Salisbury & South Wiltshire Museum
Salisbury & South Wiltshire Museum
The King's House
65 The Close
Salisbury
Wiltshire
SP1 2EN
England
Website
Salisbury Museum
Museum Events
www.salisburymuseum.org.uk/what-s-on/all.html
Current Exhibitions
www.salisburymuseum.org.uk/exhibitions/exhibitions.html
Opening Hours
www.salisburymuseum.org.uk/your-visit/opening-times/
Our Galleries
www.salisburymuseum.org.uk/collections/
General
Learning and Schools
education@salisburymuseum.org.uk
Telephone
01722 332151
A friendly museum in a Grade 1 listed building. Winner of six major awards including a Museum of the Year award and the English Tourist Board England for Excellence. The archaeology collections are Designated Collections of national importance.
Home of the Stonehenge gallery, Warminster Jewel and famous Monkton Deverill gold torc. Displays of prehistory in Early Man; Romans and Saxons; the medieval history of Old Sarum and Salisbury (with the renowned Giant and Hob Nob); the Pitt Rivers (father of modern scientific archaeology) collection; ceramics and costume; a pre-NHS surgery; pictures throughout the Museum, including Turner watercolours. Temporary exhibitions all through the year. Gift and coffee shops. Season tickets and membership benefits available.
Venue Type:
Museum, Gallery, Heritage site, Historic house or home
The archaeology collections at this museum are Designated Collections of national importance.
The Designated collections contain rich and varied material from major prehistoric and later excavations, including finds and archaeology from nearby Stonehenge and other villages in south Wiltshire.
Collection details
World Cultures, Weapons and War, Social History, Personalities, Natural Sciences, Fine Art, Decorative and Applied Art, Costume and Textiles, Coins and Medals, Archives, Archaeology
Key artists and exhibits
- Stonehenge Interactive Gallery
- Turner watercolours
- Victorian costume
- Wedgewood, ceramics & glass
- Medieval history
- Pitt Rivers gallery
- Social history
- Archaeology
- Art
- Designated Collection
What’s Under Your School?
During 2012 over 40 schools from South Wiltshire, North Dorset and West Hampshire have been helped to explore the history of their school and surroundings. What’s Under Your School? is a project funded by Dr Alistair Somerville Ford, through CBA Wessex and delivered by archaeologist, writer and broadcaster Julian Richards and Claire Ryley, formerly the education officer at Fishbourne Roman Palace.
The idea is to help schools and the communities that they are part of to investigate the past in a fun way, using maps and documents, aerial photographs, simple observation and even, in some cases, geophysical survey and excavation. The emphasis is on helping schools to bring their local history to life, teaching skills rather than just providing information.
Each school project has been different, tailored to the location, the individual school curriculum and the curiosity of the staff and children. The exhibition brings together the results of their findings, from 7000 year old flint tools to the site of a Victorian school and showcases the skills that have been acquired, from prehistoric pottery making to Roman cookery.
Suitable for
- Any age
Where
Salisbury Museum
Admission
Normal admission charges apply.
Rex Whistler - A Talent Cut Short
This exhibition is the latest in Salisbury & South Wiltshire Museum’s series of shows exploring the work of significant British artists with links to the locality, starting with Constable & Salisbury in 2011, and Circles & Tangents: Art in the Shadow of Cranborne Chase in 2012.
Rex Whistler (1905-44) leased the handsome Walton Canonry in Salisbury Cathedral Close, sometimes known as Whistler House, a few doors from Salisbury & South Wiltshire Museum. He spent much time in the locality, at nearby Wilton House, whose architectural features and Palladian Bridge inspired – and appear in – much of his work; with his close friend, Edith Olivier, at Daye House, which he painted many times, on the Wilton Estate; at Mottisfont Abbey, near Romsey, where he created magnificent trompe l’oeil designs for Maud Russell’s drawing room, now called the Whistler Room; at Ashcombe, which he visited on many occasions and, together with Oliver Messel and Lord Berners, decorated Cecil Beaton’s bedroom; on Salisbury Plain, when training with the Welsh Guards, and in the village of Codford where he was stationed.
The magnificent, rotating Rex Prism, engraved by Sir Laurence Whistler with scenes in and around the cathedral, is a memorial to his brother Rex. It is displayed in the Morning Chapel of Salisbury Cathedral, which is opposite the Museum.
