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Subject:
From:
Shirley S Albright <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 30 Nov 2004 14:22:08 -0500
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Suzanne,

Wow...you really opened up a great can of worms!   As a staff member in 
a U.S.-based, state government run museum, I can assure you you're in 
good company.   The issue you've raised can't be answered on one level 
because it transcends many levels, including education, conservation, 
research, space allotted for exhibitions, etc.     Here are a few of my 
thoughts on the matter of justifying the storage of collections.

1.  Scientific collections are often systematic in content: that is, the 
specimens represent the full range of taxonomic diversity, plumage 
variability (due to age, gender, season, breeding/nonbreeding, species 
variants etc.).   Exhibition space is so precious that multiple 
specimens of a object that illustrate the full range of physical 
characteristics are rarely shown, yet the research value of these 
specimens is incalculable.
2.   Multiple scientific specimens are often collected as voucher 
specimens for specific localities.   These are useful historically as 
species ranges expand or contract.    Representative assemblages of 
biologic or paleontologic objects are often collected from  multiple 
localities even if the species overlap, because  analyses of  species 
over time and geography may reveal habitat loss, environmental change, 
human impact, extinction patterns.     In archaeological or historic 
contexts, trade routes or patterns of human interaction are theorized 
after reviewing many site inventories.
3.   Even the very best orchestrated exhibition spaces can have 
long-term deleterious effects on certain objects (textiles, prints, 
feathers etc.) which is why some objects have to be exchanged for others 
after an appropriate period of time.   Theoretically, our job is to 
preserve objects for future generations - so we have to have materials 
in storage in order to accomplish twin objectives of "revelation" and 
preservation.   
4.  Museum collections serve many masters - researchers, educators, the 
"public" (of which there are many subgroups), preservationists, 
artists/illustrators - and exhibitions alone do not serve all their 
needs.  
5.   Exhibitions are "vignettes" of a particular theme or topic.   Even 
retrospectives can rarely accommodate all the works of an artist due to 
unavailability of individual works or restrictions of space.   The 
selection of a particular object to be included in an exhibition is 
based upon many factors - factors which can change from exhibition to 
exhibition depending upon the targeted audience, the complexity of the 
subject, the completeness of a museum's holdings, etc..   I'd wager that 
different curators, given a topic and a list of potential objects, could 
both construct very different exhibitions with little overlap....yet who 
is to say which exhibit will impact the viewer the most?
6.  Usually only the "best of the best" is/are exhibited.   Behind the 
scenes are objects awaiting preparation, conservation, identification, 
authentication or - in the case of extremely large institutions - 
rediscovery.   Objects not on view need to be stored.    In smaller 
institutions with limited staffing, certain subcollections may not be 
exhibited for many years because the specialties of the staff dictate 
the content of exhibitions.   For example, a small natural history 
institution with 1 botanist on staff would hardly mount an exhibition 
about dinosaurs unless money for a guest curator was procured - or the 
botanist was replaced by a vertebrate paleontologist.   Sometimes I envy 
the larger institutions with a position for every specialty because each 
subcollection receives a measure of priority by virtue of the specialist 
who curates and makes the objects accessible to others.
7.  Space....the final frontier.    There's never enough of it - not for 
exhibitions, offices, educational activities, visitor conveniences, etc. 
etc. etc.   And everyone - not just curators and collection management 
staff - are constantly competing for more of it.    Eventually, 
something has to give.   Unfortunately, it is often the nonpublic 
aspects of a museum that get curtailed.   If it's visible (as 
exhibitions are!), there is often very little thought given to the 
processes that gave rise to that exhibitions (research, preparation, 
information gathering, object review, incoming loans, PR, docent 
training, fundraising, ad nausea).    Exhibitions are like children: 
they need a community to be raised to adulthood - and all those people 
and objects need space.
8.   The objects seen on exhibition are just the tip of a huge 
iceberg.   The challenge is proving to our funders and donors that 
unexhibited objects have meaning and power and, perhaps, contributions 
to human culture or personal fulfillment or further understanding of the 
natural world that have yet to be realized.    The potential of 
discovery is immense.   One need only look at the vast store of 
knowledge that has come unearthed as new technologies have been used to 
reinvestigate objects that have been in repository in institutions 
around the world to be humbled by the possibilities.   

I guess you can tell where I stand on this matter!   I could say more, 
but I'll give this subject over to my colleagues.   I really hope you'll 
be able to find some substantive way to quantify your arguments.  Just 
as all of us are wrestling with quantifying insurance values of our 
collections after 9-11, I'm sure more of us are going to be asked to 
quantify our reasons for increasing storage facilities.   You can be 
certain I'll be saving whatever bits and pieces of discussion arise from 
your query.   Thanks a bunch for bringing it up!

Shirley Albright
New Jersey State Museum

S.Keene wrote:

>[Apologies to INTERCOM members who have previously had this message]
>
>Dear colleagues,
>
>I would like to ask your assistance. I am researching and writing a book on
>the usefulness and justification for museum collections that are not on
>display. 
>
>This is seen as a problem in the UK at government level, and in the
>Netherlands, too. It is felt that museums have too much stuff in store that
>they don't use. 
>
>In other countries it seems that many people feel uneasy about how to
>justify the collections. For example, it is difficult to convince local
>legislaters that there needs to be proper funding for storing collections.
>But it is not an issue at government level.
>
>In your experience, are you expected to justify the existence of the
>collections, or is it accepted that they stay in store?
>
>I would welcome any information you can give me.
>
>Best wishes
>
>Suzanne Keene
>
>
>
>
>EVA London conference July 2005: Call for Papers
>The Foremost European Electronic Imaging Events in the Visual Arts
>http://www.eva-conferences.com/eva/london/london2005/
>
>% % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
>
>Dr Suzanne Keene
>Culture Heritage
>University College London Institute of Archaeology
>31-34 Gordon Square
>London     WC1H OPY
>
>Tel: 020 7679 4935
>
>http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology
>http://www.suzannekeene.info
>
>% % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % % %
>
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