Royal Leamington Spa
Royal Pump Rooms
The Parade
Royal Leamington Spa
CV32 4AA

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Changing Exhibitions

What's On

CLOCKING ON: Working Life in the 20th Century

28 June - 7 September 2008

A new exhibition at Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum showing 28 June – 7 September will explore what it was like to work in Warwick District during the 20th Century. The exhibition, CLOCKING ON, presents the experiences of workers at four of the biggest employers in the region, Automotive Products (AP), Flavel, Ford and Potterton.

During the 20th Century, social reform and the impact of two World Wars radically influenced the workplace in Britain. The minimum wage was introduced, women joined the workforce in greater numbers than ever before and working hours were reduced. Using stories and memories from employees of the factories, the exhibition shows workplaces that offered much more that just a place to earn a living. Anecdotes from former employees describe friendships, opportunities to take part in sporting and leisure activities and a sense of community.

During World War Two this community feeling was extremely strong; rolls of honour from both AP and Ford commemorating those who lost their lives feature in the exhibition. Other exhibits include an ashtray that was given as first place prize in a relay race at a Flavel sports day and examples of products made by the factories. Visitors can learn about different jobs in the factories and find out about an average day at work by choosing a character and following a trail around the exhibition.

Warwickshire through the eyes of a Victorian tourist


A unique view of Victorian Warwickshire can be seen in a new display at Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum in the Royal Pump Rooms. The display features a portfolio of drawings by Mr William Colliss, an amateur artist, which he titled ‘SKETCHES TAKEN IN WARWICKSHIRE DURING HOLIDAY TRIP AUGUST 1867’. The drawings provide a quirky and highly personal view of Warwickshire at a time when Royal Leamington Spa, where he stayed with relatives, was changing from a spa resort into a residential town. The portfolio, which contains 41 pages of sketches and watercolour paintings, was bought by the Art Gallery & Museum at an auction held in Stratford-on-Avon on 28 February 2008.

In the preface Colliss explains that the pictures were ‘original drawings done on the spot’ in pencil and then, to avoid fading or rubbing out, gone over in ink. In the case of the drawings of Warwick Castle, though, most of these were done from memory because ‘the attendant an antient [sic] Lady seized my portfolio from under my arm, petulantly remarking “No sketching allowed here”. This blank book was returned to me on leaving the lodge after looking over the castle’. Colliss includes an amusing, cartoon-like drawing of this confrontation.

The portfolio contains two maps locating some of the places he visited around Leamington. These include some of the leading tourist sights of the time: Warwick Castle (shown in four scenes, including the one showing his sketch book being confiscated), Kenilworth Castle (three) and Stratford-on-Avon (two). These remain major tourist destinations today, but there are also drawings taken of sights which are no longer so popular: Guy’s Cliffe house and mill (six scenes) and a sketch of the old oak tree on the outskirts of Leamington said to mark the centre of England. There are also a number of views of the town of Warwick, as well as ones taken in Leamington and surrounding villages such as Lillington, Milverton, Offchurch, Radford Semele and Whitnash.

The census records from 1861 and 1871 suggest that at the time of his holiday Colliss, although born in Bognor, Sussex, was living in Lambeth and working as a ‘Commercial Clerk to East India Agents’. He died in January 1926 at Freshwater, Isle of Wight.

Temporary Displays: Literary Leamington: A history of reading and writing

Writing is all around us and plays an often unacknowledged part of our daily lives. We know which shop to go to because of the sign outside, write text messages to arrange a meeting with friends and catch up with daily events by reading the newspaper on the journey home. To mark the importance of writing and reading, 2008 has been designated the Year of Reading.

As part of the celebrations, Leamington Spa Art Gallery & Museum has a new display, Literary Leamington. The first part of the display explores the development of writing from the earliest cuneiform symbols used in Mesopotamia in 3000 BC through to the Latin alphabet, which forms the basis of the written language we use today.

The second part of the display looks at literary figures who have been inspired by Leamington and the surrounding area. Charles Dickens based a scene in Dombey and Son in Holly Walk and Sir Walter Scott set his historic novel Kenilworth at Kenilworth Castle.

Objects on display include:

Hieroglyphic stones from Ancient Egypt
Portable writing box, c.1863
Print of Kenilworth Castle in the 16th century.

Past Exhibitions Archive