AWARD HISTORY

Scroll down for details of the institutions, projects and individuals that have been awarded DAS grants and bursaries for Collections Access (CAG), acquisitions, DAS study tours and research.

COLLECTIONS ACCESS GRANTS

Image: Hand-painted walls © David Parr House

David Parr, a decorative artist with F. R. Leach & Sons who worked with many of the top designers and architects of the day, purchased a modest terraced house in 1886. For the next 40 years he decorated the house in the style of the grand interiors he worked on every day. The house became a microcosm of the Arts and Crafts era. The home was preserved by Parr’s granddaughter who lived there for over 85 years. In 2014 a charity was set-up to conserve and open the house to the public which it did in 2019. Within the collection is much archival material such as photographs, letters and notebooks and the CAG (£5000) is for a special display case to exhibit this type of material, including sketchbooks loaned by the family, in changing, thematic displays.

Image: Bird and Fish Rice Dish by William De Morgan, c. 1890 © Trustees of the De Morgan Foundation

The De Morgan Collection comprises around 2500 ceramics, drawings and paintings by visionary artist spouses William (1839-1917) and Evelyn (1855-1919) De Morgan. The Foundation displays its collection at its museum in Barnsley (at Cannon Hall), its partner venues at Watts Gallery, the Ashmolean and Wightwick Manor as well as in touring exhibitions. In 2024 the stock of the 2014 guidebook to the collection will run out. The CAG (£5000) will allow the De Morgan Foundation to produce a new guidebook incorporating much new research and new images. Through engaging narrratives, vivid imagery and detailed descriptions, readers will gain a deeper understanding of the historical context and artistic significance of 50 key artworks from the collection.

 

Image: The Waldegrave door handle, commissioned for Strawberry Hill by Lady Frances Waldegrave (1821-1879), © Strawberry Hill House & Gardens. Photo: Killian O'Sullivan

Strawberry Hill House, renowned for its Gothic Revival architecture and association with Horace Walpole, has a rich but as yet unexplored later 19th century history. The house was occupied, furnished, and decorated with sumptuous collections by two owners during this period: Lady Frances Waldegrave and the Stern family, particularly Herbert (1851-1919) and his wife Geraldine (1882-1927). The CAG (£5000) supports a project to research, document and preserve the tangible signs of the Waldegrave and Stern presence at the house, including decorative arts objects, architectural elements such as stained glass, tiles and an extensive collection of wallpapers, and Victorian-era renovations. This project is the starting point for integrating these figures into the permanent interpretation of the house and creating a special Waldegrave and Stern webpage on Strawberry Hill House website. 

 

 

 

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2019 Kelmscott Manor/Society of Antiquaries to enable the redisplay in a purpose-built case of the important embroidery The Homestead and the Forest, 1890, designed by May Morris and embroidered by Jane Morris (£2500) 

 

Blackwell Master Bedroom

MUSEUM ACQUISITIONS

Horrockses Fabric

DAS STUDY TOUR BURSARIES

 

The institutions listed are where the awardees worked when applying for the bursary.

RESEARCH TRAVEL GRANT

 AD HOC GRANTS