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The National Art Library repositioned

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Susan Lambert*
Affiliation:
Word & Image Department, Victoria and Albert Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 2RL, UK
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Abstract

Archives, libraries and museums have for some time been trying out the advantages, for themselves and for each other, of working together and sharing long-term aims. These independent sorties were given a coercive impetus in April 2000 when the Government-funded Library & Information Commission and the Museums & Galleries Commission were replaced by the single-word Resource, to bring together ‘strategic advocacy, leadership and advice to enable museums, archives and libraries to touch people’s lives and inspire their imagination, learning and creativity’. At the Victoria and Albert Museum, the National Art Library, which already included the Museum’s Archives, has recently merged with Prints, Drawings and Paintings to form the Word & Image Department. The integration of the National Art Library with a department that has traditionally put greater emphasis on its curatorial role has suggested new paths of development for us all and, in particular, an enhanced contribution for the new Department across the full range of material culture as represented in the V&A’s collections. Thus the merger has acted as a catalyst to put into practice aspects of the Government’s agenda within a single institution. This article outlines some of the developments proposed for the Word & Image Department, with particular emphasis on implications for the National Art Library, its staff, collections and users.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 2002

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References

1. I should like to thank all my colleagues in the Word & Image Department for working in a collaborative and generous way towards our repositioning and Guy Baxter, Doug Dodds, Nazek Ghaddar, Serena Kelly, John Meriton, Liz Miller and Rowan Watson in particular for their help with this article.Google Scholar
3. Currently the whole of the Word & Image Department is undergoing restructuring and repositioning. This article concentrates to a greater extent on the National Art Library than on other parts of the Department because of the audience for which it is intended.Google Scholar
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