
Hepworth, Wakefield
Ten museums in total across the country are in with the chance to win £100,000 and the prestigious award, which will be announced on 19 June 2012.
Designed by acclaimed architect David Chipperfield, Hepworth Wakefield opened in May 2011 following a £35 million development. Within its first five months the museum attracted more than 100,000 visitors.
Simon Wallis, Director of The Hepworth Wakefield said: "We are delighted to be included in the long-list of museums for this prestigious award, which recognises The Hepworth Wakefield as one of the UK's top ten museums and galleries.
Lord Smith of Finsbury, Chair of the Judges, said: "Whittling the achievements of Britain's museums over the past year down to a list of ten was an unbelievably challenging task. The outstanding quality of the projects that we finally settled on, however, perfectly encapsulates the vitality and dynamism of a part of our nation's cultural life that continues to innovate, push boundaries and engage the public, even in these straitened times."
Long List
The ten longlisted museums are:
Bletchley Park, Milton Keynes, Bucks.: The Life and Works of Alan Turing
M Shed, Bristol: A New Museum for Bristol
National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh: National Museum of Scotland Development
Riverside Museum, Scotland's Museum of Transport and Travel, Glasgow: Riverside Museum Project
Royal Albert Memorial Museum & Art Gallery, Exeter, Devon: RAMM Development Project
The Hepworth Wakefield, Wakefield, West Yorkshire: The Hepworth Wakefield
The Holburne Museum, Bath, Somerset: The Holburne Museum Development Project
The National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh: Portrait of the Nation
Turner Contemporary, Margate, Kent: Turner Contemporary
Watts Gallery, Guildford, Surrey: The Watts Gallery Hope Project
The Art Fund Prize 2012 rewards excellence and innovation in museums and galleries in the UK for a project completed or undertaken in 2011. Following a shortlist of four museums to be announced on 14 May, the £100,000 cash prize will be awarded to the 'Museum of the Year' at a ceremony at the British Museum on 19 June. The annual prize has been awarded since 2003.
Penelope, Viscountess Cobham, Chairman of The Museum Prize Trust said: "We are delighted to see such a strong and varied longlist in this tenth year of awarding the Museum Prize. It is testament to the extraordinary work that is happening around the country in museums and galleries that the 2012 Art Fund Prize longlist showcases excellence, innovation and audience engagement at all levels."
Stephen Deuchar, Director of the Art Fund, said: "This year's Art Fund Prize longlist truly reveals the creativity and ambition of museums and galleries beyond London. The vitality of our cultural treasures nationwide is a hugely important resource, and the Art Fund is extremely proud to celebrate these museums' achievements through its sponsorship of the 'museum of the year' prize."
The longlist was chosen by a panel of experts chaired by Lord Smith of Finsbury, former Labour MP and Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport. The other judges are Professor Jim Al-Khalili OBE, theoretical physicist, author and broadcaster; Charlotte Higgins, Guardian journalist and author; Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, author and broadcaster; Sir Mark Jones, Master at St Cross College, Oxford and former V&A director; Rick Mather, architect; and Lisa Milroy, artist and Head of Graduate Painting at the Slade School of Fine Art, UCL.
The shortlist of four museums will be announced on 14 May 2012 and the winner on 19 June 2012.
'Have Your Say' online forum
Also launching today is the opportunity for local champions of each of the longlisted museums to say why their chosen museum should win the Art Fund Prize 2012. Members of the public are invited to log on to www.artfundprize.org.uk and leave their comments, a selection of which will be presented to the judges to consider when they come to decide the shortlist. Anyone who posts a comment will automatically be entered into a prize draw to win an iPad 2. The forum and prize draw close at 11.59pm on Sunday 22 April 2012.
Clore Award for Museum Learning
Organised under the umbrella of the Art Fund Prize, the longlist for the Clore Award for Museum Learning was also announced today. Supported by the Clore Duffield Foundation, the £10,000 award recognises and celebrates quality, impact and innovation in using museums and galleries for learning activities and initiatives.
The award is judged by a separate panel co-chaired by Dame Vivien Duffield DBE, Chairman of the Clore Duffield Foundation and Sally Bacon, Executive Director.
The longlisted museum learning initiatives are:
Camden Arts Centre, Get The Message
Florence Nightingale Museum, Our Generation's Re-interpretation
Jersey Heritage, My History Scrapbooks and Discovery Days
Leicestershire County Council Heritage and Arts Service, Held in the Hand and Touch Tables
Penlee House Gallery and Museum, Treasures from the Earth
The Geffrye Museum of the Home, Stories of the World: London
The Quilt Museum and Gallery, Unfolding the Quilts
The Whitworth Art Gallery, The Manchester Early Years Partnership
Victoria and Albert Museum, V&A Schools Team Collaboration with Seymourpowell
Yorkshire Museum, Celebrating Severus
More information on the Clore Award for Museum Learning can be found at www.artfundprize.org.uk/clore-award
Ten Years of the Museum Prize
2012 is the tenth year of the Art Fund Prize for Museums (formerly the Gulbenkian Prize).
The past winners are:
2003 National Centre for Citizenship and the Law, Galleries of Justice, Nottingham
2004 Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
2005 Big Pit: the National Mining Museum of Wales
2006 Brunel's SS Great Britain, Bristol
2007 Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, East Sussex
2008 The Lightbox gallery and museum, Woking
2009 Wedgwood Museum, Stoke-on-Trent
2010 The Ulster Museum, Belfast
2011 The British Museum, for A History of the World
Hepworth Wakefield in the running to win £100,000 as Art Fund Prize




