UK (University of Leicester) Millions of records from UK collections to be unlocked by new Museum Data Service

Objects and knowledge from the UK’s world-class museums will soon be easier to find and work with, thanks to an ambitious collaboration between Art UK, Collections Trust and the University of Leicester. With generous funding from Bloomberg Philanthropies, work has started on a new Museum Data Service that will launch in autumn 2023 and transform the way we all can work with these collections.

The service will pool millions of object records – decades’ worth of knowledge from UK institutions large and small – and share them as the raw material for countless public and research uses. The service will also provide high-level information about each collection.

The first major user of data from the new infrastructure will be Art UK, which already brings more than 300,000 artworks, from 3,400 collections, to an online audience of over 4.5m people a year. The Museum Data Service will allow Art UK to scale up its operation adding millions more artworks over time. Thanks to support from Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Digital Accelerator Programme, Art UK will also build a new state-of-the-art e-commerce platform to generate much-needed commercial income for its partner collections.

Collections Trust will use its longstanding relationship with hundreds of smaller museums to help them make the most of the new service, and broker data-based projects that demonstrate the Museum Data Service’s game-changing potential for the UK museum sector as a whole.

The University of Leicester’s new Institute for Digital Culture completes the partnership, bringing a research dimension to the design and use of the service, the data expertise and technical capacity of a leading university, and a bridge to longer-term infrastructure ambitions for the wider digital humanities.

With guidance from the Open Data Institute on sustainable data stewardship, the three founding partners will set up a new joint organisation by spring 2024 to run the core service beyond the start-up phase and for decades to come. Until then Art UK, as the recipient of the two-year funding award from Bloomberg Philanthropies, will manage the grant. The governance structure for the Museum Data Service will be announced soon.

Professor Nishan Canagarajah, President and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leicester, says: “Providing access to information and empowering people with knowledge is key to our mission. Appropriately for one of the first major projects for our new Institute for Digital Culture, we will work with partners to unlock millions of records in museums across the UK, making them visible for research, for creativity, for inspiration – for everyone.

“I am grateful for the generous support of Bloomberg Philanthropies that will allow this major national infrastructure initiative to be realised through our partnership with Art UK and the Collections Trust. This project embodies the principles the Institute was established upon: assembling progressive thinking and diverse talents from across the research and cultural sectors, working collaboratively to make culture accessible to all.”

Dr Gus Casely-Hayford, Director of V&A East, says: “The last three years have been transformative and testing for our sector, we have had to face into extreme challenge and think about where the big opportunity for the future might lie. It has been a period in which many of us caught up with the Art UK vison, have thought about the benefits of greater collaboration across the digital space, how sharing our art collections might offer paradigm-shifting collaborative and dynamic engagement potential across other sectors. I am deeply grateful to Art UK for their vision and leadership.”

Dr Catherine Eagleton, Director of Libraries and Museums, University of St Andrews, says: “The new Museum Data Service is exciting for universities and researchers, making it much easier to search across collections to find particular types of object or specimen, to research what was acquired in a particular time period or from a particular place, or to investigate objects related to an individual or event across a number of collections. It will also mean researchers can more easily discover the richness of our local and regional museums across the UK, alongside the collections taken care of by national museums.”

Rebecca Bailey, Programme Director, Towards a National Collection, says: “Towards a National Collection warmly congratulates the Museum Data Service on their significant funding award and will follow the development of the initiative with great interest. We look forward to sharing learnings between our two programmes on how the UK cultural heritage sector can increasingly connect and share its outstanding digital collections.”

Louise Burke, Managing Director of the Open Data Institute, says: “As museums must properly steward knowledge about our societies and civilisations, so must we steward data about those collections. We are excited to be working with the University of Leicester, Art UK and the Collections Trust to support the Museum Data Service in becoming an important data institution in the culture sector.”

Camilla Hampshire, Museums Manager and Cultural Lead, Exeter City Council, and Chair of Collections Trust, says: “The Museum Data Service can’t come soon enough for hard-pressed staff and volunteers. Dynamic collections need dynamic collections information, which is really hard for individual museums to achieve by themselves. The new service will help us all collaborate better with our audiences – and each other. Collections Trust is hugely grateful to Bloomberg Philanthropies for seeing the transformational power of this project, and proud to be working with Art UK and Leicester to make it happen.”

Andrew Ellis, Director of Art UK, says: “All of us at Art UK are hugely grateful to Bloomberg Philanthropies for inviting us and our partners to participate in this farsighted investment programme focused on supporting cultural institutions invest in digital infrastructure. The benefits to our audiences and participating collections will be significant in terms of the growth in artworks joining Art UK and the growth in commercial income. But the real excitement here is to be working with Collections Trust and the University of Leicester on such a transformational initiative for the wider sector, one that will do so much to reduce silos and grow knowledge sharing.”