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MSMCC Projects

Students in our “Museum Research Seminar” often complete a final project exploring an interest they have in museum scholarship. Students sometimes curate an exhibition together, and others write about events that they attend. These pages document some of the projects completed by past students.

2020 – Online Exhibition

“Claiming Their Space: Black Student Activism at the University of Maryland”

This exhibit explores Black student activism at the University of Maryland, College Park, in the late 1960s, with a focus on the fall of 1968. October was a seminal month in the history of Black student activism at UMD. The Black Student Union (BSU) formed out of a two-year-old student organization called Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), unaffiliated with the national organization of the same name. The BSU realigned their goals from mere integration to equality and Black student solidarity, reflecting national trends in the Black Power movement. This exhibit centers on several incidents in October 1968: the rejection of appointments of radical Black students to the Committee of Meaningful Integration, the October 12 ice pelting incident at a home football game against the University of North Carolina and the rejection of four unnamed Black women students from a home economics nutrition study. Collectively, these incidents culminated in a rally on October 22 at the Home Economics building. Mixed responses by students and administrators to Black student-centered controversies demonstrated persistent discrimination on the UMD campus and lack of administrative advocacy for Black students.

View the exhibition here.

2018 – Explorations

Opening Session of a New, Campus-based Symposium from March 2018

This past March, MLIS students Tricia Glaser and Martha Schmidt attended the first colloquium held by the museum certificate program. The inaugural speaker was Dr. Diana Marsh, a postdoctoral fellow working at the National Anthropological Archives. She was there to present the results of an ethnography that she conducted at the National Museum of Natural History (NMNH) on their upcoming “Dinosaur and Deep Time” exhibition hall. She studied both the history of the hall itself and the team that has been planning and building the exhibition. Two of the questions she was considering were:

What is the relationship between institutional culture(s) and the presentation of knowledge to the public through exhibits?
What institutional histories, contexts or shifts have impacted exhibits communication?
Tricia: I found Dr. Marsh’s presentation quite engaging, partially because of the behind-the-scenes look it provided of one of my favorite Smithsonians. Being new to museum studies and having never worked in one, I’m fascinated by the process of creating exhibits.

Martha: I also thought this was interesting, and a rather unique presentation as it allowed us an inside glimpse of the Smithsonian and what it takes to put together a permanent exhibit on this scale. I’m in the archives/digital curation track of the MLIS, and also completing the museum certificate offered by UMD, so for me she touched on a number of concepts overlapping these areas of interest. She discussed the issues of involving the viewer, as opposed to “passive” participants. For the Smithsonian, this is probably less of an issue, but I think it was notable that they did so much outreach and acquired so much feedback on exhibition approaches. She also briefly talked about the implications of having a sponsor with a certain viewpoint (regarding climate change) and how they navigated that.

Ultimately, I understood her to say that because of the broader scope of the exhibit, donor viewpoint-influence was less of an issue because the exhibit covered such a length of time. It displays climate change as more historical, factual/scientific rather than political. “Deep Time: 4.6 Billion Years of Global Change” is supposed to cover “the history of life, earth systems, lessons from deep time, & planet management” (Marsh, PowerPoint Presentation). A tall order, even for the Smithsonian. I was also struck by the number of departments and different team members involved from the start. But as Dr. Marsh reminded everyone, this is the Smithsonian with a $35 million donation from David Koch.

Tricia: Yes, I’ll be curious to know how David Koch’s reputation will affect museum goers’ opinions of the new exhibit, once it opens. I was previously unaware of his multimillion dollar donation and the ensuing controversy. I remember Dr. Marsh saying that this is the first climate change exhibit the Smithsonian has ever had, and with a donor like Koch, it will be very hard for some visitors to not view the exhibition with a political lens. It doesn’t seem like the NMNH will be able to neutrally present the history and facts of climate change, when simply the existence of global warming is a fraught political issue in the U.S.

Martha: Or it could open up the discussion to “just facts” both sides agree on (regardless of how/why) and perhaps diffuse at least parts of the issue in this setting. Dr. Marsh used an example of friction and complementarities I had not heard of previously but found particularly apt. She quoted “Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connection” –

“Friction: the awkward, unequal, unstable, and creative qualities of interconnection across difference” (Tsing, 2005). This was then linked to Former Smithsonian Secretary Robert McCormick Adams’ definition of complementarities: “[…] between fields of specialization, between internally generated projects and the needs and perceptions of the wider society, and between the increase and the diffusion of knowledge” (Smithsonian Year, 1985).  

