Exhibitions
This is the Bolton Museum and Archive Service Exhibitions page. Here you will find details about current and future exhibitions.
Many exhibitions also have further pages which give more detail as well as images of some of the works and objects featured.
Further down the page is a list of previous exhibitons
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Now Showing
Open Art
Saturday 19 November – Saturday 7 January 2012
Now
in its fourth year, this popular open submission exhibition provides
professional and amateur artists and craftspeople, who live, work or
study in Bolton, the opportunity to exhibit and sell their work. Details
of how to submit entries will be available from September.
Worktown: ‘The Everyday’
Saturday 3 December 2011 – Saturday 18 February 2012
This exhibition shows photographs of Bolton taken by Anna White during her 2010/11 John Marriott Humphrey Spender scholarship year. The exhibition is supported by Bolton le Moors Rotary Club and the University of Bolton.
Anna was tasked with re-interpreting Humphrey Spender’s Worktown project of the 1930s, and for the last year have been documenting everyday life in Bolton. The poet Andrew McMillian has also created original works based on interviews taken in Bolton.
As part of the project in October 2011, Anna came into the Museum and outside the Town Hall to take photographs of Boltonians. Everyone who was photographed received a free copy of their image and all images will go into the Museums Bolton archive for further generations to look at; as well as some of them going into this exhibition. Come along and see if you are featured!
See below for news of forthcoming exhibitions
Forthcoming
Northern Legacy: Photographs by Harold Crompton Robinson (1927-2008)
Saturday 21st January – Saturday 7th April 2012
Turn back the clocks; it’s 1950s season at Bolton Museums!! To celebrate the Queens Diamond Jubilee next year all our exhibitions in 2012 will have a 1950s theme.
We begin the year by celebrating the work of photographer Harold Crompton Robinson, whose photographs, taken in the 1950s in Northern England, provide memories of a bygone era.
Harold’s preference for working in black and white film perfectly captures the stark realism of the industrial landscape depicted in many of his photos.
Leica and Rolleiflex cameras, dark room prints and newspaper cuttings will also be on display. Harold won many prizes for his work and is the only person to win the Bolton Evening News award in Bolton Camera Club’s annual exhibition three times in succession.
Copies of the prints will be available for sale at the Museum Shop.
‘Diamond Jubilee Bolton’: 60 years of life in Bolton 1952 to 2012
Saturday 5th May – Saturday 1th September
To help celebrate the Diamond Jubilee of Elizabeth II, this exhibition looks at life in Bolton over the 60 years of the Queen’s reign. How does life today compare with 1952?
From the changing townscape to 1950s’ fashion, there will be plenty to see, do . . . and make you think!
Previous Exhibition Details
Exhibitions are shown in date order, the most recent being at the top of the list.
| 13 August to 12 November 2011 | Hinduism in BoltonAs a part of our rolling series of exhibitions exploring different religions in Bolton, this was ‘Hinduism in Bolton’. The Hindu Forum produced this exhibition, which aims to highlight both religious and cultural life. Featuring images of Bolton temples and an example of scriptures in English, traditional Hindu and Indian costumes and information about Hindu deities. |
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| 30 July to 29 October 2011 | Nat Lofthouse: A CelebrationThis exhibition celebrated the life and career of the Bolton Wanderers legend, Nat Lofthouse. Appealing to fans, friends and the curious alike who were be able to see objects and photographs associated with Nat Lofthouse's long career. |
| 16 April to 2 July 2011 | Fakes and ForgeriesA prestigious exhibition of famous art fakes and forgeries will be coming to Bolton Museum. The exhibition, called Fakes and Forgeries, was originally put on by the Metropolitan Police’s Art and Antiques squad at the Victoria and Albert Museum in January this year, and includes the forgery of the Amarna Princess. Bolton will be the first town outside London to host this prestigious exhibition, which focuses on the work of several prominent forgers, the techniques that they used and how they were able to convince museums and antiques experts of the authenticity of their forgeries.The exhibition also explains some of the techniques which the police use when detecting fake artworks and tracking down their creators. |
| 19 February to 23 April 2011 | PHOTOBREIGHTMET
