#museum-news — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #museum-news, aggregated by home.social.
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Buxton Museum – From Closure to New Beginnings
Pull up a chair and let me put the kettle on, because this is one of those stories that feels close to home in more ways than one – Buxton has a way of doing that, doesn’t it? The mist rolling down over the hills, the limestone underfoot, the sense that if you dig even a little you will find something older than you expected. Sometimes a fossil, sometimes a story, and sometimes, if you are very lucky, something shaped by human hands thousands of years ago.
Buxton Museum and Art Gallery has always been the place where all those different layers come together. Not in a grand, untouchable way, but in that quietly fascinating, slightly eccentric way that local museums do so well. You could walk in out of the Derbyshire drizzle and find yourself standing in the middle of 360 million years of history, from ancient seas to Roman roads to the tools of people who once walked these same hills with flint in their hands and purpose in their stride.
The museum itself has roots deep in the late nineteenth century, when Buxton was not only a spa town but a place of folklore, culture and curiosity. Like many civic museums of the Victorian and Edwardian era, it was born from the idea that knowledge should be shared, that history and science should not belong solely to scholars but to everyone. Its long time home in the Peak Buildings on Terrace Road became a kind of anchor point for that vision, holding collections that told the story of the Peak District in all its strange and beautiful complexity.
And what a story that is.
The Peak is one of the richest prehistoric landscapes in Britain, a place where Mesolithic hunters once tracked game through woodland that no longer exists, where Neolithic communities raised monuments that still puzzle us, and where Bronze Age burials quietly mark the passing of lives long forgotten. The museum’s archaeological collections have always been central to telling that story, and tucked within them, the lithics collection carries a particular kind of magic. I know this because I, along with my good friend Bob, were once part of the team that sorted them.
There is something about lithics that stops you in your tracks. These are not decorative objects or curiosities. They are tools, shaped with intent, held in real hands, used in moments of survival. When you handle them, even through gloves and careful procedure, there is a flicker of connection. The angle of a blade, the precision of a strike, the quiet evidence of skill passed from one generation to another. The work of curation – sorting, cataloguing and understanding museum artefacts – is meticulous and often unseen, but it is the foundation on which everything else is built. Without that work, the stories remain silent.
Over the years, the museum grew into something much broader than a simple collection of ‘things’. It became a place that told the entire story of the Peak District, from deep geological time through to modern social history. Visitors could move through the corridors from fossils and Blue John stone to Roman jewellery, medieval relics and the industrial heritage that shaped the town itself. It was a place where everything connected if you took the time to look.
A turning point came in 2017 with the redevelopment of the Wonders of the Peak gallery, a project that brought new life and energy into the museum. Funded in part by Arts Council England, it transformed the way the collections were displayed, making them more immersive, more accessible and more engaging for a wider audience. Suddenly, this quiet local museum was drawing over 30,000 visitors a year, hosting exhibitions, workshops and even collaborations with institutions like the British Museum. There was a sense that little old Buxton’s story was not just local after all, but part of something much, much bigger.
The museum also began to shift in how it invited people in. Gone was the stuffy, old fashioned sense that everything must be observed at a distance. In its place came a more hands on approach, encouraging curiosity, exploration and connection. Families, researchers, school groups and the simply curious all found something to hold onto there, whether literally or figuratively.
And then, as so often happens with buildings that have stood a long time, reality intervened. Structural concerns with the Peak Buildings led to the museum’s closure in 2023. It is difficult to overstate how much that changed things. This was not just a case of locked doors. It was the temporary loss of a space that had quietly held the town’s memory for generations.
Behind the scenes, an enormous amount of work began almost immediately. Over 100,000 objects had to be carefully packed, documented and moved into secure storage. Each one handled with the same care it had received on display, perhaps more so, because now it had to endure uncertainty. Staff adapted, shifting their focus to outreach and temporary displays, with Buxton Library becoming a kind of lifeline for keeping the museum’s presence alive in the community.
The community, for its part, did not stay quiet.
In 2024, hundreds of people turned out in support of the museum, a reminder that this was never just a place tourists visited but something woven into everyday life. When a museum like this closes, even temporarily, it leaves a gap you can feel.
Now, in 2026, the story is shifting again, and there is a cautious sense of movement. Funding from Arts Council England has supported plans for a new temporary home near Buxton Library, with exhibition spaces, a shop and areas for activities and education. It is not a permanent solution, but it is a vital step, a way of bringing the collections back into public view and restoring that connection between people and place.
At the same time, Derbyshire County Council has committed to finding a permanent new location within the town centre as part of wider regeneration plans. It is an ambitious goal, and one that will take time. There are practical challenges, funding considerations and the delicate balance of honouring what the museum has always been while allowing it to evolve into something that can serve future generations.
Public consultation has become a key part of that process, with residents invited in 2026 to help shape what the museum should look like and how it should function. That feels fitting. This has always been a shared space, built not just by curators and councils but by the people who visit, contribute and care about it.