I think this was a unique pairing of concepts to describe the tension of ideas that must occur during the creation of a massive project like this. I think it also emphasizes the importance of having a diverse team who are willing to engage with the ideas and facts available to create a whole new exhibit that will engage wider groups of participants. Teams should be slightly awkward, “unequal” and not perfectly in agreement in order to create something unique: a group of top-level managers with similar ideas and perspectives will not advance the concept beyond where it already is, however contrasting ideas and viewpoints will question everything and bring out something new.

Dr. Marsh quoted one of her colleagues, and I think it summed up how the Smithsonian is able to deal with complex issues and make them applicable to everyone:

“You’ve got the science side who is doing the research and coming up with this information. We’re the diffusion side that’s trying to get the knowledge out there and the creative way that you do that. And the artistic tension that comes in the middle of that is what we wind up with. That’s the product. And I think it’s always going to be like that and it should be like that. That’s the balance . . . And I wouldn’t change that for a minute” (Moeller 6.12.13, from Marsh PowerPoint Presentation). I can’t help comparing this approach to the smaller institutions we visited as part of the Intro to Museum Scholarship class with Mary Alexander, where, for example, a historical society has one person doing both the research and the exhibit. The artistic tension may not even exist in these cases, unless small teams or communities are involved in the process. I’m wondering what this does to the exhibit and how it affects viewers?

Tricia: Yes, I could see how at a very small organization there may be no artistic tension in building exhibitions, particularly if the staff is homogenous. However, when our class went to visit the Laurel Historical Society to see their civic engagement exhibit, I remember the curator telling us that she still had pushback from the board about the concept and interpretation of it. Even if one person is solely in charge of designing exhibits, there will always be a stakeholder(s) to answer to, and opinions will differ.

The next colloquium presentation will take place during the fall 2018 semester. Watch this space for additional postings and notices. 

“The Building Will Sing for Us All”: The Influence of Design on Visitor Experience

The National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC) is a work of extraordinary design. From the architecture of the building itself to the displays and the placement of the artifacts and labels, it is clear that each aspect of the museum's design is carefully and intentionally crafted and presented with great thought and consideration. Below you will find short testimonies from four students who, as part of the Museum Scholarship and Material Culture certificate program’s Museum Seminar class were able to tour NMAAHC, and were able to experience first-hand how design impacted the visitor experience. These testimonies provide insight into how design is experienced differently by each visitor, as well as what that experience can tell us, as students of museum scholarship and museum professionals, about the intentional incorporation of design on the visitor experience.

Before we begin, I would like to express our gratitude to Mary Elliot, the co-curator of the “Slavery and Freedom” exhibit from NMAAHC for taking the time to visit our class and share her knowledge and insight with us, as well as for allowing our class to visit the museum before it opened for the day and providing us with such a moving and thought provoking tour. It was a once in a lifetime experience, which would not have been possible without Mary Elliot as well as our professor, Dr. Elsa Barkley Brown. For that I say thank you to both Dr. Barkley Brown and Mary Elliot.

Kyla Cools:

Something that strikes me every time I visit the NMAAHC is the active consideration and intentionality given to the experience of continuity. This continuity is present in the curation, exhibition planning and interpretation, and considerations given to the visitor experience. Exhibits focus on the longevity and the multi-faceted nature of the black experience both in the United States, and globally. With collections that range from the historical significance of African kingdoms pre-colonization, to the current influence of contemporary celebrity personalities, the collections speak to a range of topics. Some of these topics include structural (and physical) violence, culture and heritage, and the breadth of diversity within the black community. This continuity gives depth and prevents the institution from being ‘stuck’ in history or over-simplifying the complexities that have shaped the contemporary black experience.

From a visitor perspective, the museum has done a phenomenal job providing visitors with opportunities for mental and emotional stimulation, as well as spaces for reflection. The history galleries in particular can be emotionally ‘heavy’ and provoke a very visceral reaction – I myself experienced this. But spaces such as the reflection booths and the contemplation court give visitors space to decompress and process what they’ve just taken in. Providing these spaces is a conscious acknowledgement of the emotional weight visitors will carry in and out of these exhibit spaces, and allows visitors to have a safe space to reflect on what the experience means to them. There are a multitude of other examples that could be utilized from the NMAAHC to explore this idea of continuity within a museum context, but due to considerations of space I have only used the most prominent examples that come to the forefront of my mind. However, examined fully, the NMAAHC can provide an excellent case study in how to incorporate continuity into museum work and experiences at both macro and micro scales.

