GuM

Museum of English Rural Life
London

Museum of English Rural Life

Our Country Lives Galleries

Museum of English Rural Life (MERL) blossoms after redesign by Pringle Richards Sharratt and GuM Studio partnership

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Capturing over a century of English Rural Life, the Museum’s extraordinary collection has been revitalised and made relevant again through a striking series of ten galleries. Each carefully designed space incorporates different learning styles and areas of focus to draw visitors into the stories and landscape of the English countryside.

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The £3.3 million NHLF-funded project has been led by architects Pringle Richards Sharratt, with exhibition design by GuM Studio.

"Our aim was to make this as much a destination for rural buffs as local families. We’ve done this by contextualising this extraordinary collection: telling stories and creating curiosity about rural lives and landscapes, and showcasing the historic value of everyday life. The sheer range of objects has been both the central challenge and the joyful opportunity of the commission."


Penny Richards, Director of GuM Studio 
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A key requirement of the project was a responsive and iterative interpretation strategy. The team developed the design working with MERL’s curatorial team, the Museum’s volunteers, University of Reading students and craft groups. Artefacts from a tiny sheep dog whistle through to the iconic Fordson tractor, are displayed, with cross cutting themes of fashion, craft, food and technology to draw more urbanite visitors into the collection. Visitors will delight in the impressive ‘Wagon Walk’, and the new mezzanine area houses the Museum’s unique collection of over 40 ploughs, providing forensic analysis of the objects for the first time.

"Pringle Richards Sharratt and GuM Studio have transformed the Museum with designs that have illuminated our collections in new and extraordinary ways. The clarity of their vision, combining inventive new modes of interpretation, introducing beauty, colour, light and humour into our new galleries, has surpassed all our expectations and we believe will have set new standards for the display of rural collections."


Kate Arnold-Forster, Director of the Museum
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Pringle Richards Sharratt provided architectural guidance for interventions to the existing gallery building and proposed areas in which the museum could expand its popular activities for families. The welcome area has been improved; circulation routes offer new and returning visitors different ways of engaging with the collection; and additional educational, display and storage areas supplement opportunities for more in-depth learning.

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As exhibition designers, GuM Studio worked with the Museum’s curatorial team to identify key objects and highlight the stories, skills, technologies and traditions of rural life. The team also commissioned a number of exciting new works to enliven and enhance the collection, including a life-size sculpted willow horse.

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