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El. knyga: Museum Storage and Meaning: Tales from the Crypt [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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Beyond their often beautiful exhibition halls, many museums contain vast, hidden spaces in which objects may be stored, conserved, or processed. Museums can also include unseen archives, study rooms, and libraries which are inaccessible to the public. This collection of essays focuses on this domain, an area that has hitherto received little attention. Divided into four sections, the book critically examines the physical space of museum storage areas, the fluctuating historical fortunes of exhibits, the growing phenomenon of publicly visible storage, and the politics of objects deemed worthy of collection but unsuitable for display. In doing so, it explores issues including the relationship between storage and canonization, the politics of collecting, the use of museum storage as a form of censorship, the architectural character of storage space, and the economic and epistemic value of museum objects. Essay contributions come from a broad combination of museum directors, curators, archaeologists, historians, and other academics.
List of figures
viii
Notes on contributors x
1 Introduction
1(34)
Mirjam Brusius
Kavita Singh
PART I Visible and visitable storage
35(68)
2 Performances of museum storage
37(18)
James Delbourgo
3 Visible storage, visible labour?
55(9)
Nicky Reeves
4 Serendipity, transparency, and wonder: the value of visitable storage
64(19)
Sarah Bond
5 Richard Ovenden, Bodley's Librarian, in conversation with Mirjam Brusius
83(7)
Interview
6 To store is to save: Kenneth C. Murray and the founding of the Nigerian Museum, Lagos
90(13)
Amanda H. Hellman
PART II Spaces of storage, beyond display
103(66)
7 `Essential cure for dying museums': Clarence S. Stein and study-storage
105(15)
Belinda Nemec
8 `Storage' and `display': third world perspectives and practices
120(11)
Upinder Singh
9 Home from home: memory and history, families and museums
131(9)
Claire Warrior
10 Home storage: the treatments of domestic collections of aeronautica by the Science Museum and the National Air and Space Museum
140(12)
Caitlin Doherty
11 Preserving preservation: maintaining meaning in museum storage
152(17)
Wendy M.K. Shaw
PART III In and out of view: changing fortunes of objects
169(60)
12 Hidden histories: museum taxidermy rediscovered
171(13)
John M. Sanders
13 The animals went in two by two: shifts in the classification and display of taxidermy in the seen and unseen spaces of public museums
184(14)
Ebony Andrews
14 Museum Utopia for the twenty-first century: an `odd and impractical little dream'
198(6)
Michael Conforti
15 Upstairs, downstairs: the National Gallery's dual collections
204(14)
Susanna Avery-Quash
Alan Crookham
16 The double life of `oriental' textiles at the Byzantine 8c Christian Museum, Athens: interpreting the storage and displayability of Ottoman fabrics in twentieth-century Greece
218(11)
Nikolaos Vryzidis
Elena Papastavrou
PART IV Politics of awkwardness, anxiety and taboo
229(56)
17 Lying in wait: inertia and latency in the collection
231(9)
Alice Stevenson
18 Clothing, care and compromise: a case study of the storage of the Hodson Shop Collection, 1983-2015
240(13)
Jenny Gilbert-Evans
19 Loose bodies: reserve collections, curatorial reservations, and the ancient Egyptian dead
253(10)
Christina Riggs
20 The secret art of the Bambui Royal Treasury, Western Grassfields, Cameroon
263(10)
Mathias Alubafi Fubah
21 Remnants of past lives - storing archaeological stuff
273(12)
Morag M. Kersel
Index 285
Mirjam Brusius is a research fellow at The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities, University of Oxford, UK





Kavita Singh is a Professor in the School of Arts and Aesthetics at Jawaharlal Nehru University, India