Sara Downard:

When one looks across the National Mall, NMAAHC is immediately eye-catching. The structure does not look anything like the institutions surrounding it, which all shine brightly and whitely in the sun. With its bronze colored metallic exterior, NMAAHC also reflects the light from the sun, but it has something none of the other solid stone buildings have, light shining out from within. The interlocking bronze lattices have a heaviness to them, but through the openings, light from within the structure is able to shine out over the surrounding porches and welcome each visitor as they enter the building. It is a marvelous work of design.

The structure is not symmetrical, with its three tiers it appears more like a work of art than a practical structure. The shape, style, and design of the museum sets it apart in more than just appearance, it is also a work that is imbued with an intentional symbolism. Upon seeing the structure for the first time I was overcome with a sense of wonder and curiosity, if this was what the outside looked like I could not wait to see what was inside. I felt consciously engaged by the entire structure, from the concrete porches, which harken back to the welcoming porches common in the American South and the Caribbean throughout the African Diaspora, to the top of the tiers, which are inspired from West African art. This demonstrates to the visitor that this journey, which they are about to undertake transcends Washington D.C. and the United States. This journey begins in Africa, a place half a world away that is often overlooked, and yet is so integral to the story this museum is trying to tell. The African and African American influences on the design of this structure are a crucial part of telling that story to a public that might not be aware of it.

David Adjaye said “architecture is the physical act of social change,” and this museum has incorporated that message inside and out. While what is inside the museum may be the more expected mode to engage and communicate with visitors, the structure's architecture also accomplishes this rather wonderfully. Though you are not even inside the museum yet, the visitor experience and engagement has already begun. To see it is to be impacted by it, even if the meaning is not fully understood until you go inside. The design allows the museum structure itself to the beautiful and meaningful beginning to a visitor’s experience.

Juli Folk:

Our visit to the NMAAHC and the tour we experienced with Mary Elliot were an extraordinary privilege, as was being there during earlier hours. This allowed us to linger over some exhibits and made us privy to curatorial details that I may not have otherwise noticed. For example, in a tightly angled corner of the “Transatlantic Slave Trade” portion of the Slavery and Freedom 1400-1877 section sits a display case full of bright white sugar, upon which is set a few related artifacts (spoons, bowls, and cups, if I recall correctly, the kind of thing that would be found at a tea table setting at the time). The corner of this display points sharply from the left as you pass it, drawing the eye to the series of artifacts, timelines, images, and narratives on the right, which collectively document the transatlantic slave trade in heartbreaking detail.

I doubt I would have so fully appreciated the intentional placement of the sugar display, pointing literally and silently to its real and vast human cost, without the insights Ms. Elliot shared. I have discussed my experience at NMAAHC with friends and family, who almost exclusively react with envy that I even got a ticket, let alone an “insider” tour. The resulting discussions have felt like real steps towards general acceptance that issues with race and racism are core to, and in some ways define, this country’s founding, a difficult truth that we must acknowledge before there can ever be real progress. For that reason, I look forward to when the museum is more readily available for everyone to visit (multiple times!) without the hassle of timed ticket releases and entry. The evident care with which the entire project was undertaken by the NMAAHC staff and its supporters lays a solid foundation for us as the audience to engage in more nuanced understandings, the kind that could help everyone appreciate both common histories and different perspectives.

Allison Hedges:

The overarching design of the NMAAHC as well as the design of the individual galleries is exceptionally well-crafted to guide the visitor on a distinct chronological journey. The chronology facilitates a clear understanding of the path of history—the sequence of events and societal motivations—that pushed the mass enslavement of a people into motion and perpetuated that motion, even into the present day. My responses reflect on our visit to the galleries that focus on African American history: Slavery and Freedom and the Era of Segregation.

The elevator, for one, is a simple yet brilliant design concept. From the concourse level, the visitor steps into the elevator in 2018, and takes it down, floor by floor, into the past. This quickly and effectively orients you to a specific place in time. Next, the entranceway to Slavery and Freedom presents the pre-slavery historical context in both Africa and Europe. These opening exhibits provide a solid foundation for where and how each population was living before the transatlantic slave trade began, with an emphasis on the increasing demand for sugar. I appreciated that Africa was on one side of the hallway and Europe on the other, providing a complete picture of two coinciding cultures and concurrent events that came together at a pivotal juncture.

