River and Rowing Museum


The River & Rowing Museum in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England, was located on a site at Mill Meadows by the River Thames. It had three main themes represented by major permanent galleries, the non-tidal River Thames, the international sport of rowing and the local town of Henley-on-Thames.

History

The impetus for the museum largely came from David Lunn-Rockliffe, formerly Executive Secretary of the Amateur Rowing Association.
The building was designed by the modernist architect Sir David Chipperfield and has won awards for the building itself, including the Royal Fine Art Commission Building of the Year award in 1999. It was also UK National Heritage Museum of the Year in 1999.
The museum was one of the first to have a website, which existed before the building opened.
It was officially opened in November 1998 by Queen Elizabeth II. Major benefactors include The Arbib Foundation run by local businessmen Sir Martyn Arbib and Urs Schwarzenbach. There was a 1998 opening exhibition of Julian Trevelyan 'River Thames' etchings.
In 2004, a The Wind in the Willows attraction for families was installed. This is a walk-through recreation using models, sets and an audio-guide of all the E.H. Shepard illustrations from the 1908 Kenneth Grahame book.
In 2006, the museum completed an extensive refurbishment of its Rowing Gallery, thanks to a major donation by Urs Schwarzenbach. Now known as the Schwarzenbach International Rowing Gallery, it told the story of rowing from its beginnings in ancient Greece to the modern Olympics. Thematically arranged, the gallery includes sections devoted to the Oxford v. Cambridge Boat Race, World & Olympic rowing, professional rowing in the 19th and early 20th centuries, boat building, coaching, and nutrition. The museum now displays a unique collection of video clips. A feature in the Schwarzenbach International Rowing Gallery was an interactive exhibit In the Cox's Seat that allowed visitors to sit in a rowing boat and experience a race at Henley Royal Regatta.
Temporary exhibitions have included work by the Thames-based painter Chris Gollon, the local 20th-century artist John Piper: 'The Master of Diversity in Association with Bohun Gallery and the Michael Gyselynck John Piper Collection, one of his collaborators, the potter Geoffrey Eastop, the local painter Nick Schlee, and the local furniture maker Philip Koomen. In 2006, there was an exhibition by John Piper's grandson, Luke Piper. Between November 2006 and February 2007, there was an exhibition of the illustrations of E.H. Shepard called The Man who Drew Pooh & Toad.
On 27 February, 2025, the trustees of the museum announced that the museum was to cease operations and close, due to financial pressures. The museum closed on 21 September 2025.

Themes

The Museum included four themes explored through a wide variety of exhibitions and events across four galleries and special exhibitions:

Galleries

Special exhibitions

The Treasures Gallery, the Sir Graham Kirkham Gallery, and The Wall provided venues for special exhibitions throughout the year. The Museum's exhibition programme was designed around its major themes and includes exhibitions that have a family appeal as well as more specialist exhibitions. Topics ranged from celebrations of major events and anniversaries to arts, crafts, and sculpture, or in-depth investigations.

Collections

The museum has a collection of nearly 20,000 objects, including 5,000 photographs, 650 trophies and medals, and 400 posters. The collection also include artworks, some especially commissioned, such as Chris Gollon's 2001 acrylic painting Big Fish Eat Little Fish, acquired by the museum with the support of the Victoria and Albert Museum.