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Research Seminars 2011

Centre for Museology - Autumn Seminars 2011


Wednesday 19th October 2011,
Ian Fairweather, Lecturer in Social Anthropology, University of Manchester
'Exploring museum spaces and their collections as tools for interdisciplinary Education for Sustainable Development'

This paper reflects upon a pedagogical research project that sought  to evaluate how museum spaces, collections and resources can assist interdisciplinary pedagogies for sustainable development. Evidence was collected from students of distinct disciplines collaborating during workshops at differing museum sites. Findings revealed that students valued their museum experiences. Not only did these learners gain new understandings from interactions across other subject areas; they were also able to extend their initial individual thinking in relation to sustainability. In addition, Personal Meaning Mapping tools provided a visual record of their knowledge and understanding being constructed, each time they were stimulated to extend their thinking on sustainability through designated tasks. In the paper I will consider the implications of this research for future pedagogical collaborations between museums and universities.
This paper reflects upon a pedagogical research project that sought  to evaluate how museum spaces, collections and resources can assist interdisciplinary pedagogies for sustainable development. Evidence was collected from students of distinct disciplines collaborating during workshops at differing museum sites. Findings revealed that students valued their museum experiences. Not only did these learners gain new understandings from interactions across other subject areas; they were also able to extend their initial individual thinking in relation to sustainability. In addition, Personal Meaning Mapping tools provided a visual record of their knowledge and understanding being constructed, each time they were stimulated to extend their thinking on sustainability through designated tasks. In the paper I will consider the implications of this research for future pedagogical collaborations between museums and universities.
[Download the seminar's poster]


Wednesday 23rd November 2011, 
Zelda Baveystock, Acting Deputy Director of the Museum of Liverpool
'Creating the new Museum of Liverpool'

Zelda Baveystock, Acting Deputy Director of the Museum of Liverpool, will explain how National Museums Liverpool has developed a new city history museum. The talk will highlight in particular the process of developing a major new national museum, from the work of the curatorial team to the thousands of Liverpudlians who helped create it. It will explore how messages, stories and more than 6,000 objects have been chosen to create powerful exhibitions.
[Download the seminar's poster]


Wednesday 7th December 2011, 
Dr Henrietta Lidchi, Keeper, Department of World Cultures, National Museums Scotland,
'Re-shaping the world? The new ‘World Cultures’ displays at the National Museum of Scotland'

The National Museum of Scotland charts over two centuries of collecting.  Over this period, exhibiting have inevitably changed, and this is especially the case recently, as the Museum has opened six new “world cultures” galleries devised along thematic rather than regional lines. Working with the architecture which encourages both vertical and horizontal integration, these galleries were devised in a context where new museological theories and political agendas have taken hold. They have used collections, text, images and interactives to bring to the attention of the visitor how historic collections can illuminate contemporary culture. The paper will explore how initiatives and shifts in displaying and re-situating collections have exerted an influence and how the development of the galleries progressed. It will also use the experience of several months opening and reviews to consider the impact of the galleries, and how it has re-shaped people’s understanding of the Museum and its collections.
[Download the seminar's poster]

All seminars at 5-6.30pm in Mansfield Cooper 4.10 (see directions here). All Welcome!

 

Past Research Seminars

Creating Global Citizens? Museums, the Nation and the World


The first ICP research seminar of 2011 takes place on 3rd February.

Professor Peggy Levitt (Wellesley College and Harvard University) will discuss the response of museums to the competing pulls of globalisation and nationalism in the 21st century.
4pm - 6pm, 3rd February, Hanson Room, Humanities Bridgeford Street
This seminar has been jointly organised with CHIMERA Cultural Heritage, Identity and Memory Research Area.
A poster containing further details

Centre for Museology Spring Seminars 2011

Monday  21st February 2011, 5-6.30pm, Mansfield Cooper 4.10

Professor Piotr Bienkowski, University of Manchester

Developing a radical vision for the North West's museums

Monday 21st March 2011, 5-6.30pm , Mansfield Cooper 4.10

Dr Colin Trodd, Art History and Visual Studies, University of Manchester

William Blake has entered the building; or, stories of Blakean masterliness in British art galleries, 1876-1959

Monday 4th April 2011, 5-6.30pm,  Mansfield Cooper 4.10

Dr Claire Wintle, Lecturer, History of Art and Design, University of Brighton

What the visitor thought: Situating the historical visitor at Brighton Museum, 1900-1945

Everyone Welcome!         

For further information please contact:  Christopher.Plumb-2@manchester.ac.uk.

Centre for Museology Spring Seminars 2011

Monday  21st February 2011, 5-6.30pm, Mansfield Cooper 4.10

Piotr Bienkowski, Consultant, academic and chairman of the NWFED

Developing a radical vision for the North West's museums

If ever there was a time for museums to think radically, it is now. In late 2010 the North West Fed, which represents museum people across north-west England, launched an online strategic 'visioning document'. Set in the context of financial cuts to museums and the dissolution of existing strategic structures, its purpose is to urge and support museums to address the key priorities of national and local government, adopt new models of working, and to be innovative, creative and flexible in order to survive and thrive. To keep our heads down and hope it will all blow over is not an option: the scale of change is such that things will never be the same again.