The rising height of the ceiling is another simple, yet extremely effective design feature rich in symbolism. Starting at the entranceway to Slavery and Freedom, the ceiling is very low and the hallways are narrow, giving the visitor a somewhat claustrophobic feeling. As you move through the galleries, and forward in time, the ceilings rise just a little bit, until you reach Emancipation, when the ceiling opens up to a wide, high gallery with multiple lofts. But within those wider galleries there are smaller alcoves that are still somewhat narrow and cramped—a metaphor for the struggles that persisted for African Americans in the face of progress.

In terms of the historical and social narrative of Slavery and Freedom and the Era of Segregation, two key points came sharply into focus as I moved through the galleries: 1) the evolution of “whiteness,” “blackness,” and the social implications of both; 2) the overwhelming truth that throughout our nation’s history the promise of the “American Dream” has never applied to African Americans in the same way that it has to European Americans—not even the idea of liberty and freedom as propagated by the American Revolution.

Sara Downard, Kyla Cools, Juli Folk and Allison Hedges are an interdisciplinary group of graduate students at the University of Maryland College Park who took the MSMC Museum Research Seminar in Fall 2017. They are in the departments of anthropology, archives and information science, and theatre and performance studies, respectively.

The quote used in the title was spoken by Lonnie G. Bunch III, a museum curator and educator as well as the current director of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, in reference to the design of NMAAHC.

Reference:

Begin with the Past: Building the National Museum of African American History and Culture by Mabel O. Wilson.

Do you have a favorite winter hat?

Here’s the scene:  second floor, Amsterisdam’s Rijksmuseum after enjoying time in front of Rembrandt’s The Night Watch, we are wandering in the “side galleries” of 1600-1800 materials that range from paintings to furniture to ships models.  Along the wall at eye level is a plain glass case with six small hats in it.  Why on earth would such plain hats merit inclusion in the museum?

Each hat is different, a few with peaked tops and one with a small brim.  The colors are dark, some mustard-like or forest green.

Here’s what the label says:

Woolen Caps Worn by Dutch Whalers

In 1980 archaeologists investigated the graves of 185 Dutchmen—whale hunters, and workers at whale refineries—who had died on or near Spitsbergen in the 17th century.  Many skeletons were still wearing their knitted woolen head coverings.  These caps were highly personal.  The men were bundled up against the severe cold and could be recognized by the colours and patterns of their caps.  Presumably this is the reason why the caps went with them to their graves.

So, what’s the story?   The hats look pretty much like hats you would see on a cold day, what’s so special about them?    Spitsbergen, an Arctic island off Norway, is a long way from Holland.  So, the hats reveal Holland’s commercial reach.  How is it that the hats were brought back to Holland and considered important enough to be included in the Rijksmuseum’s collection?  What more is known of the hats, their makers and the men who died wearing them?  Why did archaeologists dig on Spitsbergen, what were they looking for, surely not hats?

The hats appear to be ordinary and the label tells you they are made of wool.  They are identified as being from the 17th century.  They raise these questions for me:  Who made them?  Are their designs significant?  Were their wearers important people?  How is it that they have remained in such good condition all these years?  Why are they here in a national museum?

Exhibition specialist Kathy McLean describes effective exhibitions as “conversations” and these hats start one for me.  The best exhibits make you curious, so I go on line to see what the collections section of the museum reveals.  Zilch, what next?  Write the Rijksmuseum staff to see what they can tell me.  When did you last write a museum?  Did you get a reply?  So, I use my association with museum scholarship at the University of Maryland hoping someone might pay attention.  A week later there’s a reply from Lotte Jaeger in the collections department.  There are articles on the hats, but guess what, they are in Dutch.  But, I live in Washington; surely I can find someone to translate for me (or is this getting too complicated?).

I’m thinking again and again about exhibitions and their messages and how I “make meaning” of these ordinary hats.  The hats are simply what we would call “watch caps,” the display is only the hats and a label.  They happen to be from Spitsbergen, which is an island off Norway and holds significance for me as I have friends who have been there (and it’s the home of an international effort to store seeds from all the world’s plants).  So what?  The hats are so “human” in a museum where there are world-class paintings and objects; is that why I “stop” at this case and start a conversation?

