Sara Abdulla reviews London’s Wellcome collection

From Sara Abdulla:

A unique cultural venue opened in London this month. The Wellcome Collection is the first permanent home for the massive, maverick history-of-medicine collection that pharmaceutical entrepreneur Sir Henry Wellcome (1853–1936) gathered throughout his life. Thirty million pounds (US$60 million) and decades in the making, the free venue has three galleries, one of the world’s most important history-of-medicine libraries, an original programme of live events, a members’ club, a bookshop, a café, a conference centre and Pablo Picasso’s Bernal mural.

Wellcome’s fortune also created the Wellcome Trust, Britain’s main bioscience research funding agency. The trust has now remodelled the compact 1930s building it recently vacated to realize Sir Henry’s vision of a ‘Museum of Man’ and to extend its public engagement activities.

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The second floor brings the trust’s vast library into the twenty-first century. Virtual browsing stations and WiFi now complement the graceful galleries long beloved by science-and-society scholars (and TV crews in search of instant gravitas). The top floors house The Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at University College London, where much of this thoughtful activity starts.

And what of the members’ club? Will it become biology’s Algonquin Hotel? Quite possibly: it is inside a thrilling new museum, beside a leading medical school, opposite London’s new European rail terminus and encircled by scientific publishers. What better place to raise a glass to humane curiosity, the legacy of Sir Henry Wellcome.

For the rest of this review, see Nature 447, 1056 (2007).

The Wellcome Collection

by the Wellcome Trust, 183 Euston Road, London.

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