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  • Formatas: 282 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Feb-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781317005520

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Almost all museums hold photographs in their collections, and museum professionals and their audiences engage with photographs in a myriad of ways. Yet despite some three decades of critical museology and photographic theory, and an extensive debate on the politics of representation, outside art museums, almost no critical attention has been given specifically to the roles, purposes and lives of these photographs within museums. This book brings into focus the ubiquitous yet entirely unconsidered work that photographs are put to in museums. The authors' argument is that there is an economy of photographs in museums which is integral to the processes of the museum, and integral to the understanding of museums. The international contributors, drawn from curators and academics, reflect a range of visual and museological expertise. After an introduction setting out the range of questions and problems, the first part addresses broad curatorial strategies and ways of thinking about photographs in museums. Shifting the emphasis from curatorial practices and anxieties to the space of the gallery, this is followed by a series of case studies of exhibitionary practices and the museum strategies that support them. The third section focuses on the role of photographs in the museum articulation of difficult histories. A final section addresses photograph collections in a digital environment. New technologies and new media have transformed the management, address and purposing in photographs in museums, from cataloguing practices to streaming on social media. These growing practices challenge both traditional hierarchies of knowledge in museums and the location of authority about photographs. The volume emerges from PhotoCLEC, a HERA funded project on museums and the photographic legacy of the colonial past in a postcolonial and multicultural Europe.

Recenzijos

This most needed volume represents a highly inspiring investigation into the role of photography as object and tool of representation in museums and archives today. Through a comprehensive selection of contributions by an interdisciplinary variety of authors - all drawing on hands-on experience - this volume fills up a void in photography and cultural studies. It is a must-read for everyone working with the materiality and meaning of photography. Mette Sandbye, University of Copenhagen, Denmark We have been needing a book like this for a long time. Looking at what photographs do, and could do, in museums, it beautifully fills a gap that has for too long stayed open in the literature on museums, museum practice, representation and photographs. On these pages we see photographs as acts of remembrance, as haunting, as absent, as representational forms and as much more besides. And throughout, this essential new volume not only explores the work of photographs in museums, but also makes a significant contribution to far wider debates on the processes of representation. Sandra Dudley, University of Leicester, UK

List of Figures
vii
Notes on Contributors xi
Acknowledgements xv
Introduction
1 Museums and the Work of Photographs
3(18)
Elizabeth Edwards
Sigrid Lien
THE AFFECTIVE PHOTOGRAPH
2 Museums and the Emotional Afterlife of Colonial Photography
21(22)
Wayne Modest
3 `I Know These Streets': Photographs, Affective Environments, and the Display of the Conflict in Northern Ireland
43(12)
Shawn M. Reming Jr.
CURATORIAL STRATEGIES 1 WORKING IMAGES
4 Photography and the Crisis of Ethnographic Display
55(18)
Hilde Nielssen
5 Negative Space: Tracing Absent Images in the National Museums Scotland's Collections
73(22)
Chantal Knowles
CURATORIAL STRATEGIES 2 PHOTOGRAPHIC ART WORKS
6 The Aesthetics of the Bear Hunt: Contemporary Photography in the Ecology of a Sami Museum
95(18)
Sigrid Lien
7 Haunted Topographies: Landscape Photography as an Act of Remembrance in the Neues Museum, Berlin
113(20)
Tonje Haugland Sørensen
CURATORIAL STRATEGIES 3 CONTESTED STORIES
8 The Story of the Netherlands-Indies: The Use of Photographs in the Centre of Indies Remembrance
133(16)
Pamela Pattynama
9 Heroic Stories or Indigenous Perspectives? Polar Expedition Photographs in Norwegian Museum Exhibitions
149(16)
Lena Aarekol
WORKING IN THE REAL WORLD
10 Curating `A Good Type': Japanese `Art' Photographs in an Anthropological Archive
165(16)
David Odo
11 Military Matters: Approaches to the Photographic Collection of the Dutch Army Museum
181(20)
Casper van Bruggen
12 Looking at Culture: Visualizing Anthropology at a University Museum
201(22)
Ira Jacknis
DIGITAL ENVIRONMENTS AND PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTIONS
13 Digital Dilemmas: The Impact of Digital Tools on Photograph Collections
223(20)
Kajsa Hartig
14 Observations from the Interface: Photography, Ethnography, and Digital Projects at the Pitt Rivers Museum
243(18)
Christopher Morton
Index 261
Elizabeth Edwards is Professor of Photographic History and Director of the Photographic History Research Centre, De Montfort University, Leicester, UK. Sigrid Lien is Professor in Art History at the department of linguistic, literary and aesthetic studies at the University of Bergen, Norway.