Research project
Dental Histories: Towards a Digital Museum
- Start date: 1 September 2024
- End date: 31 July 2025
- Funder: Research England Enhancing Research Culture Fund
- Primary investigator: Dr Rae Gillibrand
- Co-investigators: Colette Nicholas
Description
Visit the online Dental History Museum!
The School of Dentistry at the University of Leeds holds a significant, yet largely underexplored, historical archive related to its institutional past, Leeds Dental Hospital, and Leeds Dental Institute. While select artefacts are displayed on Level Six of the Worsley Building, the majority remain in storage, limiting scholarly and public access. This project sought to address this gap by cataloguing and digitising 20% of the dental collection and creating an open-source digital exhibition featuring key items. Following best practices in digital sustainability, the project includes funding for five years of exhibition maintenance, establishing a foundation for future development. The project engages academic and NHS staff, as well as postgraduate research assistants from the Schools of History, Dentistry, and Computing.
Clinical Photographers Tim Zoltie and Chloe Sykes used state-of-the-art equipment to digitise the artefacts in the collection. They say:
The digitisation process involves carefully handling each artefact and photographing it in a controlled studio environment. We use a range of lighting set ups depending on the size or shape of the object, ensuring each is evenly lit, and the details of each object are visible. Using Sony’s 90mm f/2.8 macro lens, the set up provides high magnification ratios and produces sharp images to ensure even the smallest details are captured. We then take multiple photographs from various angles to thoroughly document each piece, creating a detailed digital record.
By bridging disciplinary boundaries and incorporating cutting-edge digital humanities methodologies, the project will transform access to, and understanding of, the Leeds Dental Archive.
Project objectives
- Foster interdisciplinary collaboration. The project united scholars from history, dentistry, and the digital humanities, fostering interdisciplinary research and knowledge exchange.
- Enhance access.The project created an open-access catalogue and associated digital exhibition for research, teaching, and public exploration.
- Improve interpretation. The project produced contextualised, decolonised labels for key artefacts, including ethically sensitive items such as ivory and human dental remains.
- Public engagement. The project will engaged the wider community through interactive digital content and public events, including the National Trust’s Heritage Open Days.
Events
30th June 2025: Open Wide: Access and Engagement with Dental History Collections
What can historical dental tools, models, and teaching aids tell us about the changing story of oral health? A workshop with Rachel Bairsto, Head of Museum Services at the British Dental Association.
14th September 2024: Heritage Open Day: The Advancement in Dental Technology
A chance to come and explore dental artefacts and to see how dentistry has evolved over the years by viewing dental labs and interacting with students and dental professionals.
Read more
Enhancing Research Culture
This project is funded by Research England under the Enhancing Research Culture funding stream. Find out more about Research Culture at the University of Leeds.