Manchester Evening News

Arena tributes to be preserved at city art gallery

NATIONAL LOTTERY GRANT TO SAVE AND ARCHIVE 10,000 ITEMS

- By ALEXANDRA RUCKI alexandra.rucki@trinitymir­ror.com @AlexandraR­ucki

TRIBUTES left to those killed or injured in the Manchester Arena attack will be preserved in an archive thanks to a National Lottery grant.

The Manchester Together archive, located at Manchester Art Gallery, is made up of more than 10,000 items left in several locations across the city including St Ann’s Square following the attack on May 22, 2017.

Notes, poems, cards, t-shirts, soft toys with personal messages, Manchester bee drawings and balloons are among some of the items making up the archive.

A £99,700 grant has been awarded from the National Lottery which will pay for two staff members to document all of the items and turn them into a searchable online archive.

However, all of the tributes will still also remain at the gallery.

Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester City Council, said: “Manchester promised that we would never forget the Arena attack victims and this is part of keeping that promise.

“In St Ann’s Square we saw the public stand shoulder to shoulder with those who had been most closely affected - an act of impressive solidarity that signified our refusal to give in to hatred.

“I am glad that those expression­s of solidarity will be preserved and kept. They are now part of Manchester’s rich history and we should remember and reflect upon them.”

The project partners, in collaborat­ion with the Manchester Resilience Hub, will also explore the possible use of the archive for therapy to help families with the grieving process.

The archive has already been visited by a number of those who lost loved ones in the Arena attack, said the city council. Amanda Wallace, deputy director of Manchester Art Gallery, said: “From scribbled notes on scraps of paper to beautiful paintings and poems - everything that was left in St Ann’s Square is an important part in the story of what happened here.”

Nathan Lee, Head of Heritage Lottery Fund, North West, said: “Thanks to money from National Lottery players, the public’s spontaneou­s messages and tributes will be kept for current and future generation­s.

“I am proud that the Heritage Lottery Fund has been able to play a small part in preserving this record of Manchester coming together.”

 ??  ?? Candles and floral tributes
Candles and floral tributes

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