The principles of design should form a portion of any permanent system of national education.
So recommended the 1836 Select Committee on Arts and their Connection with Manufactures. Sir Henry Cole was even more blunt: “Straight lines are a national want”, he wrote. And, “unless you begin with the child and teach him the ABC of drawing, you have little chance of establishing any permanent system of art-instruction in this country”.
The origins of the Victoria and Albert Museum are famously broad – the East India Company collection; Prince Albert’s reformist vision; the 1851 Great Exhibition. But one of this Museum’s founding forces was the Mechanics’ Institute movement of the 1830s and the system of the design schools that emerged in the mid-19th century. Fear over the poor quality of British design relative to its European competitors (highlighted in the Hyde Park exhibits) led to the rethinking of art education from first principles. Rather than just fine art, Britain needed an education system which supported industrial design. And the South Kensington Museum was to act as the hub of this design school movement – training teachers, reforming curricula, and lending its collection across the country.
Today, that work goes on as day in and day out we champion the value of object-based learning across the country. Over 350,000 were involved in our education programme over the last year, with well over 100,000 children learning about art, design and performance through the museum. Alongside the Department for Education and Arts Council England we have been heavily involved in the Museums and Schools Initiative supporting learning outside the classroom – which we know can be transformative for pupils who don’t normally tend to access museums or cultural events. In Lancashire, 87% of primary schools in the region have now visited a Pennine Lancashire Museums venue.
Naturally our focus at the V&A is on the particular need to encourage the teaching of Design and Technology. As our creative economy grows, international competition accelerates, and the provision of creative subjects is squeezed, there is a desperate urgency around art and design education. So that is why the V&A has decided to step in. This autumn the new Design and Technology GCSE is being launched and we want to revive our founding principles to make it a success.
The facts are stark. Reports from the Association of School and College Leaders (ASCL) as well as the Cultural Learning Alliance point to dramatically falling numbers in art, design and technology subjects being taken up at GCSE and A Level. The combination of budget challenges, accountability systems, and parental pressures has put many art and design subjects on the endangered list. All of which is taking place at exactly the moment when we need an education system more attuned to creativity, design, innovation, enterprise and interdisciplinary nimbleness more than ever. The digital economy requires a dexterity and design mindset that could be under threat in school provision if current trends continue. Rightly, the government has decided to reboot the Design and Technology GCSE to address the fall-off and our view at the V&A is that we have a responsibility to support schools and teachers in delivering this subject in the most exciting manner possible.
So, we have decided to use the generous prize money from the Art Fund – following our announcement as 2016 Museum of the Year – to use our skills, collections, and world class educational provision to make a difference. Our plan is this: beginning in Coventry and Blackburn, we are going to link up with brilliant regional museums, a consortium of secondary schools and local industry to support the teaching of Design and Technology and Art and Design for 11-16 year olds. Our aim is to support students in Key Stages 3 and 4 in communities with histories of manufacturing through the professional development of teachers, bolstering the education provision of local museums, and sharing our collections. This programme, DesignLab Nation, brings together two great impulses within the V&A: our education mission and Circulations heritage, which means that we are proud to lend more objects than any other UK museum.
After Coventry and Blackburn, and then Sheffield, our plan is to grow year upon year as a national hub for design education. But, crucially, we will be doing this in alliance with local cultural institutions who know better than anyone what their students, teachers, and businesses need from design education. This museum emerged in the mid-19th century with a deeply social and civic function. At a time of real concern about how Britain plays its part in the world and how we ensure all communities across the UK have the skills and cultural capacity to succeed, this is the V&A’s response. And from the design of 19th century Japanese incense burners to Balenciaga dresses to Christopher Dresser toast racks to Sonia Delaunay fabrics, it will be about more than straight lines.
Dr Tristram Hunt, director of the Victoria and Albert Museum
Today on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row at 19.15, the 2017 finalists of the Art Fund Museum of the Year Award will be announced as part of a live discussion about the role of museums. Tristram Hunt will join the panel discussion with Stephen Deuchar, Director of the Art Fund; Hartwig Fischer, Director of the British Museum; and Sarah Munroe, Director of the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Arts.
@v_and_a #DesignLabNation
This is brilliant … heard all about it driving home from our Art and D&T exhibition! We are a Sheffield School that would love to be involved … how do I find out more?
Yes absolutely brilliant!
I teach D&T at a Sutton Grammar School and would love to hear more, is there someone I can contact?
Great initiative and idea, just heard it this morning on BBC Today. We are a Coventry school Design and Technology Department, how do we get involved?
Fantastic, how can we get involved:- Blackburn
Also in a Coventry secondary school and very interested in some more information!
This sounds amazing and I would love to get involved and include my students so that they understand how important it is to keep Design Technology in schools.
I heard this on the radio on my way to work at a secondary school in Watford Herts where product design and design and technology are no longer taught due to cuts, which I think is tragic. The V&A is doing such a good thing here, please keep it going so that children have the creative and technological skills for the future.I feel so strongly about this, I would love to know more about it.
The work of the V and A is fantastic and I have taken students to visit many times from Cornwall. The situation that Design and Technology finds itself in is due to the politicians especially at the hands of Michael Gove. The creativity of Britains talent is renowned across the world and unless we redress the balance this will be lost. The introduction of the E Bac has forced management in schools to cut creative subjects. Shoreditch College and Loughborough produced thousands of outstanding teachers of Design and Techology and this has all disappeared over time and needs to be redressed with a matter of urgency. Well done V and A for addressing a national problem.