The final preparations are now under way for the British Theatre 1860-1940 Exhibition, which will open to the public on Wednesday 15th December.
The reading room and office have been tidied up, cleaning is underway and three sets of empty boards are looming over three remarkably clear tables. We have six sheets of (almost) identically cut cotton waiting to throw over each group’s work (in the interest of fairness), which will be covered until the grand unveiling. Cushions, books rests, snake weights and Secol covers are neatly stacked, awaiting the formation of three different exhibits created by the eighteen students of the British Theatre module.
The exhbits will be titled
- The changing representation of women 1860-1910
- The reasons for the popularity of Music Hall
- The ways in which theatre troubled class relations
Each group of six students has gone through a process of exploring the sources available in Special Collections, researching topics which interest them and selecting sources to support the arguments they make in the course of their exhibit.
While staff have been on hand to offer advice on the use of collections and on the topics, the work is the students’ own and will draw on their theatrical experiences to inform current academic debates. We are looking forward to experiencing the work which these talented students produce and hope that you will be able to share in it.
If you can’t get to the exhibition, opening times below, each group will produce a website to support their exhibit, which will include digital images of the sources they used. We hope, in the near future, to be able to link these websites to the Special Collections website in order to make this work accessible to everyone.
Exhibition Opening Times
Opens: Wednesday 15th December
Daily opening: 9.30-1pm & 2-4.30pm Monday-Friday (normal reading room opening times)
Closures: 12-3pm Tuesday 21st December
23 December-3rd January (Library closure for vacation)
Closes: 7th January
If in doubt, please phone ahead of your visit on 01227 827609