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How can a vase reflect the experience of living between two cultures? This beautiful vase created by South Korean, Edinburgh-based artist Choi Keeryong, expresses this sense of 'inbetween-ness'.
ViewDiscover what this historic tool can tell us about the story of machinery and industry in Scotland.
ViewSt Andrew is Scotland's patron saint and his Saltire (X-shaped) cross is Scotland's flag. Discover more about how he has been represented through the centuries.
ViewThis iconic Red Arrows Hawk T.1A was flown by the Royal Air Force (RAF) Aerobatic Team, the Red Arrows.
ViewExplore our newly refurbished air raid and blast shelters with our costumed guide.
ViewJoin us for this exclusive Member event which will explore the many uses of maps and the stories behind them during the Second World War.
ViewExplore Wildlife Photographer of the Year with a BSL tour for those who are Deaf/BSL users.
ViewThe Hilton of Cadboll stone was carved around AD 800 in northern Scotland, then a heartland of the Picts.
ViewIn 2014 Scotland welcomed the Commonwealth Games to Glasgow. Objects from our collection give an insight into the history of the games.
ViewThe Effects of a Captive Diet upon the Skull Morphology of the Lion and Tiger
ViewThese simple-looking glasses hold a secret power: they allow people with red-green colour blindness to experience colours which they would normally be unable to see.
ViewThe unicorn is first mentioned in a long lost book about India about 400 BC and eventually is adopted as Scotland's national animal in the 15th century and can now be seen everywhere.
ViewThe de Havilland Comet was the world's first commercial passenger jet aircraft.
ViewAberdeen-born Annie Pirie was one of the first women in the United Kingdom to study Egyptology. Discover how this trained artist and pioneering archaeologist has left a lasting legacy.
ViewJoin Doug Allan as he shares personal insights from his 40-year career at the frontiers of climate breakdown as a photographer, filmmaker, diver and author.
ViewJoin us as we kick off the 2024 Edinburgh International Children’s Festival with a day of free pop-up performances and activities for the whole family.
ViewJoin author and mindfulness teacher Natasha Iregbu as she invites families to practice mindfulness in a fun and enjoyable way.
ViewJoin us for an evening of bright and vivid music from the Scottish Ensemble in the light-filled setting of the Grand Gallery.
ViewThese small objects were essential tools for trade in West Africa until the end of the 19th century.
ViewMeet 'the good ladies' of bird collecting, two pioneering ornithologists whose work is still influential today.
ViewJoin our curators to explore the fascinating objects that inspired Sir Walter Scott and the celebrated novels in which they feature.
ViewIs it possible to infer the agility or manoeuvrability of a fossil animal from the shape of its labyrinth?
ViewThis beautiful medieval bishop’s crook and silver-gilt case, or Coigreach, are associated with St Fillan of Perthshire, and are among our most important medieval church artefacts.
ViewThis dramatic suit was worn by the flamboyant fashion editor turned Highland society hostess Frances Farquharson.
ViewThe Meissen lion is part of the animal menagerie commissioned by Augustus II the Strong in the early 18th century.
ViewOur West, South and Southeast Asian collections contain more than 17,000 objects, giving insight into the lives of past and present people across a vast geographical area.
ViewExplore Wildlife Photographer of the Year with an audio-described tour for those who are blind, partially sighted or visually impaired.
ViewHuge chains strike the eye with a comic book grandeur. Yet this is no comic or Pop Art painting but an Archie Brennan tapestry from 1977 entitled Chains.
ViewDiscover more about the Circular Economy through the Making Circles schools project, led by Ostrero.
ViewNapier’s ‘bones’ or ‘rods’ are just one of the methods invented by the Edinburgh-born Renaissance scholar John Napier to speed up calculations.
ViewHow South Asian art and design captured Victorian Britain's imagination
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