Putting Preston’s art history online

Art UK has space for the Harris’s
collection of topographical watercolours

A colorful abstract painting of flowers with shades of pink and green.

The Guardian carried a report today on the appointment of a new chair of the Art UK charity, which puts online artworks from the UK’s public art collection.

It came with the announcement that the charity has reached a million artworks on its database.

Included in that total are more than a thousand artworks from the Harris Museum and Art Gallery.

The new chairman of Art UK said the charity had ‘only scratched the surface’ of the hidden treasures to be found in the store rooms of Britain’s public museums and art galleries.

That certainly goes for the Harris. When Art UK was launched ten years ago it accepted only oil paintings and the Harris duly submitted those that it held.

Later, ArtUK expanded its collection to include other works of art, including watercolours. The Harris has a major collection of topographical watercolours that would be of immense value to the city’s local historians.

When I emailed Lindsey McCormick, the Harris’s fine arts curator, before Christmas to check on progress in getting those online, she replied: ‘We are still working behind the scenes getting our stored collections back into the Harris and in order. When this is completed, Iโ€™ll hopefully have some time to work on getting more of our collection online.’

That can’t come too soon for Preston’s local historians.

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2026/feb/23/art-uk-online-public-art-database-ben-terrett


Discover more from preston history

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply