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St Barbe Museum

The Museum

St. Barbe Museum has been established to tell the special story of the coastal strip between the New Forest and The Solent, with its fascinating past and present.

St. Barbe Museum is an independent charitable organisation run by Lymington Museum Trust. The majority of our running costs are met by the Trust with support from the Heritage Lottery Fund, Hampshire County Council and New Forest District Council.

St. Barbe Museum

The area has seen a thriving salt industry, smugglers landing their illegal cargoes on the coast, and has a long tradition of innovative boat building. The museum's aim is to capture the unique flavour of life in the district and to bring first class art exhibitions into the town.

Quality Assured Visitor Attraction   The Solent Area   Registered Museum
 


 
Opening times:
Monday to Saturday 10.00am to 4.00pm
   
Admission:
Adult admission price to the museum and exhibitions. £3.00
   
Concession price (Senior Citizens - Students - Unemployed - Museum Assoc. Members). £2.00
   
Children under 16 £2.00
   
Children under 4 FREE
   
Family ticket (2 adults and up to 4 children) £6.00
   
National Arts Collections Fund Members FREE
   
Season Tickets
(1 year's entry to museum and all exhibitions)
 
Adults
Concessions (see above)
Family (see above)
£10.00
£7.00
£20.00
   
Bookings for Groups/Schools  
For details of group visit prices and school groups, please contact the museum (£2.00 per person in a group of more than 20 persons - 50p per child in School Parties).

Steve Marshall, Curator

Tel:   01590 676969
Fax:   01590 679997
email:       s.marshall@stbarbe-museum.org.uk
website:   www.stbarbe-museum.org.uk

 
Supported by
     
Heritage Lottery Fund Hampshire County Council New Forest District Council


 

This summer the St. Barbe Gallery in Lymington is mounting a major exhibition in celebration of the landscape of the New Forest, as seen by artists over the last 200 years.


The New Forest is unique, a landscape shaped by centuries of human activity and comprising a rich and varied history and ecology. Known for its ancient woodland, expanses of heath and Solent coast, the area has inspired resident artists and those who have visited since local vicar William Gilpin first championed the picturesque in the 18th century.

The exhibition gathers visions of the Forest from a range of artists known both locally and internationally who have drawn their inspiration from majestic oaks and beeches, gorse-dotted heaths, shingle beaches and, of course, the ubiquitous New Forest ponies.

Interpretations across the years have varied dramatically and among those included are the picturesque licence of Gilpin, the cosy rustic scenes of Victorian artist William Shayer, the equestrian art of Lucy Kemp-Welch and John Emms and the idiosyncratic visions of Richard Eurich and Sven Berlin. Among the larger and more dramatic works will be Kemp-Welch’s stunning oil painting of 1897 Colt Hunting in the New Forest on loan from the Tate and a magnificent William Morris tapestry designed by Heywood Sumner The Chace.

The exhibition also brings things right up to date with work by contemporary artists; New Forest residents such as Barry Peckham and Robert King and visitors like Kurt Jackson who bring their own distinctive interpretations to a landscape that has inspired artists across the centuries.

The gallery has also enlisted the help of those most closely engaged in the life of the Forest to provide a commentary on the paintings. Members of the Verderers Court, Agisters, Commoners, historians and artists will all provide an insight into the appearance and history of the landscape and the way in which it has been shaped by human and animals activity across the centuries.

The exhibition will also be marked by a series of events examining the way in which artists past and present have approached the subject of the New Forest. Exhibition curator Steve Marshall will be providing a gallery tour to give some of the background on the art and artists.

There will also be a series of artist-led workshops looking at different styles and media for portraying the unique qualities of the New Forest landscape:
13th August – Dan Powell: New Forest Coastal Landscape and Wildlife
14th August – Pete Gilbert: New Forest Landscapes
15th August – Pete Gilbert: New Forest Landscapes
25th August – Barry Peckham: New Forest Landscapes

Exhibition supported by Brewin Dolphin, New Forest National Park Authority and the Christopher Tower Foundation.