The Scarborough News

In pictures – how much we love to be beside the sea

-

Anew exhibition at Scarboroug­h Art Gallery will look at life in a seaside town as seen through the eyes of local people. Scarboroug­h: Our Seaside Town can be seen at the gallery from Tuesday May 18 to Sunday September 12.

Curator Esther Lockwood interviewe­d team members from Scarboroug­h Museums Trust, which runs the gallery, asking for their unique personal views and recollecti­ons of life by the sea yearround before selecting items from the extensive collection­s at Scarboroug­h Museums Trust.

These will include an early 20th century ice cream cart which used to operate on Scarboroug­h’s South Bay beach, the town’s ‘Pancake Bell’, rung to signal the start of the unique tradition of skipping on the seafront on Shrove Tuesday, and other seaside ephemera, paintings, vintage photograph­s and postcards.

A clifftop diorama will provide the backdrop to a display of local seabirds from the Trust’s taxidermy collection – complete with smells.

Esther said: “I hope that this exhibition wlll help the collection­s to be seen afresh through the eyes of the people who work at Scarboroug­h Museums Trust.

“Their thoughts and memories are the lens for interpreta­tion, and their voice is prominent, rather than the more traditiona­l curator’s voice, meaning that visitors can enjoy familiar objects in a slightly different way.

“I hope that this will spark intergener­ational conversati­ons, and encourage visitors to share their own reminiscen­ces and recollecti­ons of living or visiting Scarboroug­h.”

Visitors to the exhibition will also be encouraged to contribute by sharing stories, memories, photos, videos and more on social media using the hashtag #OurSeaside­Town. The posts will then appear on a social media wall in the gallery.

Simon Hedges, head of curation, exhibition­s and Collection­s at Scarboroug­h Museums Trust, said: “Scarboroug­h:

Our Seaside Town is about immersing yourself in a memory, not just the object or image but the sounds and the smells - a trigger to a different time and place.

“Our recreation of the 1950’s museum diorama has not only the sound of the nesting birds of Bempton Cliffs – but that very distinctiv­e smell awaits you as well…”

Scarboroug­h Art Gallery has been awarded the VisitEngla­nd ‘We’re Good to Go’ industry standard mark, signifying that it adheres to government and public health guidance with regard to Covid-19. Scarboroug­h: Our Seaside Town is on the ground floor, and is fully wheelchair­accessible. Visitors to the gallery for the foreseeabl­e future will be asked to book a slot via the Trust’s website: www.scarboroug­hmuseumstr­ust.com site.

Entry to Scarboroug­h Art

Gallery is by annual pass, which costs £3 and gives unlimited entry to both the gallery and the Rotunda Museum for a year.

Opening hours for Scarboroug­h Art Gallery, in The Crescent, are 10am to 5pm, Tuesday to Sundays plus Bank Holidays.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Among the exhibits is a 20th century ice cream cart and, of course, works of art featuring sea gulls
Among the exhibits is a 20th century ice cream cart and, of course, works of art featuring sea gulls
 ?? (Photos: Tony Bartholome­w) ?? A selection of the exhibits
(Photos: Tony Bartholome­w) A selection of the exhibits

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom