The New Curators Project 2026 is OPEN for Applications!
By Vicky A Price, on 28 November 2025
The New Curators Project is an annual programme run by UCL Special Collections. It offers 10 young adults in East London the chance to develop the skills and experience needed to start a career in the cultural heritage sector.
Previous applicants have gone on to work for organisations such as Toynbee Hall, Tate, The Roundhouse and UCL. It is a friendly, fun way of learning about the cultural heritage field and taking your first steps towards a career in the sector without needing a degree.
What is Cultural Heritage?
The cultural heritage field is an area of work focused on preserving history and culture and making it available to the general public. Among other things, it includes:
Museums
Arts organisations and charities
Libraries and Archives
Historic Buildings and heritage sites
Archaeology.
What will the project entail?
Successful applicants will receive training from industry experts in key areas such as:
Carrying out historical research
Using archives
Creating an exhibition
Running events and campaigns
Communications in the cultural heritage sector.
Participants will gain real work experience by creating an exhibition that will tour Newham’s public libraries, using historical material from UCL Special Collections, the Archives and Local Studies Library in Stratford and beyond.
The programme also offers employment support such as advice on applying for jobs, writing applications and being interviewed.
Participants who attend all the workshops will receive up to £680.
Who can apply?
Applications are open to people who:
Are aged 18 to 24 at the time of making their application.
Are living, studying or working in Newham, Hackney, Tower Hamlets and Waltham Forest.
Are not a university graduate or currently studying at university.
Have less than 6 months paid experience in the cultural heritage sector.

The majority of the 2025 New Curator cohort with staff member Vicky Price at the launch event for their exhibition in East Ham Library
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