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Total Model: Announcements National Railway Museum Shortlisted for Museum of the Year
By National Railway MuseumLocomotion: the National Railway Museum at Shildon, Co Durham This new £11m railway museum celebrates Shildon's history as one of the world's oldest railway towns and is the first national museum in the north east of England. ![]() New Deltic being Unloaded As well as providing public access to 70 vehicles from the National collection, many of which were formerly inaccessible, the new museum is a centre for community activity and training, and a key element in the economic regeneration of Shildon. The Gulbenkian Prize for Museum of the Year The largest single arts prize in the UK, is a £100,000 award given annually to one museum or gallery, large or small, anywhere in the UK. Locomotion: the new National Railway Museum at Shildon is shortlisted alongside a community project on the island of North Uist, a restored pit in south Wales, where visitors can visit the coalface 300 feet underground, the reworked Transport Museum in Coventry, a new museum based on the fishing industry in Great Yarmouth and newly-opened galleries at Compton Verney in Warwickshire and The Foundling Hospital in London. Nine of the ten projects have been funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, demonstrating how additional funding can transform the UK’s museums and galleries. The rest of the shortlist (in alphabetical order by city/town) is as follows:
Chair of Judges and Rector of Imperial College London, Sir Richard Sykes, comments: "This year's shortlist proves again that throughout the country, museums and galleries, both large and small, are alive and well. Not only that, they are constantly looking to innovate, with new and imaginative offerings for the visiting public." The judging panel for the 2005 Gulbenkian Prize represents a wide range of artistic, scientific and academic interests and comprises: Joan Bakewell CBE , broadcaster and writer Sir Neil Chalmers , Warden, Wadham College, Oxford and former Director of the Natural History Museum Michael Day , Chief Executive, Historic Royal Palaces Sokari Douglas Camp , sculptor Victoria Hislop , journalist and novelist Dr Elizabeth Mackenzie , Vice-Chairman, British Association of Friends of Museums The four finalists for the 2005 prize will be announced on Friday 18 th March. The winner will be announced on Thursday 26 th May in London during Museum and Galleries Month 2005. Last year’s winner was the Scottish Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh for its dramatic Landform by Charles Jencks – part sculpture, part garden, part land-art. The winner of the inaugural Gulbenkian Prize in 2003 was The National Centre for Citizenship and the Lawhoused in theGalleries of Justicein Nottingham. For more information, please visit the National Railway Museum website.
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