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Museum Memories: History, Technology, Art (Maleuvre 1999)

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... participate in the production of history and become protectors of the art. ... Art should be expression of vital culture of the present. ... Art of Misplacement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Museum Memories: History, Technology, Art (Maleuvre 1999)


1
Museum Memories History, Technology, Art
(Maleuvre 1999)
2
The Outline
3
The Outline
  • Introduction
  • Ch. 1 Museum Times
  • Ch. 2 Bringing the Museum Home The Domestic
    Interior in the 19th Century
  • Ch. 3 Balzacana

4
Introduction
main argument of the book
5
Introduction
  • The theory of museums and displays that affected
    how museums were redesigned over time (changing
    practices of presenting and apprehending art).
  • Official inception of the museum at the turn of
    the 19th century starts the Golden Age of the
    Museum. Museographic debates over the role of the
    museum, relationship of art to life (praxis),
    authenticity (art in context).
  • Louvre, The British Museum (examples)

6
Introduction
  • Formative stages in the development of museum
    displays
  • cabinet of paintings (cabinets de curiosités /
    Wunderkammer) 16/17th century
  • The Revolutionary Museum (1790s)
  • The Golden Age of Museums (19th century)
  • modernista museum (1890s to 1930s)
  • escape from museum (serialization) (1960s)
  • the revised museum (ecomuseum) (1980s)

7
Introduction
  • Why study museums?
  • History of museums reflects the history of
    reinvention of the past how society relates to
    its cultural tradition
  • Museums are manufacturing history by offering an
    image of history by collecting past artifacts
    give shape and presence to history, inventing it,
    in effect, by defining the space of a ritual
    encounter with the past.

8
Introduction
  • Why museums are problematic ?
  • Museums are purposive, and powerful institutions
    shaping identity of groups (national identity).
    What point of view do they represent?
  • Debates over authenticity The museum endangers
    artistic and cultural authenticity by removing
    artworks and artifacts from original locations
    and placing them in galleries where they can be
    gawked at, and never, so to speak, lived with.

9
Introduction
  • Should museum be viewed as production or as
    conservation (of culture)?
  • Museum champions / Museum detractors

10
Introduction
  • Separation (museification of art) vs.
  • Reconciliation of art with existence theorized
    by
  • Hegel the spirituality / the immanence of art
  • Antoine-Chrysostome Quatremère de Quincy
  • antimuseum critique
  • Nietzsche, Dewey, Heidegger, Marinetti the
  • first historical avant-garde re-constructing the
    bond of
  • the museum with life

11
1. Museum Times
authenticity of art / authenticity of experience
12
1. Museum Times
  • History Lab
  • Pointing Fingers
  • Authenticity
  • Hegels Guide to the Museum
  • Art of Misplacement
  • The Art Police
  • The Origin of Museums
  • The Avant-Garde Attacks
  • Monumental Time
  • The Caesura of Art
  • The Caesura of the Image
  • Prousts Museum
  • The Experience of Art
  • Art in Ruins
  • Framework
  • The Decline of Subject
  • Estheticizing the Bourgeois
  • The Identity in Question

13
1. Museum Times
  • History Lab
  • Museums emerge in the beginning of the 19th
    century in the process of cultural secularization
    of history (art becomes public, pedagogical
    tool for the people)
  • Art institutes established France (Louvre) 1793
    Spain 1820 Britain (National Gallery) 1824
    Berlin (Die Altes Museum) 1830
  • Museums participate in the production of history
    and become protectors of the art.

14
1. Museum Times
  • Pointing Fingers
  • First response to the phenomenon of museums.
  • Quatremères Considerations morales (1815),
    protests against museums (the principle of
    cultural authenticity) criticizes creators of
    museums (Louvre) for de-contextualizing art for
    making art a spectacle objectively removed from
    the context of creation.
  • Art should be expression of vital culture of the
    present. Instead, culture is interpreted to
    pertain to a glorious past.

15
1. Museum Times
  • Authenticity
  • His argument reflects a desire for authenticity
    that in fact is prompted by the contemporary
    social process in which the restructuring of
    thought, and society occurs (18/19 cent.).
  • Ever since, authenticity is an embattled concept
    because industrialization started liquidating the
    genuine and the perennial, producing the
    inauthenticity of experience. The role of art is
    to restore that bond.

16
1. Museum Times
  • Hegels Guide to the Museum
  • Hegels Phenomenology of Spirit (1807) offers a
    different interpretation of the museum in which
    objects are decontextualized and preserved.
    Because he promotes contemplation rather than
    action, he considers the idealized museum a
    positive development because it frees objects of
    their context and allows contemplation of their
    spiritual nature. He considers that the cultural
    context of creation of art is incidental.

17
1. Museum Times
  • Art of Misplacement
  • By uprooting art from the run of existence, the
    museum makes room for the restless drive of
    culture -- the museum uproots culture in order to
    create new forms. Without forgetting, and that
    culture is always (anyways) involved in the
    production of culture, the museum is true to that
    natural process. There is no continuity just
    re-creation of culture. The museum can be an
    active participant in the process.

