Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Beth McKillop
British sinologist and Koreanist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Beth McKillop is a British sinologist and Koreanist with particular expertise in print culture and Joseon ceramics. She is a Senior Research Fellow at the Victoria and Albert Museum and a Senior Teaching Fellow in the Department of History of Art and Archaeology at SOAS.[1]
![]() | The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for biographies. (February 2025) |
Remove ads
Education
McKillop earned a degree in general humanities from the University of Glasgow before pursuing an MA in Chinese Studies at Churchill College, Cambridge, where she was among the first cohort of women admitted. At Cambridge, she specialized in modern Chinese history under Martin Bernal.[2] After graduating in 1975, she was selected by the British Council as one of ten students to participate in an exchange program in China, studying first at the Foreign Language Institute and later at Peking University.[3][4] In the early 1980s, McKillop studied Korean language under the guidance of William Skillend at SOAS.[2]
Remove ads
Career
Summarize
Perspective
1981–2004
After briefly working for the BBC Monitoring Service, summarizing Chinese broadcasts,[4] McKillop joined the British Library in 1981 as a research assistant in the Chinese section of the Department of Oriental Manuscripts and Printed Books and later became Curator for the Chinese and Korean collections. In addition to cataloging books and curating exhibitions, McKillop collaborated with Frances Wood, the Head of Section, and visiting scholars from the Chinese Academy of Social Studies on the Aurel Stein collection of Dunhuang manuscripts housed at the British Library. One outcome of this collaboration was the publication of a multi-volume photographic facsimile of non-Buddhist Chinese texts from Dunhuang, co-published by the British Library and the Sichuan People's Publishing House.[5][6]
From 1990 to 1993, McKillop was seconded to the Victoria and Albert Museum, as the Samsung Curator of Korean Art, where she established London's first dedicated gallery of Korean art. In addition to curating the gallery, she authored its accompanying book and traveled to South Korea to acquire contemporary works.[7]
Returning to the British Library in 1993 as Curator of the Chinese and Korean Collections, McKillop conducted extensive research on the library's Korean holdings, identifying previously unnoted early Korean editions. In collaboration with bibliographic expert Fujimoto Yukio, she led a three-year cataloging project of the British Library's Korean holdings.[8] During this period, her responsibilities expanded outside of her home department and included overseeing the planning and execution of the relocation of collections and staff to the British Library's new St. Pancras site.[9]
Following the establishment of diplomatic relations between the UK and the North Korea in 2000, McKillop made two visits to the country as part of a delegation from the British Museum and the British Library. The goal of these trips was to initiate scholarly exchanges and to acquire North Korean publications of scholarly and reference value for the Library.[10]
2004–present
In 2004, McKillop returned to the Victoria and Albert Museum as Keeper of Asia, later serving as Director of Collections, and eventually, deputy director.[11] During her tenure as Keeper of Asia, the V&A staged Europe's first comprehensive study of Chinese architecture, fashion, and graphics in the Reform Era, China Design Now. The show went on to tour the United States.[12] Another major project during this time was the creation of the Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Galleries of Buddhist art.[13]
In 2016, after twelve years, McKillop left the V&A.[14]
In 2019, McKillop originated the course on the history of Korean books and printing at the Rare Book School.
McKillop is a trustee of National Museums Scotland,[15] and the Sir Percival David Foundation of Chinese Art.[16] She served as president of the Oriental Ceramic Society from 2018 to 2021.
Remove ads
References
Sources
Selected bibliography
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads