Campus close-up: University of Hull

Campus gallery to act as a gateway in £28m refurbishment of Philip Larkin’s library

April 2, 2015

Source: University of Hull

Bernasconi: Hull’s ‘hidden gem’ is now in a space that does it justice

Since 1963, the University of Hull has been building up an important collection of British art. It was started from scratch by the late Malcolm Easton, senior lecturer in the history of art, with an endowment of £200 a year from the estate of local industrialist Thomas Robinson Ferens – the man who provided the funding for the city’s Ferens Art Gallery and helped establish Hull as a university college in 1927.

Given the financial constraints, says John Bernasconi, director of the University of Hull Art Collection, Easton chose to concentrate on British art between 1890 and 1940 “partly because it was out of fashion and cheap”. Although the period has since begun to attract more interest, it is “still possible to acquire ‘museum-quality’ work without needing to be an oligarch”. Hull can therefore keep expanding the collection through several purchases a year as well as gifts (its relatively narrow focus makes it an obvious place for people to donate suitable material), while long loans from the Arts Council Collection have helped plug some of the gaps.

Hull’s collection now contains about 500 paintings, drawings, watercolours, cartoons and sculpture, and is particularly strong on the Camden Town and Bloomsbury groups. Most of the big names, from Aubrey Beardsley to Augustus John, Ben Nicholson to Henry Moore, Walter Sickert to Stanley Spencer, are represented.

In its early years from 1963 to 1967, the collection was housed in the main university library, now the Brynmor Jones Library, where the poet Philip Larkin famously served as librarian from 1955 until his death in 1985. It was then moved into galleries in the basement at Middleton Hall, a sort of university arts centre, and, in the words of one critic, was “buried in two plain rooms in an undistinguished 60s building”.

Although public access was gradually increased from two hours a week in term-time to six hours every weekday, the collection remained largely neglected by students and the local community. So, if such collections can play a role in opening the campus up to the city and bringing students into direct contact with major works, it was largely failing to fulfil its potential.

Now, in the lead-up to Hull’s year as UK City of Culture in 2017, the university’s “hidden gem” of a collection has staged “a homecoming” to the library and is displayed in a purpose-built space that does it justice, claims Bernasconi. One of his main tasks during the relocation was to spend about a year updating and rewriting works’ labels, about 18,000 words in all.

The relocation represents the final stage of the £28 million refurbishment of the whole library, one of the most ambitious revamps in the country, which has opened piecemeal since 2013.

“The entire building has been redeveloped”, explains Richard Heseltine, the current librarian, “to transform the student experience. It was built in 1959 and extended in 1966-67, with both projects overseen by Larkin, so it is very much of its age, designed for students working quietly on their own around printed materials. We have aimed to create a variety of different styles of learning spaces.

“We want to make the library one of the main gateways to the university for the wider community as well as an academic hub for students. The new gallery demonstrates our commitment, creating a space which showcases our art collection in a more publicly accessible way. It’s seen as very much part of the library, but you don’t need to go through any security to get in.”

Now open from 10am to 5pm every day, with extended evening hours also planned, the gallery should form one of the city’s major cultural attractions, both during 2017 and in the lead-up period while the Ferens Art Gallery is closed for refurbishment in preparation for the City of Culture accolade. The library cafe’s opening hours have been extended and an additional space for temporary exhibitions has been created, too.

All this creates opportunities for 2017, when the university will be a key partner in providing venues, volunteers, cultural activities and research expertise. Heseltine predicts a number of “Larkin-related events” and opportunities for students to develop skills in curation and marketing, with a view to pursuing careers in galleries, auction houses or other parts of the culture industries.

Bernasconi is just pleased that the collection is now “very much at the heart of the university”.

matthew.reisz@tesglobal.com

In numbers

500 works of art, including cartoons and sculptures, are contained within the university’s collection

Campus news

University of Glasgow
More than £300,000 has been secured to help train the next generation of African scientists at a Scottish university. The University of Glasgow is part of the Programme for Enhancing the Health and Productivity of Livestock, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The money will help to train 16 PhD students in total for four years, two of whom will study at Glasgow. Scientists and students will work with farmers in East Africa to enhance local nutrition by improving the health and productivity of their livestock.

University of Leeds
A collection of letters, poems and prose by J. R. R. Tolkien has been acquired by the university where he taught at the beginning of his academic career in the 1920s. The collection focuses on Tolkien’s friendship with fellow University of Leeds academic Eric Gordon. The Gordon-Tolkien Collection includes some of the drinking songs that Tolkien wrote in Old Norse and Old English for Leeds’ Viking Club, which he co-founded with Professor Gordon.

Cardiff Metropolitan University
A university has marked its 150th anniversary with a celebratory cathedral service. Cardiff Metropolitan University students and staff past and present, accompanied by leading figures from the local community, attended the service at Llandaff Cathedral, conducted by Barry Morgan, Archbishop of Wales. The university, which can trace its roots back to the Cardiff School of Science and Art (established in 1865), has been home to about 170,000 students over the years.

Imperial College London
The James Dyson Foundation is to donate £12 million to a London university to establish a new school of engineering. The Dyson School of Design Engineering at Imperial College London will be housed in the old postal sorting office next to the Science Museum. The content of its degree course, a four-year MEng in design engineering, has been created with engineers from Dyson and aims to develop the next generation of technology leaders. The school is the first new engineering department at Imperial for two decades.

University of Edinburgh
A world record for solving a Rubik’s cube puzzle has been broken during a university event. Participants at the Rubik’s solving session, held at the University of Edinburgh’s School of Mathematics, had to solve a 4x4 version of the cube while wearing a blindfold. Oliver Frost, 21, a neuroscience student at the University of Westminster, shortened his previous record to 2 minutes, 10.47 seconds. It is the fourth time in a row that Frost has been named champion and world record holder in this pursuit.

University of Warwick
Getting a good education may not improve your life chances of happiness, according to mental health research from the University of Warwick. In a study published in The British Journal of Psychiatry, researchers from Warwick Medical School examined socio-economic factors related to high mental well-being, such as level of education and personal finances. The team found that all levels of educational attainment produced similar odds of well-being.

East Anglia
Higher education institutions across East Anglia have come together to try to boost the numbers from the region attending university. Only 18 per cent of young people from Norfolk progressed to higher education in 2013, compared with the national average of 36 per cent, according to government statistics. The Move On Up event, which ran on 24 and 25 March, involved the University of East Anglia, Norwich University of the Arts, Anglia Ruskin University, The College of West Anglia and University Campus Suffolk.

University of East London
Product placement in film is more influential than previously thought, a study says. A research paper by the University of East London and the Humboldt University of Berlin, published in the journal NeuroImage, shows that the brain captures information even when people cannot remember seeing it. “It may mean that [the] ban of product placements on television, which was lifted four years ago, may need a rethink,” said Volker Thoma, senior lecturer in psychology at UEL and leader of the research project.

Times Higher Education free 30-day trial

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Register
Please Login or Register to read this article.

Sponsored