Next steps; I sent pictures of the hats to a few friends who are interested in museums (one is a knitter) and ask them what they think of these hats?  Their replies include:  “like my own hat,” “contemporary designs,” “like the pussy hats worn at the anti-Trump march,” and “accessible to everyone.”  This winter as I ride the metro I notice the knit hats and wonder at their significance to the wearer.

From the articles sent from the Rjiksmuseum collections staff I learn a lot about Dutch whaling stations on Spitsbergen. The station sites were established along the Island’s northwest coast at safe anchorages, places that mimic the Dutch coastline.  One of the stations was known as Smeerenburg (which translates to “Blubbertown).  There were 7 stations with “furnaces” for processing the whale oil; they were in use from 1610 to 1660, after which over-fishing had reduced access this source of oil.

The 20th century archaeology fills out a bit more the picture of whaling and whalers. The cemetery at Zeeuwe Uitkijk (maybe the site of these hats) comprised 50 graves with 31 knitted caps.  Most bodies were buried in linen shrouds that have disintegrated leaving only fragments.  The men ranged in age from 14 to 69 and the bodies revealed evidence of scurvy disease.  The hats, sometimes consisting of two layers of fabric, were hand-knitted, not machine made.  As the label suggests they were buried with the whalers rather than being “recycled” by others as perhaps being too personal to be worn; or as mementos of identity and worthy of respect.

I’m curious what others might want to know about these hats and their importance to Dutch culture as represented in the Rjiksmuseum exhibitions.  I’ve shared my conversation with you, where would yours begin?

Footnote:  Smeerenburg Seminar  Report from Symposium presenting results from research into 17th century whaling in Spitsbergen, “A Man is what he wears; 17th and 18th century workman’s clothing from Spitsbergen,” S. Y. Vons-Comis (1987)

Mary Alexander is the co-director of the University of Maryland College Park Museum Scholarship and Material Culture Certificate Program.  

Unpacking the Ariana Curtis Lecture: Understanding Afro-Latinx Museum-cology

In October, Dr. Ariana Curtis, the curator for Latino history at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, spoke as a guest lecturer at an event on Afro-Latinx Museum-cology co-sponsored by the Museum Scholarship and Material Culture Certificate Program. Situated in the basement of Tawes Hall on the University of Maryland campus, Curtis spoke to the small crowd of students and faculty about her lived experiences as an Afro-Latinx woman, others’ perceptions of the concept and the place of Afro-Latinx objects, narratives and peoples within museums. She provided specific examples from exhibits she was involved with from her time as a curator at the Anacostia Community Museum and the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Prior to this lecture, I was unfamiliar with the term ‘Afro-Latinx.’ I had previously seen the term ‘Latinx’ used to refer to those who identify as Latino or Latina in a gender neutral form. However, that was not the topic of discussion for the night. Rather, the topic of discussion was on a different use of the word Latinx, one that described individuals of mixed Latinx and African ancestry and heritage. Curtis’s lecture highlighted how these individuals, of whom she counts herself amongst, are often overlooked and unrecognized both in museum spaces and historical accounts as well as within their own communities.

According to Curtis, despite the large amount of cultural and genetic mixing that took place in the U.S., Latin America and the Caribbean due to the historic abduction and mass forced migration of African peoples through the trans-Atlantic slave trade, many people in the United States are ignorant of the existence of Afro-Latinx people and the different world views they possess by being situated in aspects of both African and Latin American and Caribbean cultures. As Curtis explained, this intersectionality is largely unknown, even to members of African American and Latinx communities, and that many people tend to categorize individuals solely as African/African American, Latin American or Caribbean rather than mixtures of the two. This lack of recognition not only affects how Afro-Latinx individuals see and identify themselves, but also how other people accept and view their identities.

This is partially why Afro-Latinx people are still subject to discrimination and othering, like many African American and Latinx individuals. Curtis has even experienced this at her current place of work, the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, a place she described as a predominantly African American work space. Still, she described an interaction she had with a colleague; where in mentioning plans for an upcoming event the colleague referred to Curtis and her staff in the Latino history department as “you people.” This type of othering, while appearing unintentional, highlights many people’s inability to perceive the overlapping and dynamic aspects of those within their community, who they themselves may possibly view as outsiders. Encountering these recognition obstacles can lead to issues of identity and acceptance, which is something Curtis addresses through her museum work.

