Some of the language used in privacy notices can be specialised. The Information Commissioner's website provides .
Information regarding artists who have exhibited work at the Scottish Parliament, their subjects, donors to the collection and lenders who are loaning works of art to the Art Collection are held electronically in our catalogue system and associated records in order to facilitate collection management.
The data used is normal category data such as the title, name, email address and other contact information of artists exhibiting work at the Scottish Parliament or donors or lenders to the Art Collection.
We may also process some special category data including biographical information relating to an artist of a work or their subject in the work (for example, disability information or sexuality) if this information is directly relevant to, or otherwise informs, the artwork and where the contributor or subject have themselves put that information into the public domain. The information would be held as part of a catalogue record about the artwork and may be used in interpretation (for example a caption or text panel) about the artwork.
Special category personal data consists of information revealing:
Personal information is provided directly by the artists, subjects, lenders and donors (the data subjects) themselves or indirectly via their agents or representatives.
Data protection law states that we must have a legal basis for handling your personal data.
The legal basis for the processing of the personal data as described above is that it is necessary for the purposes of the legitimate interests of the Scottish Parliamentary Corporate Body (SPCB) of facilitating curation activity and collection management (Article 6(1)(f) UK General Data Protection Regulation (UK GDPR)).
For special category data the processing relates to personal data which is manifestly made public by the data subject (Article 9(2)(e) UK GDPR).
We will seek permission to share the artist/subject/lender/donor’s contact email addresses with third parties such as contractors or trusted suppliers. The names of artists, subjects, lenders and donors, sometimes with their year or date of birth and short biographical information, appear alongside artwork within in the Parliament building, on the Parliament website and other social media platforms where artworks are promoted.
Details of artists, subjects, lenders and donors are held electronically and retained for the lifetime of the artwork or loan period plus 5 years in accordance with the Scottish Parliament records management policy
In line with the principles underlying the National Guidance for Child Protection in Scotland (2014), published by the Scottish Government, our staff may report a concern to the relevant authorities if they come across an issue during their work which causes them to think that a child may be at risk of abuse or harm.
Data protection legislation sets out the rights which individuals have in relation to personal data held about them by data controllers. Applicable rights are listed below. You can exercise your data subject rights in particular circumstances depending on the purpose for which the data controller is processing the data and the legal basis upon which the processing takes place.
The following rights may apply:
You have the right to request a copy of the personal information about you that we hold.
Further information on how to make a data protection 'subject access request'.
You have the right to ask us to correct the personal data we hold about you. We want to make sure that your personal information is accurate, complete and up to date and you may ask us to correct any personal information about you that you believe does not meet these standards.
You have the right at any time to require us to stop using your personal information for direct marketing purposes. In addition, where we use your personal information to perform tasks carried out in the public interest then, if you ask us to, we will stop using that personal information unless there are overriding legitimate grounds to continue.
You have the right to ask us to delete personal information about you where:
In some cases, you may ask us to restrict how we use your personal information. This right might apply, for example, where we are checking the accuracy of personal information about you that we hold or assessing the validity of any objection you have made to our use of your information. The right might also apply where there is no longer a basis for using your personal information, but you don't want us to delete the data. Where this right is validly exercised, we may only use the relevant personal information with your consent, for legal claims or where there are other public interest grounds to do so.
Where we use your personal information with your consent, you may withdraw that consent at any time and we will stop using your personal information for the purposes for which consent was given.
Please contact us in any of the ways set out below if you wish to exercise any of these rights.
We keep this privacy statement under regular review and will place any updates on this website. Paper copies of the privacy statement may also be obtained using the contact information below.
This privacy statement was last updated on 9 February 2021.
If you have any further questions about the way in which we process personal data, or about how to exercise your rights, please contact the Head of Information Governance at:
The Scottish Parliament
Edinburgh
EH99 1SP
Telephone: 0131 348 6913
(Calls are welcome through the Text Relay service or in British Sign Language through contactSCOTLAND-BSL.)
Email: [email protected]
Please contact us if you require information in another language or format
We seek to resolve directly all complaints about how we handle personal information but you also have the right to lodge a complaint with the Information Commissioner's Office online at: .
Or by phone at: 0303 123 1113