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Horniman Museum

Museum in Forest Hill, London, England

Horniman Museum

Summary

Museum in Forest Hill, London, England

FieldValue
nameHorniman Museum and Gardens
imageFile:Horniman Museum tower, 2015.jpg
map_typeUnited Kingdom London Lewisham
established
visitors952,954 (2019)
location100 London Road, Forest Hill
London, 3PQ
United Kingdom
publictransit
websitehorniman.ac.uk
embedyes
designation1_offnameHorniman Museum
designation1Grade II*
designation1_date12 March 1973
designation1_number

London, 3PQ United Kingdom The Horniman Museum and Gardens is a museum in Forest Hill, London, England. Commissioned in 1898, it opened in 1901 and was designed by Charles Harrison Townsend in the Modern Style. It has displays of anthropology, natural history and musical instruments, and is known for its large collection of taxidermied animals. The building is Grade II* listed.

It is a non-departmental public body of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and is constituted as a company and registered charity under English law. In 2022 the museum won Museum of the Year, an award made by the Art Fund.

History

The museum was founded in 1901 by Frederick John Horniman. Frederick had inherited his father's Horniman's Tea business, which by 1891 had become the world's biggest tea trading business.

The proceeds from the business allowed Horniman to indulge his lifelong passion for collecting, and which after travelling extensively had some 30,000 items in his various collections, covering natural history, cultural artefacts and musical instruments.

In 1911, an additional building to the west of the main building, originally containing a lecture hall and library, was donated by Frederick Horniman's son Emslie Horniman. This was also designed by Townsend. A new extension, opened in 2002, was designed by Allies and Morrison.

In 2007, the museum held the Walking with Beasts Exhibition. The exhibition featured life-sized models of extinct animals featured in the BBC series of the same name, such as Smilodon and the Woolly Mammoth.

The museum won the Art Fund's Museum of the Year award in 2022. In November 2022, the museum returned a collection of 72 items that were stolen from the Kingdom of Benin, including Benin Bronzes, to Nigeria's National Commission for Museums and Monuments.

Collections

The Horniman specialises in anthropology, natural history and musical instruments and has a collection of 350,000 objects. The ethnography and music collections have Designated status. One of its most famous exhibits is the large collection of stuffed animals. It also has an aquarium noted for its .

Floor directory

1st FloorGround FloorLower Ground FloorBasement Floor
[[File:Cmbox content.png15px]] Access by stairs and lift
Under 5s Book Zone
Natural History Balcony
Horniman Highlight Objects
3 Apostle Clock, GermanyMain Entrance
CUE Building
Conservatory
Café
Shop
Education Centre
Hands On Base
Natural History Gallery
Balcony Gallery
Environment Room
Horniman Highlight Objects
1 Sand Painting, America
2 Walrus, CanadaWorld GalleryAquarium

Transport connections

ServiceStation/StopLines/Routes servedDistance from
Horniman Museum
London BusesHorniman Museum176, 185, 197, 356, P4
Horniman Park363260 m walk
London OvergroundWindrush line650 m walk
National RailSouthern

Gardens

The bandstand overlooking the London skyline

The museum is set in 16 acre of gardens, which include the following features:

  • A Grade II listed conservatory from 1894 which was moved from Hornimans' family house in Croydon to the present site in the 1980s.
  • A bandstand from 1912
  • An enclosure for small animals
  • A Butterfly House
  • A nature trail
  • An ornamental garden
  • Plants for materials, medicines, and foods and dyes
  • A sound garden with large musical instruments for playing
  • A new building, the Pavilion, for working on materials that are outside of the collections, such as from the gardens. The gardens are also Grade II listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England.

Mosaic

''Humanity in the House of Circumstance''

On the London Road wall of the main building is a neoclassical mosaic mural entitled Humanity in the House of Circumstance, designed by Robert Anning Bell and assembled by a group of young women over the course of 210 days. Composed of more than 117,000 individual tesserae, it measures 10 × and symbolises personal aspirations and limitations.

The three figures on the far left represent Art, Poetry and Music, standing by a doorway symbolising birth, while the armed figure represents Endurance. The two kneeling figures represent Love and Hope, while the central figure symbolises Humanity. Charity stands to the right bearing figs and wine, followed by white-haired Wisdom holding a staff, and a seated figure representing Meditation. Finally, a figure symbolising Resignation stands by the right-hand doorway, which represents death.

Totem pole

The totem pole

A 20 ft totem pole, carved from red cedar, stands outside the museum's main entrance. It was carved in 1985 as part of the American Arts Festival by Nathan Jackson, a Tlingit native Alaskan. The carvings on the pole depict figures from Alaskan legend of a girl who married a bear, with an eagle (Jackson's clan crest) at the top. The pole is one of only a handful of totem poles in the United Kingdom, others being on display at the British Museum, the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh, Windsor Great Park, Bushy Park, the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, the Pitt Rivers Museum at Oxford, and at Alsford's Wharf in Berkhamsted. There is also a totem pole in the Royal Albert Memorial Museum in Exeter. It is displayed in their World Cultures galleries.

CUE building

The Horniman Museum contains the CUE (Centre for Understanding the Environment) building. This opened in 1996 and was designed by local architects Archetype using methods developed by Walter Segal. The building has a grass roof and was constructed from sustainable materials. It also incorporates passive ventilation.

References

References

  1. "ALVA – Association of Leading Visitor Attractions".
  2. (2000). "Pioneros del diseño moderno : de William Morris a Walter Gropius". Ediciones Infinito.
  3. {{NHLE. (12 March 1973)
  4. {{EW charity. 802725. Horniman Public Museum and Public Park Trust
  5. "Horniman Public Museum and Public Park Trust – GOV.UK". www.gov.uk.
  6. "RIBA Find an Architect".
  7. (5 February 2007). "Take a walk with beasts". News Shopper.
  8. (15 July 2022). "London museum wins world's largest museum prize". [[The Independent]].
  9. (2022-11-28). "Benin Bronzes: Nigeria hails 'great day' as London museum signs over looted objects". BBC News.
  10. "Horniman Museum". Time Out London.
  11. "Walking directions to '''Horniman Museum''' from '''Horniman Park''' bus stop". Google Maps.
  12. "Walking directions to '''Horniman Museum''' from '''Forest Hill''' railway station". Google Maps.
  13. {{NHLE
  14. "FAQs – Horniman Museum". Saatchi Gallery.
  15. Jacqueline Banerjee. "The Horniman Museum by Charles Harrison Townsend". The Victorian Web.
  16. "Main entrance". Horniman Museum.
  17. Tearle, John. (1998). "The Berkhamsted Totem Pole". Lillydown House.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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