Funded through Bolton at Home's Housing Percent for Art service, the photobreightmet exhibition brings together a selection of images produced during this time. The photograph on the right is BOXER BOXER by Les Monaghan More details about the exhibition |
| 5 February to 27 March 2011 | Bolton Art and Photography
Bolton Art Circle is over 60 years old and again provides a social and friendly atmosphere where artists can support and learn from one another’s techniques. They arrange regular workshops, exhibitions, competitions, demonstrations and social events, as well as raising money for the Royal Bolton Hospital. The photograph on the right is a detail from Parincota by Steve Garland |
| 20 November 2010 to 22 January 2011 | Roger Hampson
Also on display were a selection of paintings, capturing the bleakness of the northern landscape and the warmth and humour of its people. A social realist, Hampson documented colliery life and the people who lived and worked in the mill towns of the north of England. He is represented in several public collections and his work was widely collected, notably by Lord Rhodes, L.S. Lowry and Princess Margaret. The painting on the right is Bessie in Regent Street, Bolton. Oil on board by Roger Hampson. |
| 31 July to 30 October 2010 | At the Edge: British Art 1950 to 2000
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| 29 May to 24 July 2010 | Works by Raoof Haghighi Raoof Haghighi was born in Shiraz in Iran. He started painting at the age of 3. He comes from an artistic family and his father taught him to paint. Painting has been a big part of Raoof’s life – he says that “painting is like breathing for me”.
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| 27 March to 22 May 2010 | Worktown Holiday Rituals |
| 20 to 24 March 2010 | Their Past Your FutureTheir Past Your Future was an MLA and Big Lottery funded project intended to increase young people's knowledge about conflict This exhibition involved the work of local primary schools and included poems, drawings and posters. Photos by and of the children doing activities throughout the project were also on display. |
| 30 January to 13 March 2010 | Cell by Date
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| 27 November 2009 to 23 January 2010 | Open Art Show |
| November 2009 to 9 January 2010 | The Nights are Drawing InThe exhibition shows prints from our permanent collection. They represent the typical days and nights of our British winters. Prose and poems about winter are also on display. |
| 21 February '09 to December '09 | Sports and Games in WorktownHumphrey Spender’s Worktown photographs were taken during half a dozen trips to Bolton in 1937 and 1938. The pictures he took helped reinforce Mass Observation’s chief findings on sports and games in Worktown.First, they highlighted how much drinking and gambling were part of this form of recreation.Second, they identified a tension between the leisure pursuits of the individual and the idea of the team: ‘The pub spirit is not the team spirit.’ This exhibition draws connections between Spender’s photographs and Mass Observation’s writings. This collection was purchased with the assistance of the V&A Purchase Grant Fund. |
| 13 June '09 to 7 November '09 | Simple Beginnings: The Story of Evolution
“From so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been, and are being evolved.” Charles Darwin, On the Origin of Species, 1859
Find out about more about Darwin, the story of his discovery and Evolutionary Theory Entrance to the exhibition is free. A wide range of events and activities will be taking place as part of the exhibition. The original chimpanzee photo can be seen on suneko's Flickr account. |
| 18 September '09 to 31 October '09 | Bolton Council of Mosques
It also included a large scale art piece made from photographs of the work created by young Muslim girls attending Bolton Council of Mosques youth club. |
| August '09 to 25 October '09 |
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| August '09 to 25 October '09 | Wearing Feathers
Wearing Feathers was a small display in the Central Library of objects from Bolton Museum & Archive Service. It showed how feathers have been worn by people in the past. Displaying fashionable feathers from the late 1800s and early 1900s and learn how this trend for feathers had disastrous consequences for birds. Feathers image by Flickr member Ana Cota |
| 1 August '09 to 5 September '09 |
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| 16 May '09 to 25 July '09 |
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| 14 March '09 to 23 May '09 |
