We work with partner organisations to involve adults in the gallery's learning programme. This work gives people the opportunity to explore our collections, make links with their own lives and work with practising artists. This can lead to participants being involved with gallery displays and events.
“I feel I am a valuable person in the community again...The project has made me challenge my belief in myself...”
Participant in Under my skin project
For a full list of projects, see below.
If you belong to a community group in Manchester and you’d like to find out more about community projects at Manchester Art Gallery, contact Ruth Edson or Leisa Gray on:
Tel: 0161 235 8877 or 0161 235 8844
Email: l.gray@manchester.gov.uk, r.edson@manchester.gov.uk
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A ceramic teapot revealing stories about the role of carers.
2006
This teapot was designed and made by local carers, taking a creative break from their home lives. The carers decided to create this piece using the gallery's teapots as inspiration. The idea of the teapot as a symbolic object is linked with the gesture of offering a cup of tea to someone in need of comfort and support.
Each section of the teapot tells one person's story shaped by their experience of being a carer, whilst the overall shape and colours reflect feelings of stability, generosity and fun.
The tea pot was on display in the Gallery of Craft and Design, between 2006 and 2008.
Image © Graeme Vaughan
Project partners: Carer's Strategy Team, Manchester City Council, Talbot House Support Service.
Funding: Neighbourhood Renewal Fund, Co-operative Insurance Society
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2003
Refugee women in Manchester explore well-being through art and culture.
From November 2002 to March 2003 Manchester Museum and Manchester Art Gallery ran a project for women from refugee and isolated communities in the Manchester area.
The aim of the project was to explore health and well-being using food and nutrition, art and culture as well as movement and dance. The project culminated in a final celebration and a film showing of the project.
Project partners: Manchester Museum, University of Manchester, South Trafford College
Funding: Neighbourhood Renewal Fund
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2007
25 March 2007 marked the 200th anniversary of the Abolition of the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Act. Eight museums and galleries in Greater Manchester have been commemorating this anniversary by exploring the legacy and impact of this history on the region. For more information visit the Revealing Histories website.
Throughout 2007, Community programmes ran a series of projects which reveal some of Manchester's hidden histories and share local people's understanding about objects in our museums and galleries.
Image&Identity: Remembering Slavery
Project partners: Arts About Manchester, Bolton Museum and Archive Service, Gallery Oldham, Museum of Science & Industry in Manchester, People's History Museum, The Manchester Museum, The Whitworth Art Gallery, Touchstones Rochdale
Funding: DCF, Renaissance North West, HLF
Image © Manchester City Galleries
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Introductory tours tailor made for your community group
On going
This is your gallery and you don’t need to know anything about art or have any special artistic skill to enjoy a visit. Textile artworks are created by participants with learning disabilities.
2004
Participants with learning disabilities worked with textile artists to create clothes and accessories to express their personal identities and celebrate creativity. From this, an exhibition ran from October 2004 to January 2005.
The project promoted a positive image of people with learning difficulties and helped to break down negative stereotypes.
Project partners: Start and Benchmark Furniture Design & Build (Manchester Mental Health and Social Care Trust) and Platt Lane Art Group (Manchester Learning Disability Partnership
Funding: Neighbourhood Renewal Fund
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2009
We worked in partnership with Venture Arts to create a new display of artworks made by adults with learning disabilities in response to pieces on permanent display at Manchester Art Gallery.

The artworks were created during a workshop programme led by professional artists and community development staff that included bespoke Gallery tours and development of the artworks at the Venture Arts studios. The artworks were displayed next to the pieces in the gallery's collection that inspired them and gallery visitors were encouraged to create their own responses by drawing or writing a postcard to add to the display.
"This project has offered Venture Arts staff and participants a rare opportunity to experience and work with art objects first hand rather through photos back at our studios. The Gallery sessions made the work much more accessible for the participants and some of the participants who had not been to the Gallery before keep asking when we are going back."
Venture Arts lead artist
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Find out more about our forthcoming exhibition involving three women's groups interpreting the gallery's Empire Marketing Board Poster collection.