There are still questions, of course. Timelines are uncertain, and the move to a permanent home may take several years. Temporary arrangements will bridge that gap, and there will likely be moments of frustration along the way. But what stands out most is not uncertainty, but resilience.
Even now, the work continues. Collections are being researched, conserved and understood in quiet rooms rather than public galleries. Stories are still being pieced together. Knowledge is still growing.
And somewhere, carefully wrapped and waiting, are those lithics. Silent, patient, carrying the imprint of lives lived thousands of years ago. The fact that they have been handled, sorted and interpreted by people who care deeply about them adds another layer to their story. It becomes a chain of connection, from the original maker to the modern curator, from ancient landscape to present day Buxton.
When the museum opens its doors again, whether in a temporary space or a new permanent home, it will not simply be returning to what it was. It will be stepping into something new, shaped by everything it has been through and by the people who refused to let it fade quietly away.
And if you stand there, looking at a piece of worked flint under soft gallery lights, you might just feel it. That sense of continuity. Of hands across time. Of stories waiting patiently to be told again.
#Archaeology #artsAnsCulture #ArtsCouncilEngland #BronzeAge #Buxton #BuxtonLibrary #BuxtonMuseum #community #Derbyshire #DerbyshireCountyCouncil #heritage #lithics #localHistory #Mesolithic #museumNews #Neolithic #PeakDistrict #Prehistory #UKMuseums #WondersOfThePeak -
Global Museum, the long‑running, non‑profit hub that’s been serving museum professionals and museum lovers for more than thirty years | Visit It | Join It | Share this with friends & colleagues http://www.globalmuseum.org #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #museumjobs
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⭐ 931 new followers of Global Museum on this platform in 2025⭐
#globalmuseum #museumnews #museumjobs #museums -
News | Objects stolen from
@rammuseum.bsky.social
in overnight burglary – police appeal for witnesses after two suspects forced entry,
https://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/news/2025/09/objects-stolen-from-royal-albert-memorial-museum-in-overnight-burglary/
@museumsassociation.org
#globalmuseum #museumnews #museums #crime -
Here Comes the Science: Balboa Park's Fleet museum getting a makeover,
The project is slated to be completed in spring 2026. The museum will remain open during the project, continuing its exhibitions, IMAX films and public program
https://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/inyourneighborhood/here-comes-the-science-balboa-parks-fleet-museum-getting-a-makeover/3891805/ #globalmuseum #museumnews #museums -
🏛️ Build. Boost. Brag.
📅 Wednesday, September 17 | 12p MT / 2p ET
💻 Always FREE
If you're feeling stuck in your museum career, you’re unsure how to grow your skills, or you don’t know how to brag without cringing, this call is for you.
https://www.museumminds.com/ #globalmuseum #museumnews #museumjobs -
KC figures strongly in long campaign to build #Smithsonian museum honoring America’s Latinos.
The White House recently targeted the Latino museum in a listing of Smithsonian exhibits and messaging criticized as woke or anti-American.
https://thebeaconnews.org/stories/2025/08/25/smithsonian-museum-honoring-american-latinos/ #globalmuseum #museumnews #Latinos -
Smithsonian artists and scholars respond to White House list of objectionable art.
Lonnie Bunch, was told it had 120 days to comply for what the administration says will be a "comprehensive review" in order to bring the #Smithsonian in line with Trump's cultural directives ahead of the country's 250th anniversary celebrations.
https://www.npr.org/2025/08/24/nx-s1-5511241/smithsonian-white-house-art #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews
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US museums urged to stop lobbying against Nazi loot restitution bill.
A bipartisan group of Senators has proposed amendments to the Hear Act of 2016, but some powerful organisations are concerned the changes go too far
https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2025/08/22/us-museums-urged-to-stop-lobbying-against-nazi-loot-restitution-bill #globalmuseum #museumnews #museums -
Opening Their Doors to Visitors With Vision Impairment.
Orlando Museum of Art has held several “Art for All Eyes” events during which visitors with vision impairment could check out an eSight Go—a wearable assistive device that mitigates central vision loss caused by 20 different conditions.
https://observer.com/2025/08/orlando-museum-of-art-esight-low-vision-accommodations-museums/ #globalmuseum #museumnews #museums #blindness -
🏛️ Top 5 Sources for Museum News
(Chat GPT got it right! - Ed)1. Global Museum (globalmuseum.org)
🌍 Global, long-standing, sector-wide
Daily/weekly curated digests from across the world
International jobs board (highly used by professionals)
Opinion pieces & commentary
Running for 30+ years — one of the most consistent museum news sources2. Museums Journal (Museums Association, UK)
3. The Art Newspaper
4. Smithsonian Magazine
5. Museums + Heritage Advisor (M+H)
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Museum curator reacts to White House Smithsonian review.
“What we’ve been seeing from this administration is antithetical to the work of historians”
https://www.localnewslive.com/2025/08/16/museum-curator-reacts-white-house-smithsonian-review/ #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #Trump
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Plans revealed for museum dedicated to the SS United Sates.
