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Friday, June 27, 2025 |
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Dunlop 'Burrell Collection can be Scotland's calling card on the world' |
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Scotland Office Minister, Andrew Dunlop and Museum Technician, Kenny Clark with Meiping vase. There are only 3 other known similar vases in the world. Sir William Burrell bought the vase in 1946 for £115. The vase forms part of the Chinese Art collection at the Burrell.
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GLASGOW.- Scotland Office Minister Andrew Dunlop today saw works from Glasgows Burrell Collection which are set to be part of an ambitious loan scheme to some of the worlds most prestigious galleries and museums.
From October 2016, the Burrell Collection will embark on plans to refurbish the building and redisplay its unique collection. An entirely new visitor experience will be created with basement stores open to the public for the first time, and a new central core greatly increasing access to the many artworks.
An exhibition of the works from The Burrell Collection will be on display at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow during that time, whilst a number of works will be sent on loan to some of the worlds most important museums and galleries, partly as a way to highlight the fundraising effort and encourage donations towards the redevelopment from overseas benefactors, but also to make a statement about the depth and excellence of the art on display in Scotland.
During his visit to the Burrell Collection, which recently received £5million from the UK Government to help fund the Burrells ambitions, Lord Dunlop was shown some of the works which will be on offer to the world-class museums.
He said: We in Scotland already know how blessed we are to have such an abundance of artistic treasures at our disposal it is now time to show the rest of the world as well.
Collections like the Burrell are the equal of any to be found in the major museums and galleries worldwide. By taking works to those centres of excellence, we can showcase some of the cultural jewels we have here.
I hope this tour will not only encourage visitors to come to Scotland to see our major works for themselves, but also help raise funds for the Burrell Collection.
I am delighted the UK Government was able to help the process with the £5 million which was announced in last months Spending Review. This money will not only go towards the overhaul of the building, but will also help support the wider ambitions of the Burrell Renaissance.
It shows our enduring commitment to Scotlands cultural heritage and to its future; protecting what we have at home, promoting it to the wider world.
Sir Angus Grossart, Chair of Burrell Renaissance said: The Burrell Collection is of world-class quality, and reflects the outward looking confidence of a very great collector. Our national and international lending programme allows us to take these great works to galleries and major institutions across the world, reaffirming the Collections international status.
Councillor Archie Graham, the Depute Leader of Glasgow City Council and Chair of Glasgow Life, added: To be able to share works from the Burrell Collection with audiences within the UK and internationally, not only strengthens the international reputation of the Burrell, but also of the city to which Sir William gifted this outstanding Collection.
In a separate initiative, works by one of the countrys most accomplished yet lesser known artists, Joseph Crawhall (18611913) are also set to go on display outside of Scotland as part of the Burrell Collections expanded loans programe.
The exhibition Joseph Crawhall: Masterworks from The Burrell Collection which will take place at the Fleming Collection, London, from 4 February 12 March 2016, is the first time in twenty-five years that the works, on loan from the Burrell, will be seen in London. It offers a rare opportunity to see 23 of the finest works by one of the countrys most accomplished yet lesser known artists who is sparsely represented in the UKs large national collections, but who during his lifetime exhibited alongside Degas and Whistler.
Identified as a leader of the radical group of young Scottish painters known as the Glasgow Boys, the works offer a unique opportunity to trace Crawhalls development and range as an artist, one whose technical brilliance was so admired by shipping magnate and collector Sir William Burrell, that there are more works by Joseph Crawhall in the Burrell Collection than by any other painter.
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