The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

£1.6m museum refit will allow for more exhibits

Major expansion of popular attraction will see more space for collection­s and visiting temporary displays

- Leeza Clark leclark@thecourier.co.uk

Hidden treasures will go on show as part of a £1.6 million expansion of the Museum of St Andrews University.

The major refurbishm­ent will mean important artworks and collection­s can come out of storage and go on display to the public.

The existing museum, on The Scores, has been a huge success since it opened in 2008.

Better known as MUSA, it attracts around 35,000 visitors a year, including more than 2,000 schoolchil­dren who take part in events and workshops.

And it is the only university museum in Scotland to have been consistent­ly awarded five stars under Visit Scotland’s quality assurance scheme.

However, its success means it is running at capacity.

The education space is fully booked and there is insufficie­nt space for regular temporary exhibition­s.

The university holds more than 115,000 items in its museum collection­s, but the vast majority are kept in storage.

The extension will provide two new galleries for temporary exhibition­s, greatly increasing the university’s ability to display its own collection­s and to host visiting exhibition­s from prestigiou­s galleries, such as the V&A.

The smaller of the two spaces will allow the museum collection­s unit to work more closely with local community groups to create exhibition­s and for academics to showcase their cutting edge research to the public.

MUSA will close for 18 months from this summer so the work on the extension can be completed.

During the closure, two of the permanent galleries will also be remodelled and a new studio/workroom will be created for seminar groups to study the museum’s collection­s.

An improved environmen­tal control system will precisely regulate conditions across the new and existing galleries, enabling the display of a greater variety of sensitive items.

Digital access to the collection­s will be maintained during the closure.

The co-director of the museum collection­s unit, Emma Jane Wells, said it would be the biggest change at MUSA in the last decade.

“The two new exhibition spaces will allow us to extend and improve the exhibition­s on offer, allowing us to display major travelling exhibition­s from national and internatio­nal institutio­ns,” she said.

“It will also enable us to work more closely with community groups and schools as well as with the university’s own academics and students.”

 ?? Picture: Kris Miller. ?? Lisa Scrimgeour, curatorial trainee, with a MUSA kaleidosco­pe slide.
Picture: Kris Miller. Lisa Scrimgeour, curatorial trainee, with a MUSA kaleidosco­pe slide.

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