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| 7 February '09 to 9 May '09 | This exhibition showed the influence of Egyptian art and culture on other civilisations, ranging from ivory furniture made for Assyrian kings in the eighth century BC to cotton woven in Bolton. |
| 13 December '08 to February 14 '09 |
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| 25 October '08 to January 31 '09 | Julian Trevelyan joined the Bolton Worktown observation team in 1937. He was one of a number of artists and poets invited by Tom Harrisson to record what it felt like to be in Bolton, in the form of paintings, collages and photographs. |
| 8 November '08 to January 31 '09 |
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| September 20 to November 22 '08 |
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| August 9 to November 1 '08 | This was an exhibition of original illustrations by artist Helen Flook, from bestselling author Terry Deary’s series of history books for children. Specially created for the ‘The Phantom and the Fisherman’ and ‘Gold in the Grave’ these illustrations bring to life Egyptian tales. |
| May 17 to September 6 '08 |
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| May 3 to August 2 '08 |
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| February 9 - April 26 '08 |
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| February 2 - May 3 '08 |
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| December 1 '07 - January 28 '08 |
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| November 17 '07 - January 12 '08 |
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| 18 August - November 24 '07 |
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| 21 July - November 3 '07 |
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| 5 May - 11 August '07 | |
| 11 May - 7 July '07 |
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| 5 - 26 May '07 |
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| February - 15 May '07 |
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| 12 - 30 April '07 | . |
| 10 March - 28 April '07 |
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| 24 February - 28 April '07 |
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| 16 Dec 2006 - 10 Feb '07 | |
| 14 Dec 2006 - 15 Jan '07 | Home From HomeFirsthand accounts taken from Bolton's immigrant communityBolton is truly a diverse place, with residents who have arrived here from every corner of the globe. Home from Home is a video-history account of some of the paths people have followed on their way to Bolton and consists of a number of interviews filmed over several months with local people who have settled in the town from all over the world.Over 80 local people were interviewed from over 40 different countries, resulting in the creation of a video-history archive of these interviews, which will be based at the central library for future public reference. Footage from a small selection of these interviews forms the exhibition, along with information about the people interviewed, and covers people’s reasons for leaving their home countries, why they came to Bolton, how they adapted to life here, the challenges they have faced and the customs and cultures they have managed to hold on to. The project and exhibition have been funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and conducted in partnership with Bolton Museum and Archive Service, Bolton Literacy Trust and Bolton Community Video. As a result of taking part in the project a number of volunteers have received training in oral history, interviewing and camerawork techniques. |
| 23 Sep - 1 Nov '06 | Bolton Art CircleLocal artists exhibition now in its 60th yearOn display were artworks created by members of the 200-strong group, one of the largest in the North West, in a range of media including watercolours, acrylics, pencil and pen and ink. The group has both professional and amateur artists among its membership who cover a wide variety of subjects such as landscapes, portraits, still lives, abstract work, seascapes and townscapes. Many of these works were shown as part of the exhibition, with the standard on display being matched only by its variety. |
| 23 Sep - 1 Nov '06 | Sensual AusterityTextile Minimalism by Maxine BristowMaxine Bristow’s showcase uncovers the multiple personalities and emotional currency attached to cloth. It takes hours, days, weeks and months of sheer toil, but the end results could justifiably stand alongside Robert Ryman or even Dan Flavin in terms of its uniformity and its silent rhythm. “There are two contexts to the work: the genre of minimalism - and just plain sewing,” says Bristow. The Bolton-born artist and designer has drawn not only upon her own background of textiles, with sewing skills passed down from her grandmother, but the North West as a whole, with its history of cotton mills and factories |
