Museum Of The Year Winner Unveiled

A London museum dedicated to inspiring the next generation won the largest museum prize worldwide.

The Horniman Museum and Gardens was crowned the Art Fund’s Museum Of The Year after it reimagined its role as the creative hub of the community during the pandemic – having had time to reflect on the climate emergency and Black Lives Matter protests.

Officials set up a microforest to reduce local air pollution. They also curated the 696 Festival, which incorporated the black British sounds from south London through concerts, installations, collaborations, and a music festival.

Horniman MuseumHorniman Museum and Gardens (Amaal Said/PA)

It is also London’s only museum to exhibit environmental, ecological and human culture side-by-side.

The director of Horniman, Nick Merriman, was presented with the £100,000 prize by BBC Radio 6 DJ and judge Huw Stephens during a ceremony on Thursday at the Design Museum in London.

It beat Derby Museums, Museum of Making, People’s History Museum in Manchester, The Story Museum in Oxford and art gallery Tŷ Pawb in Wrexham.

Each of the finalist museums have received a £15,000 prize in recognition of their achievements.

Jenny Waldman, art fund director and chair of the judges for Art Fund Museum of the Year, said: “The Horniman Museum and Gardens has now blossomed into a truly holistic museum bringing together art, nature and its myriad collections.

“Its values are woven through everything it now does, with a passionate team breathing life and meaning into every object, performance, plant and animal.

“In many ways it’s the perfect museum and I would encourage everyone to go and experience all it has to offer.”

Dame Diane Lees is the director-general for the Imperial War Museums. “The Horniman Museum and Gardens are championing the natural environment, commissioning artists and music festivals, to bring the eclectic collections of Frederick Horniman new relevance with diverse communities.

“They are setting the agenda for how a traditional museum can reinvent itself through powerful ideas.”

The prize went to Firstsite, Colchester, Essex, last year. It had transformed into a food bank, and provided free school meals during the pandemic.

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