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Tate Partnership (2013-15)

Mining Josef Herman

From 2013-15 the Josef Herman Art Foundation Cymru worked with Tate on a two-year partnership project called Mining Josef Herman, as part of a larger project called Transforming Tate Britain: Archives and Access. this project involved community engagement, working with schools and an exciting working with Tate which provided the opportunity to interpret the archive and Herman’s work.

This legacy project has had a lasting impact on the foundation having forged strong working relationships with different organisations and establishing our archive as important in South Wales.

In 2002 the Josef Herman Art Foundation Cymru was established in Ystradgynlais to honour Josef Herman and his legacy and to encourage the public appreciation of the visual arts by people of all ages.

The internationally renowned émigré artist Josef Herman travelled to Britain from Poland in 1940 and settled in Ystradgynlais between 1944 and 1955. The extraordinary paintings, drawings and prints Josef Herman made during this time captured the life of the community, most notably in his images of miners.

Mining Josef Herman enabled new audiences to engage with digitised local and national archives, and created opportunities for members of the public to work with artists in making their own creative responses.

Transforming tate britain:
archives & access

Archives and Access was an ambitious five-year programme of digital access, learning and participation. It made 52,000 items from Tate’s archives fully accessible online, including a significant number relating to Josef Herman. This has allowed people to group, tag, annotate and share their own collections of artworks and archive items online and access a suite of new resources on the Tate  digital hub.

These archive materials and digital tools have been used as the basis for partnership learning projects in five different areas of the UK between 2013 – 2017. The first project was in Ystradgynlais, South Wales. The programme also involved Tate Britain in London; Tate Liverpool; Tyne and Wear Archives & Museums and Turner Contemporary, Margate.

Transforming Tate Britain: Archives and Access was supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Josef Herman Art Foundation Cymru also received support from the Arts Council of Wales.