Decentring the Museum

£29.99

Author: Nina Moentmann

Art & design styles: from c 1960 | Museology & heritage studies | National liberation & independence, post-colonialism

Published on 1st September 2023 by Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd in the United Kingdom as part of the ‘New Directions in Contemporary Art’ series.

Hardback | 144 pages, 20 Illustrations, black and white
137mm x 208mm x 17mm | 288g

8 in stock

Description

Nina Moentmann’s timely book extends the decolonisation debate to the institutions of contemporary art. In a thoughtfully articulated text, illustrated with pertinent examples of best practice, she argues that to play a crucial role within increasingly diverse societies museums and galleries of contemporary art have a responsibility to ‘decentre’ their institutions, removing from their collections, exhibition policies and infrastructures a deeply embedded Euro-centric cultural focus with roots in the history of colonialism. In this, she argues, they can learn from the example both of anthropological museums (such as the Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum in Cologne), which are engaged in debates about the colonial histories of their collections, about trauma and repair, and of small-scale art spaces (such as La Colonie, Paris, ANO, Institute of Arts and Knowledge, Accra or Savvy Contemporary, Berlin), which have the flexibility, based on informal infrastructures, to initiate different kinds of conversation and collective knowledge production in collaboration with indigenous or local diasporic communities from the Global South.

For the first time, this book identifies the influence that anthropological museums and small art spaces can exert on museums of contemporary art to initiate a process of decentring.

Additional information

Weight 288 g
Dimensions 137 × 208 × 17 mm

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Decentring the Museum”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *