In artist Fred
Wilson’s conversation with numerous museum curators, he reveals that he was
ultimately drawn to the Maryland Historical Society in Baltimore for his Mining the Museum project because it
made him uncomfortable. “I’m a black man, and I went to an institution about
the 19th century where they had basically nothing (on display) about
black people in a city that was majority African-American.” [1]
As public institutions whose exhibitions presumably change over time,
historical museums have an important opportunity not only to cultivate interest
in history among visitors, but to right past institutional wrongs. By sharing
authority with local communities, artists, and others without public history
backgrounds, museums can create exhibitions that truly feel public in their
representation and involvement of potential visitors. As the edited collection Letting Go: Sharing Historical Authority in
a User-Generated World shows, there are numerous ways of completing such a
task.
In the example
of Fred Wilson’s Mining the Museum exhibit,
museum curators invited in a local artist – untrained in the skills of museum
curation – to use the Maryland Historical Society’s collection in creating an
exhibit that addressed historical themes and topics lacking presence in museum
displays. In the displays, Wilson placed slave shackles next to ornate silverwork,
communicating American opulence as derivative of the upper-class’ use of slave
labor.[2]
Wilson’s displays ultimately resulted in mixed reviews. Some positive and some
utterly appalled. Yet, this exhibit – in an extremely visceral sense – filled
in the narrative gaps missing from the Maryland Historical Society for decades.
Through the act of shared authority, Mining
the Museum moved beyond representations of white bourgeois identity and
showed the darker flipside that had provided for such comfortable lifestyles in
Maryland’s nineteenth century past – slave labor.
Another example
of shared authority once again enabling more inclusive exhibit is seen in the
Oakland Museum of California’s section on Native California in the museum’s
Gallery of California History. In this exhibit, Native Californians themselves
structured the exhibit’s content, determining the focus of the content, editing
video commentary, and selecting cultural objects that would be displayed in the
exhibit.[3]
Museums are often seen unfavorably in Native communities. Considering such
institutions’ past as repositories of sacred cultural objects and occasionally
human remains taken without tribal permission by anthropologists, such
inclusions remain incredibly important.
When OMCA
unveiled this exhibition, I remember it being a really big deal. I was in a
Native California class at San Francisco State at the time and the teacher
insisted that our class go to visit the exhibit. For a large portion of the
semester, we had discussed the manner in which Californian anthropologists like
Alfred Kroeber and others had looted Native grave sites and cultural
ceremonies, storing such objects and human remains for preservation purposes in
museums. The fact that the OMCA had consulted many Native Californians
including my teacher Kathy Wallace – she is pictured on page 74 - to structure
the exhibit around their communities’ historical interpretations and needs
represented significant progress including Native communities in their
representation. Through sharing authority with the communities that they
represent, museums and other cultural institutions, curators gain the ability
to correct the institutional wrongs committed by museums in the past.
[1]Fred Wilson and Paula
Marincola, et al, “Mining the Museum Revisited: A Conversation with Fred Wilson,
Paula Marincola, and Marjorie Schwarzer” in Letting
Go?: Sharing Historical Authority in a User-Generated World, ed. Bill Adair
et al. (Philadelphia: The Pew Center for Arts and Heritage, 2011), 231-2.
[2] Melissa Rachleff,
“Peering Behind the Curtain: Artists and Questioning Historical Authority” Letting Go?: Sharing Historical Authority in
a User-Generated World, ed. Bill Adair et al. (Philadelphia: The Pew Center
for Arts and Heritage, 2011), 218.
[3] Kathleen McLean, “Whose
Questions, Whose Conversations?” Letting
Go?: Sharing Historical Authority in a User-Generated World, ed. Bill Adair
et al. (Philadelphia: The Pew Center for Arts and Heritage, 2011), 74.