The Jewish Museum London has been given a £1m funding enhance by the UK authorities which can assist the establishment develop plans for a brand new everlasting residence within the capital. Lisa Nandy, the UK’s tradition secretary, introduced the money injection on the launch final week of Two Rooms, the museum’s interim exhibition house on the JW3 venue on Finchley Street in north London.
“Two Rooms is a small, momentary house, a form of testing floor for concepts and exhibitions, till they discover a new, everlasting residence, scheduled to open by 2030,” stated a museum spokesperson. The funding may also help the museum’s ongoing viewers growth and outreach work.
Two new exhibitions drawn have opened within the interim house: Legacy: The Story of the Jewish Household who Based J. Lyons and Fed Britain and Tree of Life: Tales from Jewish Museum London’s Assortment (till 18 October).
The museum’s Camden City website closed in July 2023 as a consequence of monetary pressures and the positioning was ultimately bought. In a press assertion, the museum stated it was going through “unanticipated rising prices” and in the end wanted to develop into “extra sustainable into the longer term”. The museum had additionally skilled an precedent days of “monetary disaster” in 2019, prompting a evaluate of its donor-dependent enterprise mannequin.
The UK Division for Tradition, Media and Sport (DCMS) has additionally awarded £100,000 to Manchester Jewish Museum to help its group outreach work.
In line with Museums Journal, the DCMS’ funding in museums got here out of discussions with Jewish leaders following a Downing Road summit on antisemitism final month. On the Two Rooms launch, which occurred as the primary Jewish Cultural Month was ending, Nandy referenced the latest spate of antisemitic assaults within the UK.
“We’re gathering at a time, frankly, the place in each nook of our nation we’re seeing the ties that bind us fraying, and nowhere is that this extra obvious than the appalling assaults we have seen on the Jewish group,” Nandy is quoted as saying in Museums Journal.
The tradition secretary instructed the Jewish Chroniclein the meantime: “One of many issues that basically strikes me when speaking to younger folks within the UK rising up as we speak is that many younger folks will not have come into contact with a member of the Jewish group or will not know that they’ve.”
The federal government can be working with Arts Council England on an impartial audit of its processes for dealing with antisemitism.









