'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display

The British Small Craft display, installed in 1963 as part of the Science Museum’s new Sailing Ships Gallery, comprised of a sequence of twenty showcases containing models of British boats—including fishing boats such as luggers, coracles, and cobles—arranged primarily by geographical region. The br...

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Main Author: Fenner, James Lyon
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14494/
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author Fenner, James Lyon
author_facet Fenner, James Lyon
author_sort Fenner, James Lyon
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The British Small Craft display, installed in 1963 as part of the Science Museum’s new Sailing Ships Gallery, comprised of a sequence of twenty showcases containing models of British boats—including fishing boats such as luggers, coracles, and cobles—arranged primarily by geographical region. The brainchild of the Keeper William Thomas O’Dea, the nautical themed gallery was complete with an ocean liner deck and bridge mezzanine central display area. It contained marine engines and navigational equipment in addition to the numerous varieties of international historical ship and boat models. Many of the British Small Craft displays included accessory models and landscape settings, with human figures and painted backdrops. The majority of the models were acquired by the museum during the interwar period, with staff actively pursuing model makers and local experts on information, plans and the miniature recreation of numerous regional boat types. Under the curatorship supervision of Geoffrey Swinford Laird Clowes this culminated in the temporary ‘British Fishing Boats’ Exhibition in the summer of 1936. However the earliest models dated back even further with several originating from the Victorian South Kensington Museum collections, appearing in the International Fisheries Exhibition of 1883. With the closure and removal of the Shipping Gallery in late 2012, the aim of this project is to produce a reflective historical and cultural geographical account of these British Small Craft displays held within the Science Museum. In this process it reveals the hidden stories behind the collection and individual boat models. The research therefore considers the former British Small Craft display in terms of its geographical visual and textual presentation of national and local identity, the cultural transference of knowledge from local regional areas to a national/international stage, its evocation of coastal and river landscapes, and its techniques of landscape/seascape miniaturisation in mid twentieth century Britain.
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spelling nottingham-144942025-02-28T11:31:14Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14494/ 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display Fenner, James Lyon The British Small Craft display, installed in 1963 as part of the Science Museum’s new Sailing Ships Gallery, comprised of a sequence of twenty showcases containing models of British boats—including fishing boats such as luggers, coracles, and cobles—arranged primarily by geographical region. The brainchild of the Keeper William Thomas O’Dea, the nautical themed gallery was complete with an ocean liner deck and bridge mezzanine central display area. It contained marine engines and navigational equipment in addition to the numerous varieties of international historical ship and boat models. Many of the British Small Craft displays included accessory models and landscape settings, with human figures and painted backdrops. The majority of the models were acquired by the museum during the interwar period, with staff actively pursuing model makers and local experts on information, plans and the miniature recreation of numerous regional boat types. Under the curatorship supervision of Geoffrey Swinford Laird Clowes this culminated in the temporary ‘British Fishing Boats’ Exhibition in the summer of 1936. However the earliest models dated back even further with several originating from the Victorian South Kensington Museum collections, appearing in the International Fisheries Exhibition of 1883. With the closure and removal of the Shipping Gallery in late 2012, the aim of this project is to produce a reflective historical and cultural geographical account of these British Small Craft displays held within the Science Museum. In this process it reveals the hidden stories behind the collection and individual boat models. The research therefore considers the former British Small Craft display in terms of its geographical visual and textual presentation of national and local identity, the cultural transference of knowledge from local regional areas to a national/international stage, its evocation of coastal and river landscapes, and its techniques of landscape/seascape miniaturisation in mid twentieth century Britain. 2014-12-11 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14494/1/Fenner_Thesis_2014_-_FINAL_FINAL.pdf Fenner, James Lyon (2014) 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. ship models model boats museum displays Science Museum
spellingShingle ship models
model boats
museum displays
Science Museum
Fenner, James Lyon
'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
title 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
title_full 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
title_fullStr 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
title_full_unstemmed 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
title_short 'British Small Craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
title_sort 'british small craft': the cultural geographies of mid-twentieth century technology and display
topic ship models
model boats
museum displays
Science Museum
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/14494/