North East Museums

North East Museums

Museums, Historical Sites, and Zoos

Newcastle upon Tyne, England 6,844 followers

Art and heritage at the heart of North East England

About us

We manage nine museums and galleries across Tyneside and the Archives for Tyne and Wear, attracting around 1 million visits a year. We run these venues and services on behalf of the local authorities of Gateshead, Newcastle, North and South Tyneside, and Newcastle University. From 1 April 2025 Northumberland County Council will join our partnership, and we will manage Woodhorn Museum, Hexham Old Gaol and Morpeth Chantry Bagpipe Museum on its behalf. We care for over 1.1 million objects - many of international importance - in archives, art, science and technology, archaeology, military and social history, fashion and natural sciences. Our award-winning formal and informal learning activities focus on natural history, local heritage, art, science, technology, engineering and maths and inspire 150,000 children and young people each year. We work with partners to engage local communities, offering creative activities inspired by our collections to help them to improve their health and wellbeing. Our venues: Arbeia, South Shields Roman Fort Discovery Museum Great North Museum: Hancock Hatton Gallery Laing Art Gallery Segedunum Roman Fort Shipley Art Gallery South Shields Museum & Art Gallery Stephenson Steam Railway Tyne & Wear Archives We are the largest cultural collective in the North East and we'd love to work with you to ensure art, culture and heritage continue to make a positive impact.

Industry
Museums, Historical Sites, and Zoos
Company size
51-200 employees
Headquarters
Newcastle upon Tyne, England
Type
Partnership
Founded
1974
Specialties
art, culture, heritage, archives, wellbeing, conservation, family, eduction, health, schools, exhibitions, learning, collections, STEM, community outreach, wellbeing, and events

Locations

Employees at North East Museums

Updates

  • FORMERLY TYNE & WEAR ARCHIVES & MUSEUMS...    From today Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums is known as North East Museums and we have a new visual identity to match!   We’ve been planning this for a while to better reflect our mission and commitments and the timing is perfect as we enter a new exciting phase as an organisation.    From 1 April 2025, Northumberland County Council will join our partnership, and we will manage Woodhorn Museum, Hexham Old Gaol and Morpeth Chantry Bagpipe Museum alongside the other nine venues we run on behalf of our partners. We’re looking forward to expanding our work with visitors and communities into Northumberland.    Everything we do is built on successful partnerships – so thank you for your ongoing support!

    • Black and white archive photo of a cycle race in Washington, UK. Logo has been overlaid, reading 'North East Museums'
  • COMPLIMENTARY REFRESHMENTS WITH YOUR VENUE HIRE  We’re excited to offer an exclusive treat to make your next event at North East Museums even more special. Book a space in our museums in the month of January or February 2025 and receive a complimentary round of refreshments [drinks] for your guests.  Whether it’s a corporate event, team meeting or networking reception, this is our way of saying thank you for choosing to host your special moments with us at Discovery Museum, Great North Museum: Hancock or Laing Art Gallery. To book your event, contact North East Museums Sales & Events Team via:  ⭐ Online enquiry form – link in the comments!  ⭐ Email venuehire@northeastmuseums.org.uk  ⭐ Telephone on 0191 277 2303 (open weekdays 9am-5pm until 23 December 2024 and reopen from 6 January 2025)    Bookings must be confirmed by midday on 17 January 2025. To receive this offer, please quote ‘VHJAN’ to your event coordinator on booking. Terms & Conditions apply.    We look forward to welcoming you to our venues in 2025! 

    • The Laing Art Gallery main hall, lit up in red and purple lights with plants hanging from the ceiling. A popcorn machine stands on the left, amongst a group of people.
  • FILL YOUR HEART, INSTEAD OF YOUR CART ❤     “North East Museums venues are more than just places to visit—they’re spaces that are accessible to all, where curiosity is sparked, creativity is nurtured, and our community’s stories can be kept alive for generations to come.” - Cogan, Supporter It’s the time of year for giving to the people and charities you love. You can support your favourite museums and galleries by giving just £5 a month (or a £60 one off donation) to help us keep art and heritage at the heart of the North East.    Our Supporters receive:  🎄 invitations to VIP exhibition preview events (for you and a guest of your choice)  🎄 priority booking for exhibitions and events  🎄 regular emails about what’s on at our venues   🎄 quarterly updates about the impact of your support.    Thank you! Link to donate in the comments. 

    • A man standing in front of an art exhibition at the Laing Art Gallery
  • AGE CONCERN CHRISTMAS PARTY AT SOUTH SHIELDS MUSEUM 🎄 We had a great time last week at South Shields Museum & Art Gallery for the Age Concern Tyneside South History Group Christmas party.   We’ve built up such a good relationship with this group! As well as festive celebrations, we deliver enriching activities for over 55s all year round through our Platinum Programme. Over the last five years, we’ve delivered over 180 sessions with 3,000 older people. At North East Museums, we recognise the positive health impacts of cultural participation. Our targeted community programmes respond to the needs of the North East population and are rooted in the five Ways to Wellbeing:  ⭐ Being connected  ⭐ Being active  ⭐ Taking notice  ⭐ Giving to others  ⭐ Learning new things.

