the wall of the same room a puffin, a red squirrel and a grey squirrel share a wall with a collection of brown and black rats!

squirrels-larger

Meanwhile, in the Medieval York gallery, our four statues from St Mary’s Abbey stand waiting patiently for opening day…

abbey-statues-larger

by Janet
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The animals came in one by one…

The Yorkshire Museum’s new Extinct gallery is now being populated with fossilised, skeletal and stuffed birds and animals – ready for our reopening on 1 August!

Pip Strang, assistant curator of biology, is pictured, top left, with one of our Great Auks, and, right, with our selection of Dodo bones which have been mounted with a manmade skull. These feature in a section on relatively modern extinction stories.

Below is an image of a huge whale skull which is suspended from the ceiling and at the other end of the room a lion skeleton sits high up on a ledge, as if leaping out over visitors’ heads. Both these animals are featured to highlight conservation efforts to save them from decline.

Over in the Roman York gallery, staff and volunteers have been busy installing objects into an area devoted to activity before the Romans arrived in York, in the Neolithic period, Bronze Age and Iron Age. Jackie Logan is pictured, bottom left, filling a case with Neolithic flints.

One of the display cases will be open so that visitors can pick up pieces of sharpened flint tools and Natalie McCaul, assistant curator of archaeology, is pictured with one of these larger flints, bottom right.

Natalie, incidentally, is also the photographer behind the atmospheric images of the northern English landscape used as the backdrop for this section – which you’ll be able to see in full when we reopen on 1 August!

by Janet
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And there’s more… in the new Roman York gallery

The new Roman York gallery at the Yorkshire Museum is coming to life as more and more artefacts and displays are installed in time for our reopening on 1 August.

Here are some pictures of what visitors will be able to do while they walk round. First is the chance to mint coins inspired by a coin featuring Severus, the African emperor who lived in Eboracum (York) for three years. The second picture shows our map of York – visitors will be able to lift flaps around the city to find out what archaeologists have found where.

And finally here’s just a portion of what is sure to be one of the most popular parts of the Roman gallery – the chance to walk on a real Roman mosaic.

floor-wide-smaller

by Janet
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Roman relics return…

Roman gravestones and sculptures are being brought back into the Yorkshire Museum this week to take pride of place in our new Roman York gallery. Panels of text and colourful photos of Roman mosaics and statues are also appearing around the walls and the whole place is looking like a new museum already!

Earlier this week Mars, God of War, was put into position in the Central Hall, see pic below. Stonework was being put in place around the walls, including a piece of a statue of Neptune, the God of the Sea, riding on his chariot. Andrew Morrison, head curator, is pictured putting it into place, in front of an image of a Roman mosaic showing the same scene.

Pictured centre right is the gravestone to Lucius Duccius Rufinus, a French standard bearer of the Ninth Legion, in the next section of the Roman York gallery,as our exhibition fitters discuss the best position for him.

Another gravestone was being brought in at the same time by Geoff Hutchinson and Dave Evans who are pictured pausing a while to look at the lettering, which tells of the sadness felt by the father of Corellia Optata, who died at the age of 12. The final picture shows some of the next section of the Roman York gallery.

by Janet
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