18
1. Museum Times
  • The Art Police
  • Society locks away those elements that are
    deemed either too dangerous or too precious to
    move freely in the public domain.
  • Museum aestheticizes art. It protects art (in a
    neutral context) from the forces of the social
    and those who would manipulate art because it is
    perceived as dangerous.

19
1. Museum Times
  • The Origin of Museums
  • The museums are contemporary with the emergence
    of aesthetics as meditation on art, as being able
    to speak about art in words rather than
    sensuously experiencing it without making it
    external to the subject.
  • Art (in the museum) becomes object for
    contemplation (18th / 19th century)

20
1. Museum Times
  • The Avant-Garde Attacks
  • Attacks by avant-garde (Futurists, Surrealists)
    because of the esthetic exclusion of art from
    praxis.
  • Duchamps ready-mades were made to mock the arts
    freedom from life as established by the museums.
  • Duchamps urinal (Fountain by R. Mutt) is a
    statement about art but, outside the gallery, it
    is simply a urinal.

21
1. Museum Times
  • Monumental Time
  • Museums are historical because they exhibit
    artworks according to historiographic principles
    (criteria of period, style, chronological
    markers, technique). They are also ahistorical
    because they raise artworks above the flow of
    historical becoming. They are engaged in
    producing monumental time.
  • Museums provide contact with reality in the
    modern world (ecomuseum transforms a real thing
    into heritage).

22
1. Museum Times
  • The Caesura of Art
  • The Caesura of the Image
  • Museums present art as historical monument but
    they can never preserve it fully. For example,
    they disengage the object from use-value (e.g.
    objects in ecomuseum) and make the thing become
    an image of what it used to be. This is not
    historical because historical deals with the
    realm of use, of how this was used as historical
    object.

23
1. Museum Times
  • Prousts Museum
  • The Experience of Art
  • Prousts description of the museum in A la
    recherche du temps perdu, shows it as a place of
    memory where object exists as an image, and
    produces pleasure in continuous contemplation
    that is always aware of previous contemplation of
    that object. The mental event of contemplation
    singles art out as experience of itself, not mere
    documentation.

24
1. Museum Times
  • Art in Ruins
  • The increasingly historiographic nature of the
    museum, that collecting should be scientific, is
    the product of the Golden Age of Museums (19th
    century).
  • Kunstkammer (16/17 century) was reorganized into
    a museum, a place of study and contemplation, and
    work of art is stamped as having historically
    documentary character belonging to a rational and
    coherent history of artistic development.

25
1. Museum Times

26
1. Museum Times
27
1. Museum Times

28
1. Museum Times
  • Art in Ruins
  • Changing role of museum and styles of displays
    (styles of hanging paintings) from Wunderkammer
    through Revolutionary through Restoration
    (Louvre)
  • Salon (until the end of the 19th century) frame
    to frame, floor to ceiling, regimented according
    to stylistic regroupings and explanatory labels
    (national pigeonholing)

29
1. Museum Times
  • Framework
  • Changing styles of displays (styles of hanging
    paintings)
  • Modern museum (20th century) sanitizes the works.
    In the Salon display, the works vie for
    attention, in their heavy frames in a tightly
    packed exhibition space. The exhibition space
    becomes sparse. The transition from the gilded
    frame to the modern self-effacing frame.

30
1. Museum Times
  • Framework
  • Changing styles of displays (styles of hanging
    paintings)
  • Modern museum (20th century) Implications for
    viewing and activity of subject in processing
    art. The previous activity of viewing (salon
    display) was in appropriation of work and
    experiencing it as distinct from others. The
    modern museum provides a packaged experience, and
    viewing that is not a negotiation.

31
1. Museum Times
  • The Decline of Subject
  • Estheticizing the Bourgeois
  • The process of viewing from Wunderkammer in which
    there was no viewing order and the only unifying
    principle was the collectors persona and the
    personal principle of collection. In the modern
    museum there is an increasing alienation in the
    consumption of art. The collector is mere manager
    of resources art as resource is objectively
    defined by market value.

32
1. Museum Times
  • The Decline of Subject
  • Estheticizing the Bourgeois
  • Art seeks to escape from the rarefied atmosphere
    of the modern museum. For example, the works of
    Andy Warhol, embracing serialization, and
    multiplicity, do so by their very substance. The
    modern work of art favors series, and openly
    manifests its belonging to a sequence of other
    artistic works.

33
1. Museum Times
  • The Identity in Question
  • The museum is a political resource whereby
    national identities are constructed. The creation
    of museums in the nineteenth century is tied to
    rise of nationalism and the forced identification
    of individuals with a civic, national character.
  • That process makes museums a fascinating object
    of study of group identities.

34
2. Bringing the Museum Home
the social context (bourgeois interior,
decorative objects), positivism in scholarship,
naturalism in literature
35
3. Balzacana
Le peau de chagrin (Balzac)
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