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Date: | Thu, 2 Oct 1997 10:31:57 -0400 |
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Lynda,
The University of British Columbia Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada has a highly successful "visible storage" installation.
Museum of Anthropology
Univ. of British Columbia
6393 Northwest Marine Drive
Vancouver, British Columbia
V6T 1Z2
(604) 822-8057
fax (604) 822-2974
Sorry, I don't have an email address.
Greg Spurgeon
Head, Art Documentation & Storage / Chef, documentation & d'entreposage d'oeuvres d'art
Registration / Enregistrement
National Gallery of Canada / Musée des beaux-arts du Canada
380 Sussex Drive / 380, promenade Sussex
P.O. Box 427, Station A / C.P. 427, Succursale A
Ottawa, Ontario
CANADA K1N9N4
tel: 613-990-0482 fax: 613-990-8689 email: [log in to unmask]
>>> LyndaK <[log in to unmask]> 10/01/97 05:52pm >>>
Hi everyone! At the Australian Musuem in Sydney we are currently
looking at the idea of open collections. At the moment we use our
collections as the basis of many of our exhibitions, but like most of
you have a huge range of 'stuff' out of the public eye (both natural
history and anthropological collections).
We have three questions of you all:
1. Do visitors want to see museum collections? Has anyone conducted
any research into this?
2. Would visitors come to museums more often if they knew they could
see more of our collections? Is there research/data supporting this?
3. Any examples of other institutions that have undertaken this either
successfully or unsuccessfully? (we do have some literature already)
I know there was a thread discussing this last year and I kept all the
responses but we're interested in these 3 questions in particular. I
will post a summary to the list if there's sufficient interest.
Thanks in advance.
Lynda kelly, Evaluation Coordinator, Australian Museum, Sydney
[log in to unmask]
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