The University of Cambridge's museums and collections are for everyone.

Together, the eight University of Cambridge Museums and Botanic Garden represent the UK’s highest concentration of internationally important collections outside London. With more than five million works of art, artefacts, and specimens, the collections have supported nearly 300 years of investigation into the world around us.

Today, they bring together people from across the world to explore the big questions: from the earliest forms of life to the future of our planet. We work to deepen understanding of our world, inspire new thinking, and address local and global challenges.

What we do

A lot happens behind the scenes. Like most museums and collections, our work centres on three areas:

  • We care for the collections and seek to understand them better
  • We share them with you and with the wider world online, and through exhibitions, events and activities
  • We use them to inspire and make a difference to our communities.

As University museums, we also have a distinctive mission to:

  • Research the collections to help us answer big questions and respond to global challenges such as climate change
  • Teach the next generation and work to widen access to the opportunities that higher education and cultural engagement can offer.

We work closely with the University’s other collections, as well as local and national partners. We are proud to be members of the national University Museums Group and Cambridge Arts and Cultural Leaders. 
 

About the collections

The history of the University of Cambridge Museums stretches back to 1728, and the founding of what would become the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences

Our collections can be read as a history book, documenting Cambridge's role in the development of Western knowledge. Alongside our objects, many of the museums hold field notes, books and other documents which reveal how Cambridge scholars set out to understand the world around them. The most famous of these might be Charles Darwin, and the Museum of Zoology holds some of the specimens collected on his voyage with HMS Beagle.

Other museums represent different ways of seeing the world, through the eyes of artists or craftspeople, and have their origins in private collections. Richard, Viscount Fitzwilliam's gift of art, antiquities and manuscripts to the University in 1816 sits at the heart of the Fitzwilliam Museum. Kettle's Yard, the home in the mid-20th century of Jim and Helen Ede, displays Jim's remarkable collection of modern art in the setting of their house.

Collections for everyone

We are committed to ensuring that all our work, and the way we do it, is as inclusive as possible. From our approach to researching the collections and sharing what we find to collaborating with communities and the development of our workforce, we are committed to positive institutional change. You can find out more about our inclusivity work and our approach to the return of objects on this website.

Find out more 

Read Collections in Action for an overview of our most recent work, and receive updates from across the consortium on our Blog

Since 2012, we’ve undertaken projects of all shapes and sizes, in collaboration with a huge variety of organisations. Find out more on our past projects page and in our 2021-2022 Year in Numbers
 

Museum ambassadors event

 

What's On

Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences
27 Aug 2019
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Discover how animal senses and characteristic have adapted over millions of year. 

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A private guided tour of the Beggarstaffs exhibition for individuals and groups, up to 20 people at each session, before the Museum opens.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
07 Feb 2019

A private guided tour of the Beggarstaffs exhibition for individuals and groups, up to 20 people at each session, before the Museum opens.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A private guided tour of the Beggarstaffs exhibition for individuals and groups, up to 20 people at each session, before the Museum opens.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
05 Apr 2019

A private guided tour of the Beggarstaffs exhibition for individuals and groups, up to 20 people at each session, before the Museum opens.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Ever wanted to know how you balance a chair on your chin or if you can juggle liquid? StrongWomen Aoife and Maria reveal the scientific secrets behind their astounding tricks.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
05 Mar 2019

Showcasing rare and exquisitely decorated fans from the collection of the Hon. Christopher Lennox Boyd, allocated to the Museum by H.M. Government in lieu of inheritance tax in 2015, this display reveals the techniques behind the making, investigation and conservation of fans.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
06 Dec 2019

A talk with Dr. Andrew Burnett former Deputy Director of the British Museum.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
05 May 2019

A talk with Flavia Ravaioli, Assistant Conservator.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Dr Lisa Gee reveals some of the significant connections, secrets and surprises preserved in the Hayley Papers, one of the largest manuscript archives held by the Fitzwilliam Museum.

 

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Drop-in and enjoy half an hour looking at and talking about art.

 

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Drop-in and enjoy half an hour looking at and talking about art.

Museum of Classical Archaeology
05 Jun 2019

An exhibition of contemporary works by Loukas Morley

 

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A talk with Dr Catriona Cooper, Dr Abi L. Glen and Dr Jennifer Wexler, AHRC Creative Engagement Economy Fellows.

Museum of Classical Archaeology
05 Aug 2019

An exhibition of photographic work by course participants at Cambridge Community Arts.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
07 Mar 2019

A talk with Melanie Pitkin, Research Associate and Helen Strudwick, Associate Curator.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A talk with Professor Chingfei Shih, Art History Department, Taiwan University.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A talk with artist Jennifer Lee.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
06 Oct 2019

A talk with Eliza Spindel, Curatorial and Research Assistant, Kettle’s Yard.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

This exhibition is the second of two successive selections of works on paper which celebrate the outstanding generosity of benefactors and donors who have helped to enrich the collections.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
08 Jan 2016

 

Over the past fifty years, Francesca and Massimo Valsecchi have built up a remarkable collection of paintings, furniture, sculpture, glass and ceramics. This includes the renowned nude portrait of Patricia Preece by Stanley Spencer (Gallery 1), a Spanish 17th-century polychrome wood sculpture of the Christ Child (Gallery 6), Art Nouveau Tiffany glass (Gallery 22) and an extremely rare Meissen porcelain vulture (Gallery 27).

30 Jun 2019
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Release your inner artist!

01 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist!

The Fitzwilliam Museum

The Salisbury family, based locally in Cambridge, have kindly lent part of their studio ceramics collection to the Museum. This collection, formed over many years, includes pieces by some of the finest artists to work in clay from the mid-20th century onwards. These include Austrian and German emigrés Lucie Rie, Hans Coper and Ruth Duckworth, and contemporary artist Jennifer Lee, winner of the Loewe Craft Prize 2018.

06 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist!

13 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist!

08 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist

15 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist 

20 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist

22 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist 

27 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist 

The Fitzwilliam Museum
01 Feb 2019

This display highlights some of the outstanding pieces of decorative art on loan to the Museum from the Keatley Trust.

29 Aug 2019
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Release your inner artist 

The Fitzwilliam Museum
06 Feb 2019

David Sciacca (solo guitar) performs pieces from Italian Opera with arrangements of works by Bellini, Rossini and Mascagni.

The Fitzwilliam Museum
05 Sep 2019

Sarah Bowden (clarinet), Sam Alberman (violin), Tom Taylor (viola) and Jon Fistein (cello) perform Penderecki’s Quartet for Clarinet and String Trio and Beethoven’s String Trio in G.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A chance to restore, refresh and relax. Join us for 40 minutes of stress release with a combination of body awareness and mindfulness. No previous experience needed.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

A chance to get close to small Tudor and Stuart coins in our Making a Nation exhibition with a special talk by Richard Kelleher, Exhibition Curator and Assistant Keeper of Coins and Medals. Afterwards create your own topical currency, with a twist, back in the Studio.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Put your creativity to the test and craft your very own sterling silver pendant during this hands-on workshop.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Exquisite examples of still life paintings can be seen in our Beggarstaffs exhibition. Join guest artist Penny Price to experiment with the painting techniques used to create these seemingly timeless works of art.

The Fitzwilliam Museum

Elspeth Owen’s ceramics are found in museum collections all over the world and are all made in her studio in a former cricket pavilion in Grantchester. Elspeth will talk about the centrality of touch in the making and enjoying of pots and there will be an opportunity to handle some of her works.