As Chair of the North West Fed, Piotr Bienkowski led this process, negotiating a partnership with the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council (MLA), Renaissance North West and National Museums Liverpool. In this lecture he describes the vision and the process of developing it, including the political difficulties and consultations, and challenges the HE sector to respond to the changing museum world.

Piotr Bienkowsk is a cultural, heritage and museums consultant, writer and researcher, Honorary Professor in the School of Arts, Histories and Cultures at the University of Manchester, and Chair of the North West Fed. Previously he has been Acting Director of The Manchester Museum and Head of Antiquities at National Museums Liverpool.

William Blake
William Blake

Monday  21st March 2011, 5-6.30pm, Mansfield Cooper 4.10

Dr Colin Trodd, University of Manchester

William Blake has entered the building; or, stories of Blakean masterliness in British art galleries, 1876-1959

The story of how cultural institutions deal with the afterlife or reconstruction of artistic identity has for a long time been overshadowed by the symbolic value of canon formation: a tale of how styles, periods or forms of innovation or experimentation cohere into stable patterns or structures of meaning. In fact, most studies of the processes by which artistic value is institutionalised reveal a different picture: of complex critical fields coloured by a number of factors including interaction of cultural forces, social relations and modes of subjectivity. This semi-hidden world of engagement and judgement is the main focus of a paper that examines the reformative apparatus that enabled curators, critics and collectors to imagine Blake as a masterly artist. In essence, this paper sets out to answer one of the central questions in Blake studies: how can we explain his transformation from an unrepeatable or toxic subject into a complete angelus of modern culture?

Colin Trodd is a Lecturer in Art History and Visual Studies at the University of Manchester. He is the co-editer of Victorian Culture and the Idea of the Grotesque (Ashgate, 1999); Art and the Academy in the Nineteenth Century (MUP, 2000); Governing Cultures: Art Institutions in Victorian London (Ashgate, 2000); Representations of G.F. Watts: Art Making in Victorian Culture (Ashgate, 2004) and author of Visions of Blake: William Blake in the Art World, 1830-1930 (LUP, 2011).

Spring Seminar list 2011
National Gallery

Monday 4th April, 5-6.30pm, Mansfield Cooper 4.10

Dr Claire Wintle, University of Brighton

What the visitor thought: Situating the historical visitor at Brighton Museum, 1900-1945

Critiques of 'official' interpretations developed by public institutions and curators tell us much about the histories of academic thought and the intended approaches of such organisations. This paper, however, will focus on how these official agendas were actually received in practice, emphasising the extent to which discrepancies between intended meaning and popular understanding of museum displays occurred. It will use a discussion of visitor engagement with non-European material cultures in the provincial museum to critique the assumption of the pervasive nature of curatorial control of audience reception; I explore instead how museum publics form individual responses to cultural heritage, sometimes rejecting official interpretation and drawing upon wider cultural references and experiences.

Dr Claire Wintle is a Lecturer in the History of Art and Design at the University of Brighton. She has an MA in Art Gallery & Museum Studies at the University of Manchester (2003-4) and  has taught at the University of Sussex since 2006. She has worked in collections and public programmes at the Walker Art Gallery, World Museum Liverpool and the Museum of Science and Industry. She has recently published in Victorian Studies and the History Workshop Journal.

Everyone Welcome!

For more info, email Christopher.Plumb-2@manchester.ac.uk

 

 

 

Research Seminars 2012

Centre for Museology - Spring Seminars 2012

Wednesday 8th February 2012     

Dr Marzia Varutti, School of Museum Studies, University of Leicester

'Negotiating Indigeneity: Museums and indigenous groups in Taiwan'

In Taiwan there are today 14 officially recognised indigenous groups – the 14th indigenous group was officially recognized in 2008, and several others are seeking recognition. In this situation, the representation of indigenous cultures is laden with political significance. Museums and other sites of cultural display (such as community centres, indigenous art shops, craft workshops, and local markets) have become prominent venues where indigenous cultures and identities are being displayed, and in the process, re-appropriated, re-interpreted and negotiated. This paper will examine the politics of representation of indigenous groups in Taiwanese national and indigenous museums, and other sites of cultural display, and critically discuss the impacts of such representations on ongoing processes of definition and regeneration of indigenous cultures.

Wednesday 22nd February

Dr Sam Lackey, Curator, The Hepworth Wakefield

'Hepworth Comes Home'

Dr Sam Lackey will discuss the genesis and development of The Hepworth Wakefield. Opened in May 2011, the gallery is the culmination of over a decade of planning, the impetus sustained by a combination of factors. The significance of these factors (accessibility of the existing collection, a regeneration agenda, the gift of over 40 Hepworth sculptures) will be discussed in relation to the displays and The Hepworth's operation as an organisation.

Sam Lackey is a curator at The Hepworth Wakefield. She previously worked at the Whitworth Art Gallery as an Assistant Curator and Curatorial Research Fellow. Before this she was Senior Research Fellow for the AHRC Research Centre for Studies of Surrealism and its Legacies, The University of Manchester and lectured within the Art History and Visual Studies department at The University of Manchester. 

All seminars at 5-6.30pm in Mansfield Cooper 4.10 (see directions here). All Welcome!