Collection of National Significance.

Great to read this morning that the University of St Andrews Photography Collection, which in 2021 acquired the complete archive of my photographic career, has been formally recognised as being a Collection of National Significance by Museums and Galleries Scotland.

Black and white image of the hull of a large ship, with massive propellor, seen on the shipyard slipway. Below the ship are the tiny figures of five men.

Glasgow Shipyards, one of the images from my archive, ©Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert. Available in the Clydebuilt zines.

“St Andrews has been collecting photography since the early 1840s, and today this is one of the most important among the University’s collections. We are delighted that our nationally (and internationally) important collection has been recognised, and look forward to continuing to develop it in the years to come.” - Dr Katie Eagleton, University Librarian and Director of Collections and Museums at the University of St Andrews.

The University press release states, “The University of St Andrews Photographic collection has been Recognised as one of National Significance by Museums and Galleries Scotland. 

With approximately 1.6 million photographs in a wide variety of formats – including negatives on glass and film, lantern slides, prints, postcards, transparencies and born-digital images – the University of St Andrews is also thought to be the oldest photography collecting institution in the world.

The roots of this collection began with certain members of the St Andrews Literary and Philosophical Society, who worked with the English inventor of photography to develop and perfect the first photographic processes on paper in the late 1830s. These early experiments with salted paper now extend to the latest digital printing processes. 

 The collection covers subject areas from social documentary to Scottish landscape, travel and exploration. It is uniquely important due to its completeness, depth and rarity, and provides extensive documentation of the social and cultural transformation of Scotland and its forays into the world, for nearly two hundred years. 

The announcement coincides with the collection moving to its new home in the centre of St Andrews, where the entire collection can be more accessible to researchers and the wider public.”

Quoted in The Scotsman, Lucy Casot, chief executive of Museums Galleries Scotland, the national development body for Scotland’s museums sector, said: “Congratulations to the University of St Andrews on being recognised as a collection of national significance. Scotland’s Recognised Collections of National Significance are a valuable reminder of the breadth and quality of what our museums and galleries have to offer. I hope this achievement and status helps further their work to conserve their collection and also share them and the stories they tell with their communities and wider audiences.”

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