Nottingham Institue of Research in Visual Culture - Museum Metaphors symposium

Date(s)
Wednesday 20th November 2013 (13:00-19:00)
Contact
Please contact Lucy Bradnock for any further enquiries
Description

Museum Metaphors

Organised by Dr Lucy Bradnock (University of Nottingham) and Briley Rasmussen (University of Leicester)

Throughout the relatively short history of the art museum, metaphorical constructs have often been used to elucidate the museum’s social and cultural role, as well as to define its various protagonists. Through the metaphorical language of the museum as, for example, temple (Duncan), tomb (Adorno), laboratory (Barr), or supermarket (Warhol), artists, curators, critics, philosophers and historians have sought to read the institution of the museum as symbolic of particular cultural and social ideologies.

Against the backdrop of a growing current interest in institutional and exhibition histories, this symposium will consider the many metaphors that have been used to describe, define and theorise museums, as well as the ways in which changes in the metaphorical language of the museum might indicate broader discursive shifts. In addition, it will ask what metaphorical constructs shape our conception of museums today. 

Keynote speakers:
Dr Suzanne MacLeod (University of Leicester)
Dr Michaela Giebelhausen (University of Essex)

Papers:
Dr Dimitra Christidou (Institute of Archaeology, UCL)
‘Performing etiquette in the art museum’

Briley Rasmussen (University of Leicester)
‘MoMA: Laboratory on 53rd Street’

Eleanor Roberts (Queen Mary, University of London)
'Apollinaire as Patron Saint: spectacles of catholicity at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts’

Dr Harpreet (Neena) Mand (School of Architecture & Built Environment, University of Newcastle, Australia)
‘Making the postcolonial Indian Modern: Mandala as metaphor in the Museums of Correa’

Hilary Floe (University of Oxford)
The ‘Constructed Garden’: Art, Play and Utopia at the 1960s Museum of Modern Art, Oxford’

Dr Teresita Scalco (Università Iuav di Venezia)
‘Museum of Innocence (Istanbul): Reflections on the concepts of “objects” and “museums”’

This event is free of charge and open to all. Registration for the event is advised and is now open. 

Department of Cultural, Media and Visual Studies

University Park
Nottingham, NG7 2RD

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