Taggers' Palace joy despite losing out
Six of the team who worked on Tagging the Treasures - project manager Jacqueline Arundel, Veronica McDonnell, Sally Banister, Marjorie Gregson, Heather Davis and Margaret Race, chairman of the Friends of the Lytham St Annes Art Collection – had their travel and accommodation costs covered by organisers the Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation after the project was short-listed in the Historic England Angel Awards.
The Taggers - a team of 150 who worked for two years to find out all they could about the artworks donated to the Collection - lost out in the Best Research project category to Port Sunlight Village Trust and Wirral Council’s Port Sunlight Local Listed Building Consent Order but Margaret said: “We were treated royally and had a very memorable time.
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Hide Ad“The ceremony was at the marvellous Palace Theatre in London’s Shaftesbury Avenue and they laid the red carpet up to the front door. It was just like the Oscars. We did not win but we were made to feel as if we had. Everyone there was constantly told they had made a difference and we felt it was a huge accolade just to be shortlisted.
“After the ceremony, we were invited to the nearby Groucho Club for refreshment and to admire some amazing artworks by the likes of Damien Hirst.”
An exhibition entitled Liverpool Influcences, featuring works from the Lytham St Annes Art Collection, continues at the Fylde Gallery, above Booths in Lytham, until Sunday.