More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good

In our world today, greater attention is paid to fostering social responsibility, sustainability, inclusiveness, diversity, multi-perspectivity, as well as achieving decolonization and the flattening of hierarchies that have enabled and maintain inequalities of power, agency, and resources. These co...

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Main Author: Salter, Kerryn Elizabeth
Other Authors: Karin Oen
Format: Thesis-Master by Coursework
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163948
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1639482023-03-11T20:03:46Z More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good Salter, Kerryn Elizabeth Karin Oen School of Art, Design and Media karin.oen@ntu.edu.sg Visual arts and music In our world today, greater attention is paid to fostering social responsibility, sustainability, inclusiveness, diversity, multi-perspectivity, as well as achieving decolonization and the flattening of hierarchies that have enabled and maintain inequalities of power, agency, and resources. These concerns become even more pronounced in the museum context, as they are reflected and reproduced in this institution’s production of cultural knowledge. In addition to this consideration, there are also concerns that are specific to museums, such as how their collections have been acquired and associated issues of object ownership and calls for repatriation, as well as how national histories and “other” cultures have been presented (or excluded) by them. As a result, increasingly and more vociferously, there are calls for museums to be accountable, to address these systemic and institutionally embedded issues, and to be a proactive player and force for good in engaging audiences in broader social, political, economic, and ecological issues, in ways that provoke curiosity, criticality, and dialogue. Given these circumstances, to sustain their cultural importance, popularity, and ultimately their survival – while still retaining their core functions, such as collecting and safekeeping objects from the past for future posterity – museums need to attend to the contemporary and evolving social, cultural, and educational needs and interests of the diverse communities they serve. To accomplish these, museums must change and strive to be more accessible, inclusive, participatory, ethical, and sustainable on an ongoing basis; and also effectively demonstrate the authenticity and substantive nature of these efforts. I propose that one way in which this can be accomplished is by museums acknowledging and reflecting these concerns and developments to a greater degree in their core activities – in particular, via how they curate and display their exhibitions, which leverage the museum’s primary resource (i.e., its collections) and its existing competencies. As such, this dissertation focuses on how museum collections can be curated and exhibited more adaptively to the contemporary concerns noted above, and suggests strategies, by way of looking into case studies and best practices that incorporate contemporary art, artist interventions, and curatorial practices, that museum curators can consider as part of their efforts. A key factor I keep in mind during this investigation is the importance for museums to maintain their cultural relevance and ideological freedom, while also being able to survive as financially viable institutions. In this regard, I stress the need for museums to carefully consider with whom they wish to partner, and to work towards attracting like-minded sponsors who authentically share the same community-centric values they espouse. Master of Arts (Museum Studies and Curatorial Practices) 2022-12-27T02:44:19Z 2022-12-27T02:44:19Z 2022 Thesis-Master by Coursework Salter, K. E. (2022). More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163948 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163948 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Visual arts and music
spellingShingle Visual arts and music
Salter, Kerryn Elizabeth
More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
description In our world today, greater attention is paid to fostering social responsibility, sustainability, inclusiveness, diversity, multi-perspectivity, as well as achieving decolonization and the flattening of hierarchies that have enabled and maintain inequalities of power, agency, and resources. These concerns become even more pronounced in the museum context, as they are reflected and reproduced in this institution’s production of cultural knowledge. In addition to this consideration, there are also concerns that are specific to museums, such as how their collections have been acquired and associated issues of object ownership and calls for repatriation, as well as how national histories and “other” cultures have been presented (or excluded) by them. As a result, increasingly and more vociferously, there are calls for museums to be accountable, to address these systemic and institutionally embedded issues, and to be a proactive player and force for good in engaging audiences in broader social, political, economic, and ecological issues, in ways that provoke curiosity, criticality, and dialogue. Given these circumstances, to sustain their cultural importance, popularity, and ultimately their survival – while still retaining their core functions, such as collecting and safekeeping objects from the past for future posterity – museums need to attend to the contemporary and evolving social, cultural, and educational needs and interests of the diverse communities they serve. To accomplish these, museums must change and strive to be more accessible, inclusive, participatory, ethical, and sustainable on an ongoing basis; and also effectively demonstrate the authenticity and substantive nature of these efforts. I propose that one way in which this can be accomplished is by museums acknowledging and reflecting these concerns and developments to a greater degree in their core activities – in particular, via how they curate and display their exhibitions, which leverage the museum’s primary resource (i.e., its collections) and its existing competencies. As such, this dissertation focuses on how museum collections can be curated and exhibited more adaptively to the contemporary concerns noted above, and suggests strategies, by way of looking into case studies and best practices that incorporate contemporary art, artist interventions, and curatorial practices, that museum curators can consider as part of their efforts. A key factor I keep in mind during this investigation is the importance for museums to maintain their cultural relevance and ideological freedom, while also being able to survive as financially viable institutions. In this regard, I stress the need for museums to carefully consider with whom they wish to partner, and to work towards attracting like-minded sponsors who authentically share the same community-centric values they espouse.
author2 Karin Oen
author_facet Karin Oen
Salter, Kerryn Elizabeth
format Thesis-Master by Coursework
author Salter, Kerryn Elizabeth
author_sort Salter, Kerryn Elizabeth
title More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
title_short More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
title_full More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
title_fullStr More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
title_full_unstemmed More than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
title_sort more than just a show: extending the impact of museum exhibitions for good
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/163948
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