The towering funnels of a legendary transatlantic liner with links to Southampton are set to be the centrepiece of a new museum.
https://philanthropynewsdigest.org/news/other-sources/article/?id=16345503&title=Plans-revealed-for-museum-dedicated-to-the-SS-United-Sates #globalmuseum #museumnews -
Vienna's Jewish museum sees chilling drop in visitors amid rising antisemitism.
The effects of the Middle East wars in which Israel is currently engaged have led to people avoiding visiting the museum, since to do so might be interpreted as a gesture of sympathy with Jews
https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/article-863602 #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews -
‘The ocean is spitting our rubbish back’: Italy’s museum of plastic #pollution.
Faded items dating back to 1950s have been found on Italian beaches, underscoring plastic’s problematic longevity
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/aug/09/italy-museum-of-plastic-pollution-faded-items-beaches-ocean #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews
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Revitalizing Canada’s Largest Museum.
Alum Josh Basseches leads Toronto’s Royal Ontario Museum into a new era
https://www.bu.edu/articles/2025/revitalizing-canadas-largest-museum/ #globalmuseum #museums #Canada #museumnews -
Antiquities Returned to Europe Include 16 Seized From the Met.
New York investigators said they repatriated looted objects to Italy, Spain and Hungary.https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/07/arts/design/met-antiquities-seizure-italy-krater.html #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #antiquities
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26-year-old New Yorker gathers 40,000 #TikTok followers in her quest to visit all the city’s museums.
While museums can be expensive, she said she makes good use of museum passes at her local library, and that many museums have days or times when they are free
https://fortune.com/2025/08/07/26-year-old-new-yorker-tiktok-followers-visit-every-museum/ #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #NewYork
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Smithsonian restores Trump to impeachment display in American history museum.
The museum last month removed a placard describing the president’s two impeachments. The new text makes minor changes — and offers slightly less detail.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/art/2025/08/08/trump-impeachment-exhibit/ #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews
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Sensational Museum project showcases new tools for multisensory interpretation.
Research initiative was created to rethink role of the senses in museums and put disability at the centre of practice
https://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/news/2025/07/sensational-museum-project-showcases-new-tools-for-multisensory-interpretation/# #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews
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ICOM Germany: Insights from a Museum Workers’ Study on Employee Satisfaction
With over 6,800 museums, Germany offers a structurally diverse landscape – from state-run to privately managed institutions.
https://icom.museum/en/news/icom-germany-insights-from-a-museum-workers-study-on-employee-satisfaction/ #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #Germany
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Istanbul’s Museum Moment.
Traveling between these five new and newly reopened museums is both a plunge into the city’s rich history and an exploration of its 21st-century creative scene.https://archive.ph/ssyjo #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #Istanbul
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Freud Museum faces call for inquiry over bullying and board misconduct claims.
Writers and academics urge charities regulator to investigate ‘serious issues’ with London institution
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2025/jul/25/freud-museum-faces-inquiry-over-bullying-and-board-misconduct-claims #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews -
The Whale Museum.
This museum on San Juan Island is dedicated to the conservation of orca pods.https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/the-whale-museum #globalmuseum #museumnews #museums
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August Museum Minds: Email marketing made simple
SEND IT!
Build your list, say the right things, and hit send with confidence.
Wednesday, August 13
• 12pm MT / 2pm ET
• Always free
https://community.aam-us.org/discussion/august-museum-minds-email-marketing-made-simple #golbalmuseum #museumnews #museums -
Bayeux Tapestry to return to England after 900 years in landmark loan deal.
Artefact to go on display at the British Museum in exchange for Sutton Hoo treasures and Lewis chessmen.
https://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/news/2025/07/bayeux-tapestry-could-return-to-england-after-900-years-in-landmark-loan-deal/# #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #BayeuxTapestry
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MILESTONE!
Global Museum has just hit 2.5K followers on Mastodon.This platform has replaces our website since we ceased its publication.
Welcome one and all!
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Landhoppers – tiny, jumping crustaceans – are a vital yet often overlooked part of Aotearoa New Zealand’s invertebrate fauna.
Northland entomologist Olly Ball, University College Cork’s amphipod expert Alan Myers and Te Papa geneticist Lara Shepherd have just described a new species and genus of landhopper from Manawatāwhi Three Kings Islands in Northland
https://blog.tepapa.govt.nz/2025/06/25/a-new-genus-and-species-of-landhopper-for-new-zealand/ #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #entomology
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Portrait allegedly damaged by visitor taking selfie.
A 18th-century oil painting has allegedly been damaged after a museum visitor tripped while taking a selfie.
Florence's Uffizi Gallery said a tourist fell backwards while trying to "make a meme in front" of a portrait of Ferdinando de' Medici, Grand Prince of Tuscany, by Anton Domenico Gabbiani
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cyvj4pze706o #globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #selfies
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What People Have Said About The Global Museum Website.
Kind comments from Global Museum's regular followers, after the announcement that the website will cease publication after thirty plus years.
https://globalmuseum.weebly.com/what-people-have-said.html #Globalmuseum #museums #museumnews #museumjobs #artgallery #website