    • A group of 13 people stood in South Shields Museum and Art Gallery. They all wear Christmas jumpers and Christmas decorations adorn the exhibition space, including multi-coloured lights hanging from the ceiling and paper chains on the walls.
  • TURNER IN NEWCASTLE MAKES THE TOP 10 The Laing Art Gallery’s original exhibition ‘Turner: Art, Industry & Nostalgia’ is featured in The Guardian art critic Jonathan Jones’ top 10 art exhibitions of 2024. The centrepiece was a loan of ‘The Fighting Temeraire’ from The National Gallery – but Julie Milne, Lizzie Jacklin and the Laing team built a major show around it, borrowing other works by JMW Turner from collections around the UK. The exhibition ran from May – September 2024 and was hugely popular with North East Museums visitors. Jonathan Jones says: 🗣 Tugging The Fighting Temeraire to Tyneside for this exhibition, as part of the National Treasures project that sent masterpieces out of London, was inspired... 🗣 JMW Turner’s crimson and bronze, tear-jerkingly smoky vision of a great ship being heaved off to die resonated with the post-industrial story of Newcastle... 🗣 Photographs of 1970s shipyards and backstreets by Chris Killip were juxtaposed with Turner’s nautical paintings and watercolours to heartbreaking effect. Keith Merrin Sheryl McGregor Newcastle City Council NewcastleGateshead Initiative Newcastle NE1

  • As 2024 draws to a close, we’ve been reflecting on a very busy year for North East Museums (formerly Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums) and looking forward to exciting developments in 2025.  Thank you for your support and may we wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! If you don’t celebrate Christmas, we hope you have an enjoyable break. Image: The Spence family ice-skating on a frozen pond in the 1800s. Tyne & Wear Archives collection.

    • Sepia photograph of a family ice skating.
  • EDINBURGH CASTLE 🏰 The painting seen here, Edinburgh from Castle Street by William Crozier, is currently on show in the Romance to Realities: The Northern Landscape and Shifting Identities exhibition at the Laing Art Gallery. 🎨    Born in Edinburgh, Crozier studied at Edinburgh College of Art before moving to Paris in the 1920s. There he was exposed to the revolutionary new approach of Cubism with its emphasis on fragmentation and abstraction.    In this eerily empty work showing his home city, the buildings are represented as simple geometric blocks with intense contrast between the sunlit facades and heavily shaded sides.    📸: William Crozier, Edinburgh from Castle Street, c.1930, image courtesy of the Fleming Collection. 

    • An impressionist painting of Edinburgh Castle from a street view. Buildings line the street on both sides, with a white monument depicting a man at the bottom. Edinburgh Castle is located at the top of the painting, at the peak of a hill in much less detail.
  • MUHAMMAD ALI AT SOUTH SHIELDS 🥊 Did you know that boxing legend Muhammad Ali (1942–2016) came to South Shields in the summer of 1977? Ali was the World Heavyweight Champion at the time, so his Tyneside visit drew huge crowds.    Ali came to our region to promote boys’ boxing clubs. He came at the invitation of Johnny Walker, a painter and decorator from South Tyneside who had once boxed himself. Johnny idolised Ali and had travelled to America in search of his hero, persuading him to come to an area of the world that the boxing champ had never even heard of.    Ali stated that he would remember his visit to South Shields for the rest of his life. He was struck by the immense reception and support he received while visiting. He was quoted as saying “To think I have so many friends in South Shields. I am going to tell them in America!”.   ✍️ Text adapted from the blog post written by Assistant Keeper of History at South Shields Museum and Art Gallery, Adam Bell.  📷 Images from our collection and courtesy of Fred Muddit of Fietscher Fotos, courtesy of South Tyneside Libraries. 

    • A black and white image of Muhammad Ali greeting a crowd. He is wearing a white three piece suit and is accompanied by his wife, and reporters.
    • A leaflet, black text on white card reading "Personal Appearance of Muhammad Ali in Ron Taylor's Boxing & Wrestling Academy on Saturday 16th July 1977 at 10am (doors open 9.30am). Proceeds in aid of Charity... £1.00"
    • A black and white image of Muhammad Ali on a double decker bus waving at a large crowd.
    • A black and white image of Muhammad Ali over the bonnet of a car outside a large town hall. He is reaching out to hold a child's hand.
    • Pair of red and yellow coloured junior boxing gloves. Signed on back in biro by Muhammad Ali during his visit to South Shields on July 16th 1977.
  • MITTENS 🧤 It’s not long now!  This painting by Ralph Hedley shows a granddaughter with her grandfather getting ready for Christmas. Two little sprigs of holly and mistletoe in the window brighten up this North-East cottage. The little girl’s grandfather lovingly helps her put on her new mittens, with the wrapping paper on his knee. It looks like she has two gifts, a doll and an orange, lying on the table. She also has smart new clogs, and a knitted scarf! 🎨 'Mittens', Ralph Hedley, oil on canvas (1907) This painting is currently on display in the Laing Art Gallery’s Café. 

    • A painting of a grandfather and granddaughter in a cottage. The grandfather sits on a wooden chair with his jacket hanging on the back. He is putting a red mitten on his granddaughter's right hand. The mittens match her red and blue striped winter hat. Two sprigs of Christmas holly and mistletoe hang on the window. A doll and an orange lie on the table, next to a grandfather clock.

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