| 28 Jan - 12 Mar '05 | Carved EarthSculptural Ceramics by Halima CassellCarved Earth is a unique exhibition by one of the most exciting young ceramicists in Britain, Halima Cassell. Halima's work is a fusion of her multi-cultural background, inspired by a combination of her Asian roots, a fascination for African pattern work and a love of Islamic architectural geometry. Using heavily grogged clay, Halima works on a large scale and utilises a relatively thick surface into which she deeply carves complex geometric patterns. The exhibition is part of the Shisha initiated Parampara Programme. |
| 27 Sep '03 - 19 Jun '04 | Water WaterShowcasing Bolton's fine art collectionA fine art exhibition using the theme of water to showcase some great examples from Bolton Museum's art collection |
| 17 Sep '03 - 6 Oct '04 | Barry WhitePaintings by this artistMaking a painting for Barry is a process of discovery, an uncharted creative journey in which he has no preconceived idea of the final image. Instead the viewer experiences his paintings as they might experience an unfamiliar landscape. |
| 17 Sep '03 - 15 Jan '04 | The Drawing RoomDrawings from Bolton's collectionShowcasing over seventy drawings from Boltons amazing art collection. Works by famous names such as Turner, Millais, Ruskin, Rossetti, Lowry, Hepworth, as well as perhaps less familiar ones from the last 300 years will be on show. Portraits, figure studies, landscapes, city and seascapes,still life and illustrations will all feature in the exhibition |
| 17 Sep '03 - 15 Jan '04 | Thomas MoranExhibition of works by the famous Bolton artist and his wifeAn opportunity to see the fantastic oil painting ONearing Camp, on the Upper Colorado River, by the Bolton-born artist Thomas Moran alongside two oil paintings and several drawings and prints also held in Bolton's collection by the artist and his wife Mary Nimmo Moran. |
| 20 Nov '03 - 15 Jan '04 | Adventurous Wild FlowersMixed media exhibition around the subject of wild flowersFive artists have been commissioned by Gallery Oldham to create new artworks that investigate the impact that adventurous wild flowers have on our lives and on our natural heritage. Unique works have been produced, using sculpture, stories, installation, drawing, photography and sound, that look at weeds, Victorian plant collectors, the dandelion seed, urban landscapes and the impact of Himalayan balsam. |
In November 2009, Bolton at Home's Neighbourhood Management Team (Bolton East) commissioned photographer Les Monaghan to spend six months in Breightmet as the Photographer in Residence.
An exhibition of artistic talent from Bolton Art Circle, Bolton Camera Club and Bolton Digital Photographic Society.
Roger Hampson is a local artist who painted 20th century urban scenes from Bolton and the region during the post-war period. The exhibition featured early monoprints and linocuts, which established Hampson’s reputation as a distinctive graphic artist.
This touring exhibition of art from collections of Rochdale, Preston, Oldham and Bolton showed British artworks from the 1950s to the present day.
Raoof Haghighi was born in Shiraz in Iran. He started painting at the age of 3. He comes from an artistic family and his father taught him to paint. Painting has been a big part of Raoof’s life – he says that “painting is like breathing for me”. 
The exhibition tells the story of two people in prison cells. The first will be a Victorian cell, telling the story of Agnes Lawless, a prisoner in 1871. Agnes was a young servant girl who stole from her employer and received six month hard labour in Stangeways Prison as a result.


A fascinating exhibition exploring the history of mosques in Bolton. The exhibition featured a brief history of the first mosques in Bolton, and objects from the current 20 Mosques in Bolton; brought to life with stories from elders in the community.
Chemist display
Until 25 October 2009
Surreal Stories
Escape to the Country: Picturesque Landscapes


Egyptomania
Julian Trevelyan's Worktown
Bolton Art Circle and Bolton Camera Club
The Artist and the Author’s Tale
Face to Face
Bolton’s Treasures: Peruvian Mummies Unravelled
Bolton's Treasure: A Moran Family Affair

Wildwood: A photographic exhibition by Pete Davis
Mass Obseration: 70th Anniversary of Worktown
Open Art: works by Bolton artists
Second World War Art
Something old, something new
Death Equals All Things: OMNIA MORS AEQUAT
Bolton Philatelic Society 75th Anniversary
From a Modern Land
Gateway Protection Programme
Made In Africa
The Lost And The Found