Through her curatorial works, Curtis combats this narrow world view through her exhibitions and educational programs. With the exhibit “Black Mosaic.,” Curtis was able to show the variety to African American experiences and send a message to her audience about how there are multiple views of “blackness” within African American communities and that they are all equally valid, as no one person or group has the right to own or define “blackness” for everyone. She accomplished this through a very visual presentation of different skin colors, clothing styles, and languages, which highlighted the different viewpoints being presented in the exhibit. By emphasizing the intersectionality and the multivocality of the people she presents, Curtis is able to influence future conversations about them both inside and outside of the museum, as well as increase recognition for Afro-Latinx people within the United States, Latin America and the Caribbean.

Throughout the lecture it became apparent just how difficult this process of inclusion and recognition within a museum setting is. Developing these exhibits is very challenging and is grounded in knowing who your intended audience is, according to Curtis. This is because that knowledge impacts how she structures the exhibit and how it depicts the Afro-Latinx narrative. Based on her own curatorial experiences, Curtis recommends presenting a balanced exhibit grounded in common understandings and relatability. Not every visitor who comes to see the exhibit will be Afro-Latinx, but it is still important that others see some part of themselves or connection to their lives in the exhibit. This can be done by focusing on shared experiences and the coming together of communities—a notion that harkens back to one of the famed “Principles of Interpretation” put forth by National Park Service Chief Interpreter Freeman Tilden. Curtis believes exhibits like these will encourage critical thinking and expand understanding, which is what is needed to get people talking about life experiences from an intersectional perspective. This greater understanding will influence future generations and affect the conversations they will have regarding the intersectional nature of race and culture.

I found this lecture to be incredibly thought provoking and beneficial as both a student within the MSMC certificate program and also as a white person coming from a place of privilege as a student within the museum world. Prior to this lecture, I was ignorant of the existence of Afro-Latinx cultures and thus was unaware of the issues of identity and acceptance that affect these individuals and how they are portrayed (if they are portrayed) in museum spaces. The “Museum Seminar” class, one of the three core classes of the MSMC certificate, places emphasis on acknowledging intersectionality and incorporating an intersectional perspective in exhibit curation and design. I had already found this lesson to be important as museum spaces often cater to specific audiences or else their established audience, which tends to not include an intersectional focus. However, after this lecture I can see why it is so vital. Museums have the power to affect how some people are viewed in society and it can take a communal identity, like Afro-Latinx, which has been ignored or overlooked in mainstream America and in other museums and really shine a light on it. This work is important, and it will need the support of museum practitioners and students alike if it is to continue successfully.

Sara Downard is a second year M.A. student in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Maryland, College Park, and a student in the Museum Scholarship and Material Culture Certificate program. Email inquiries can be directed to slbdownard@gmail.com.

An Anthropologist in the Art Museum: Reflections on the Curation Process for The Last Ten Years: In Focus

As a second year master’s student at the University of Maryland, College Park, I’m working on a lot of projects: my forthcoming degree will be in anthropology, with a concentration in environmental anthropology, but I’m also enrolled in UMD’s Museum Scholarship and Material Culture Certificate Program. On top of that, I work full time as a graduate assistant at the David C. Driskell Center for the Study of the Visual Arts and Culture of African Americans and the African Diaspora at the University of Maryland, College Park–UMD’s art gallery and research center devoted to African American Art and Art History. This path has given me an incredible opportunity to unify my long standing interests in anthropology, museums and the environment. I’ll be discussing two of those interests today in this reflection on my first foray into art exhibition curation.

In the spring of 2017, I was offered the opportunity to assist in the curation of the Driskell Center’s Fall 2017 exhibition, “The Last Ten Years: In Focus; Selections from the David C. Driskell Center Collections.” The exhibition was drawn both from the Driskell Center’s permanent art collection and its archives, and it had the specific goal of highlighting new acquisitions made in the last 10 years. As an anthropologist, I jumped at the chance to work with the objects in the Driskell Center’s wide and interesting collection. The process of curating the show afforded me the opportunity to meld my museum scholarship with museum practice; it also taught me a lot about the idiosyncrasies of curation.

One early influence on my own curation strategy was the coursework I was doing in the spring of 2017. I was enrolled in the “Introduction to Museum Scholarship” class, taught by Mary Alexander, and in this class we had the opportunity to visit multiple institutions, one of which was The Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C. While at The Phillips Collection, we encountered the notion of grouping objects by what was “in conversation” with each other—this idea, and many of the discussions and readings I encountered in the “Intro to Museum Scholarship” course (which is the first in the sequence leading to the graduate certificate in Museum Scholarship and Material Culture) had a deep effect on the way I thought about the “The Last Ten Years: In Focus.”

