Derwent Valley Mills - World Heritage Site

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Enlightenment!

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Please also visit the Enlightenment blog

BACKGROUND

Enlightenment! Derbyshire Setting the Pace in the 18th Century

Stakeholders, partners and interested individuals involved with the Enlightenment! project at Arkwright’s Mill, Cromford as part of a familiarisation bus trip along the Derwent Valley, December 2008.'Enlightenment! Derbyshire Setting the Pace in the 18th Century', is a partnership between Buxton Museum & Art Gallery, Derby Museums & Art Gallery and Strutt's North Mill, Belper.

With a grant from the Heritage Lottery fund collecting cultures programme of £200,000 and other funding, these three Accredited Derbyshire museums will be able to add artefacts to their collections to help record and understand the Enlightenment in Derbyshire. We are looking for topographical art, early geological and natural science publications, watches and scientific instruments, miners' and map makers' equipment, items that record the changes to peoples lives in the Derwent Valley, even boxes of threads and items uniquely associated to individual mills.

We will recruit new volunteers, giving people the chance to share and learn about this time in our county's history.

There will be workshops, activities and summer walks around historic factories.

People involved with the Enlightenment! project in the Joseph Wright Gallery, Derby Museums and Art Gallery as part of the familiarisation bus trip along the Derwent Valley, December 2008.There will be three major exhibitions, one in each of the partner sites, showcasing existing Enlightenment collections and new acquisitions, and other smaller exhibitions at the museums and in libraries and other venues.

'Enlightenment! Derbyshire Setting the Pace in the 18th Century' is supported by Renaissance East Midlands and the Derwent Valley Mills World Heritage Site Collections Group. Anna Rhodes has been appointed as the Enlightenment! officer coordinating the project. She can be contacted via e-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Collecting Cultures is a one-off museums and galleries collections' development programme from the Heritage Lottery Fund devised as a direct result of consultation with the sector. Twenty-two museums and galleries across the UK received funding as part of this £3 million collection development initiative which is designed to help support acquisitions, curatorial skills, research and increase public involvement.

ACQUISITION NEWS

  • View of High Tor, 1860A group of nine watercolours by an unidentified artist of Matlock and the surrounding area all dated Nov–Dec 1860. As well as the usual tourist views of High Tor and waterfalls in Lumsdale, there is a view of Smedley’s Hydropathic Hotel at Matlock, now the headquarters for Derbyshire county Council. This is one of the earliest dated views showing the newly built railway viaduct. Smedley’s Hydropathic Hotel, Matlock, 1860 These are probably drawn by a tourist staying in Matlock seeking out interesting views for their own sketchbook, recording mill buildings, cottages, the view from the bedroom window – what nowadays we as tourists would record in photographs.

    Purchased for £900, with support from Derbyshire County Council

    This group can be seen at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery


  • 'On the Derwent, Derbyshire', a watercolour painting by Joseph Clayton Bentley, dated 1842.
    Joseph Clayton Bentley was born 1809 in Bradford. He travelled to London in 1832 where he worked as an engraver, including for Constable whose work he admired. His own paintings were exhibited at the both the Royal Academy and the British Society of Artists. Known to have travelled across the country, this is the first work with a Derbyshire provenance.

    The painting shows the view from Matlock looking south down the River Derwent towards the Boat House public house, behind which lime is being burnt. While the landscape seems to be accurately drawn, there is some concern about the buildings and it is not clear whether in fact these were painted subsequently in the studio.

    There have been significant changes to the landscape since, with the river banks being reinforced, the road realigned and a railway viaduct spanning the valley. Purchased for hammer price of £1600 with support from Derbyshire County Council
    This picture can be seen at Buxton Museum and Art Gallery

  • Two pewter alms plates from King Street Methodist Chapel, Derby (1820). They may have been the former New Jerusalem Chapel established 1814, although a second congregation was gathered by James Robinson who apparently 'erected' it at his own expense and which opened on 18th June 1820. Robinson was ordained that August.

    These plates will be on display at Derby Museums and Art Gallery

  • Over 7000 antique Chelsea and Derby figure parts and moulds from the Spode Museum Trust. The antique figure parts are made from clay, wax, plaster or porcelain. Some are casts from moulds and others have signs of working to them which suggest that they are either part of an original sculpture, or that they have been fettled up with a modelling tool to increase definition. The clay and porcelain parts have all been fired. These parts highlight the importance and influence of the 18th on Derby Porcelain. The collection is of national and regional significance and would be lost as the Spode Museum has gone into receivership. The collection is to be conserved, catalogued and displayed to the general public at Derby Museum and Art Gallery and other venues.
  • Some of the treasures purchased as part of ‘Enlightenment!’ have been on display in Derby Museum and Art Gallery for the first time. The exhibition, which runs until the end of 2010, included pieces of Derby porcelain, alms plates from Derby Methodist Chapel and 18th Century engravings.

The project, which runs until spring 2013, will develop a better understanding of the Enlightenment period in Derbyshire and will help to put the Derwent Valley Mills World Heritage Site into context.

Items still on the shopping list include watches and scientific instruments, miners’ and map makers’ equipment, items that record the changes to peoples lives in the Derwent Valley, early geological and natural science publications, items uniquely associated with individual mills and even small items like boxes of thread.

EVENTS AND ACTIVITIES

Faces in the Crowd: Joseph Wright and Friends in Georgian Derbyshire

Saturday 5 March to Monday 30 May, Buxton Museum and Art Gallery

For the very first time, some of the iconic pictures in Derby Museum and Art Gallery’s collection are travelling to the county museum in Buxton. They will join some of the great and the good faces in Buxton Museum’s collections to explore life in Georgian Derbyshire.

The Strutts and Innovation Exhibition

20 April – 2 May, Strutt Centre, Belper

An exhibition highlighting the importance of the Strutt family’s contribution to the development of Belper and Milford and their integral links with the Enlightenment period in Derbyshire.

Pictures in the Landscape

22 April – 2 May, Dovedale

For 10 days Dovedale will be turned into an open-air picture gallery.  Put on your walking boots and see 20 replicas of historic views in the Valley placed in the landscape that inspired them. The exhibition will feature some of our ‘never seen before’ new acquisitions that have been purchased as part of the Enlightenment! project. 

There are lots of fun (and mostly free!) events to accompany these exhibitions.  The events include guided walks, family fun days, talks, and poetry workshops.  Visit the events page on the Enlightenment blog (http://enlightenmentderbyshire.wordpress.com/enlightenment-events/) to find out more.  

VOLUNTEERING AND FURTHER INFORMATION

If you would like to find out how you could become a volunteer for the Enlightenment! project or for further information please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , Derbyshire Museums Manager.