Rex Whistler was a prominent and prolific twentieth century artist on the British scene between the wars. A prodigious worker, he produced enchanting and important mural cycles, stage designs and book illustrations, as well as portraits, designs for the decorative arts and commercial material. At the outbreak of war, he joined the Welsh Guards, training as a tank commander on Salisbury Plain, 1941-4, where he not only painted and sketched many of his fellow soldiers, but also transformed the interior of the officers’ mess - painting the inside as a Bedouin tent. Tragically, he was killed on his first day of action in Normandy, in 1944.
This exhibition, which embraces Whistler’s whole career and artistic development, has a special emphasis on his Wiltshire connections. The show includes around 75 items that are key to his oeuvre and demonstrate his importance as a painter. There are loans from important collections including the Regimental Headquarters of the Welsh Guards, Wilton House, the Whistler Archive and a number of private collections, as well as oil paintings owned by Salisbury & South Wiltshire Museum, bequeathed by Edith Olivier’s family. A number of items are exhibited in public for the first time.
Where
Salisbury Museum
Admission
Not yet finalised.
Website
http://www.salisburymuseum.org.uk/exhibitions/exhibitions/303-rex-whistler-a-talent-cut-short.html
Under Fives Friday
Explore and create together with lively, themed activities. The theme for the July event is "Buried Treasure". Suitable for 2-5 year olds. Baby play area.
Suitable for
- Family friendly
When
10-11:30am
Admission
Booking: No booking required.
Cost: The under fives are free. Normal admission charges apply to accompanying adults and older children.
Discovery Day: Roman Britain
Enjoy a day of Roman-themed activities: fighting gladiators, tales from Britannia and Roman arts and crafts.
Suitable for
- Family friendly
When
10am-4pm
Admission
Free
Discovery Day: Murals and Masks
Help create a community mural, make a mask or create your own funny faces - be inspired by Rex Whistler.
Suitable for
- Family friendly
When
10am-4pm
Admission
Free
Rex Whistler: A Closer Look
A lecture by Nikki Frater. Rex Whistler had a dazzling career as a muralist, portrait painter, illustrator, stage designer and graphic artist. Although we all know some of his works – whether it be the mural in the restaurant at Tate Britain, his funny adverts for Shell, or the beautiful illustrations for Gulliver’s Travels – he remains quite an enigmatic character. Here’s an opportunity to get to know more about this fascinating man and his work. We’ll follow his career from the highly imaginative creations in his childhood sketchbooks to his magnificent designs for ballet, theatre and film. Rex Whistler had what seemed a very glamorous life, with famous friends and patrons from actors to the aristocracy, but we’ll go ‘behind the scenes’ and get a deeper sense of the man himself, his humour, distinctive vision and creativity.
Nikki Frater is an artist and art historian who has been researching and presenting on the life and work of Rex Whistler for many years. Having returned to academia as a mature student, she is currently completing her PhD thesis on the artist at the University of Plymouth. She has presented and given papers on Rex Whistler at Tate Britain, the Rex Whistler The Triumph of Fancy exhibition in Brighton, on BBC Radio Wales, the University of St Andrew’s, the Association of Art Historians, the Courtauld Institute of Art, and at the National Trust at Plas Newydd, Anglesey where Whistler’s most important mural is located.
Suitable for
When
6-7:30pm
Admission
Booking: Booking required. Please contact the museum.
Cost: £12
Discovering Ancient Wessex: Salisbury Museum’s new archaeology displays
A talk by Adrian Green, Director of Salisbury Museum. This lecture is in the Salisbury Museum Archaeology Lectures (SMAL) series.
Suitable for
When
7:30-8:30pm
Admission
Cost: Museum Members £2
non-Members £3.50
payable on the door
Travel and Communication through the Landscape of Anglo-Saxon Wiltshire
A talk by Alex Langlands, University of Winchester. This lecture is in the Salisbury Museum Archaeology Lectures (SMAL) series.
Suitable for
When
7:30-8:30pm
Admission
Cost: Museum Members £2
non-Members £3.50
payable on the door
Stonehenge: results from recent research
A talk by Professor Mike Parker-Pearson, Institute of Archaeology UCL. The lecture takes place at Salisbury Museum. This lecture is in the Salisbury Museum Archaeology Lectures (SMAL) series.
Suitable for
When
7:30-8:30pm
Admission
Booking: Booking required. Please contact the museum.
Cost: £8 in advance or £10 on the night (includes light refreshments).
The Battle for Stonehenge: the aerodrome, the monument and the landscape
A talk by Martyn Barber, English Heritage. This lecture is in the Salisbury Museum Archaeology Lectures (SMAL) series.
Suitable for
When
7:30-8:30pm
Admission
Cost: Museum Members £2
non-Members £3.50
payable on the door.
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