I co-curated “The Last Ten Years: In Focus” with professor Curlee R. Holton, the Driskell Center’s executive director. We began this process in late spring by pulling a list of objects accessioned in the last 10 years. I was responsible for selecting a quantity of objects that would make up the show. To do this, I operated from a standpoint of selecting objects or images that were interesting to me both as an amateur art curator and an anthropologist. I also tried to honor the scope of the art collection by selecting a diversity of media, attempting to achieve gender parity in the artists in the show, and spanning a wide range of art history. During this process, I looked at images of everything from Negro Leagues baseball ephemera to antique dolls to African objects and plenty more. After I made my first pass through the collections, I consulted with the center’s deputy director, Dorit Yaron, who was very helpful in mentioning works that bore further consideration, hidden gems or bringing in local artists whom I had missed on the first round of selection.

I mentioned above that I curated the first round of items from images: this is because almost none of the art was on site. From the summer of 2016 to the summer of 2017, the Cole Fieldhouse (attached to our building) was under construction, and the art collection has been moved offsite to prevent damage from the various environmental stresses that construction can cause. Because of this, I had, therefore, seen only a handful of the objects I was selecting for the show in person.

But this process evolved when the Driskell Center was given the all-clear on major construction and the collection was brought back to the center over the summer of 2017. I had a hand in helping to unpack the collection, and this was one of the ways we discovered other pieces in the collection that hadn’t been selected in the first round of curation. Showing up to work over the summer felt like Christmas everyday—unpacking a work in the permanent collection from storage, moving it to its home in the vault, and then getting another. Getting to know the collection on such an intimate and visceral level helped us all to make “The Last Ten Years” a much stronger show by showing us the power of certain works’ physical presence. When you’ve only seen a picture of a piece of art, it’s hard to understand the scale or presence of the piece. After the collection was back on site, curation became administration—pulling together all the proper records for the pieces, creating a checklist and labels and proofreading, re-proofreading, adding and subtracting a few pieces at the last minute, etc.

Professor Holton and I also made a few curatorial decisions about display practices for the show. Traditionally, the Driskell Center only provides interpretation in the form of a wall text at the beginning of the show, but for “The Last Ten Years,” we wanted to open up dialogue about the collection and for the visitors. To this end, we created 10 “conversation labels,” which contained the standard information for the pieces in the show (artist, title, year, medium, credit line, etc.) and an additional two-paragraph “dialogue” between Professor Holton and me. The purpose of these labels was to shine a light on why we chose some of the works we did, as well as different modes of interpretation between an artist/art historian (Professor Holton) and an anthropologist (myself). The labels also contained questions—as an anthropologist, I’m interested in the ways we construct categories and genres, etc., so I asked things like “What is a portrait? What makes a portrait good or effective? Does it need to be totally true to life, or can it depart from reality in certain ways?” Additionally, I created an audience response wall visible upon exiting the gallery which contained prompts such as “I SAW,” “I FELT,” and “I HAVE A QUESTION” so that visitors could talk back to the show. We’ve already received some wonderful feedback.

The audience response board created for “The Last Ten Years: In Focus.” Audience members wrote thoughts and feelings on cards and pinned them to the areas around the prompts.

Once the process of selecting the works in the show was complete, the process of installation began. I mentioned above that the process of curating this show included some departures from traditional Driskell Center choices, and the installation for “The Last Ten Years: In Focus” was no different. From the start, I wanted this show to be jam-packed full of work, because the Driskell Center’s collection is so full of wonderful pieces. My own personal aesthetic tends towards more dramatic modes of display, and to this end, we experimented in “The Last Ten Years” with intimate settings and salon-style hangings. The process of installing the show was its own journey—and perhaps it will be the subject of a future blog post.

“The Last Ten Years: In Focus” was on view until November 18, 2017. To learn more about “The Last Ten Years: In Focus,” including gallery hours, please visit the Driskell Center’s website.

Kevin McDonald is a second year M.A.A. student in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Maryland. His research interests include environmental anthropology and museum scholarship. He can be reached on Twitter at @oykevalt and Instagram @cinaedus. Email inquiries can be directed to KevinRyanMcDonald@gmail.com.