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Mon, 17 Oct 1994 16:18:22 EST |
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I think that "deep readings" of museums as a class, as signs
and signifiers, and all of that kind of jargon, is a very
fruitful endeavor. I work at a botanical garden, and have
been managing an NEH planning grant where I've had the
luxury of thinking and reading about public and private
gardens along the same lines.
There are two people to whom I would refer you: the first, a
writer about gardens, is John Dixon Hunt, who was recently
appointed to run the Landscape Design program at U of P. He
contributed a fascinating article to a book called Denatured
Visions, published by MOMA to a accompany an exhibit of the
same name.
The second person is a professor at the Graduate Center at
City College, Bill Kelly. He is working on a book about the
creation of both the Zoo and the Natural History Museums in
NYC, and the meanings and contexts of these undertakings.
I'm sure there is much more of this type of work about art
museums, since they attract more culturally advanced (or
modish, depending on your point of view), crowd (you don't
see many of the lower east side kids in black at the Garden
or Zoo).
Anyway, the discussion you suggest is very worthwhile, and
hasn't really been already thrashed through since I've been
on the list.
I'm always up for this kind of speculative stuff...
Eric Siegel
[log in to unmask]
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