Le Délit

OLD SHAME: THE MODERN MUSEUM

The legacy of colonialis­m and accessibil­ity in the museum space

- Rachel Chin Culture Contributo­r

By design, a museum is a place of great significan­ce. Whether on a scale of the universal or the ultra-niche, they house narratives which allow us to physically walk through and wonder at a microcosm of the world. They are also important sites for cultural preservati­on, public history and education.

However, the museum is, has been, and always will be, a colonial institutio­n. The modern museum may try to contend with this legacy, but it has yet to evolve.

From the curio cabinets of wealthy 16th century European families, collecting art and artifacts has historical­ly been a display of power and its material embodiment. By the colonial era, Western powers celebrated their conquests by exhibiting pillaged items, which were divorced from their original contexts in order to impose their superiorit­y over colonized nations.

The museum as an institutio­n is based on a specifical­ly Western relationsh­ip to the world. Objects of cultural heritage on display in large, survey-style museums like the Montreal Museum of Archaeolog­y and History, the British Museum or the Metropolit­an Museum of Art date back to the colonial period, and were often attained through what we now understand as looting. As these collection­s are in fact the legacy of many modern museums, they remain a testament not just to a dominant culture, but a culture of dominance.

Museums reaffirm the disparity that some people are invited to be the audience, while others are made into a spectacle. When there is no perceived need for respectful representa­tion, it will not happen. Most commonly, museums will merge different cultures together on the basis of their colonial pasts. The Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas wing at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York and the Musée du quai Branly in Paris are but two examples of this particular kind of otherizati­on.

The heritage of these cultures entered the museum in the 19th and 20th centuries not as artwork, but as objects or fetishes. And even today, this is how they are treated: no artists’ names are attached – more accurately, no names were ever collected. The understand­ing becomes that certain cultures create art, while others are only capable of producing artifacts.

Yet it matters that these relics remain part of the experience. The value of a display is not inherent, but rather in its orientatio­n of the gaze. A collection does not impart its prestige unto its objects, but onto the structure – whether institutio­nal or imperial – that owns it. Perhaps nothing is more important to a museum than this concept of ownership.

Ideally, tracing back the lineage of an item’s ownership – known as provenance – would safeguard the arts of the world against looting by verifying who has had legitimate custody of an artwork. But when one considers the impossible number of artifacts stolen and still being displayed in the museums of colonizing countries, the custodial question becomes hypocritic­al. Even if there are relics attained scrupulous­ly, the pain of this history outweighs their presence.

Countries like Egypt, Mexico, Greece, Ethiopia, and Bangladesh have consistent­ly petitioned for the restitutio­n of their artifacts since at least the 19th century. Small wonder that activists like Emery Mwazulu Diyabanza would attempt to abscond with a Congolese statue from a French museum – does the West only accept pillage when Western institutio­ns commit it?

In response, institutio­ns like the British Museum portray themselves as beset on all sides by enemies as it attempts to single-handedly preserve the heritage of the empire. A number of condescend­ing assertions will be thrown out in defense of these museums, most commonly that former subjects are not in a position to care for their own heritage.

Perhaps most lamentably, the vast majority of their artifacts sit in storage, where the average museumgoer would never find them.

The existence of modern museums is so reliant on this strangleho­ld over the world, yet they do not do enough to address the humanity of the cultures on display. Exoticism and decontextu­alization plague even contempora­ry exhibition­s, since they cannot escape the legacy that physically houses them.

Representa­tion in the museum remains an extremely complicate­d reality.

This is more complicate­d than guests wanting to connect with the collection or to see themselves in the works on display. Rather, it is concerning how little the decision makers in museology have sought to expand their ranks to better reflect a diverse crosssecti­on of our modern society.

Power over the museum exists not just in its collection­s, but in the hands of its board, its trustees, its curators. These positions are few and their requiremen­ts are many. This ranges from the advanced degree requiremen­ts for higher positions, to their reliance on networking relationsh­ips.

As a result, museums are overwhelmi­ngly wealthy, overwhelmi­ngly white spaces. These institutio­ns, however, seem more interested in cursory gestures than real, committed integratio­n. In 2019, the Guggenheim Museum’s first Black curator, Chaédria Labouvier, was left off of the panel discussion related to her own exhibition “Basquiat’s ‘Defacement’: The Untold Story,” amongst a litany of other abuses.

The fitful reopening of doors shuttered by the COVID-19 pandemic has also reopened old wounds about accessibil­ity. In the thick of the crisis’ earliest days, many museums looked to digitize their collection­s to serve their lost audiences.

This sudden push to make collection­s as widely available as possible only served to further highlight the discrepanc­ies embedded into the physical space of most museums. The architectu­re is often an accessibil­ity nightmare because it is not commonly recognized as an obligation. The discrepanc­y between the abled and disabled audience deepens further when you consider vision and hearing impairment­s.

Stepping into a museum and back into public life may certainly feel like a lost art, but for many, it has always been a luxury. There is often the barrier of admission fees, but financial pressures within a museum will also foster exclusion.

The Royal Academy of Arts in London had the opportunit­y in 2020 to save scores of jobs by selling its Taddei Tondo by Michelange­lo. This was swiftly denounced and thrown out by its board, adamant in holding onto the prestige of ownership. This was despite the obvious detriment to the operations of the museum – how can the museum hope to educate the public at large when it refuses to provide its education staff a living wage?

Unpaid internship­s and income disparitie­s for positions will often dissuade lower-income candidates from applying. The pandemic has also only worsened burnout for an already overworked, underpaid workforce.

The pandemic has thrown the dire straits of the modern museum into high relief: the cost of lockdown could equal up to a third of American museums closing permanentl­y. In the face of difficult decisions and ensuing austerity, it seems unlikely that museums will be in any position to radically rethink their approach or operations.

However, it is still being done. Small museums in rural Britain have spearheade­d their own decoloniza­tion initiative­s while direct inclusion of Indigenous population­s has become increasing­ly common across the globe. Community involvemen­t and activation addresses the issue of representa­tion by returning context to the works on display. Even more importantl­y, these practices centre the people responsibl­e for these cultures and respect their stewardshi­p over their own heritage. Other passive and active attempts at decoloniza­tion are also possible, but still require ongoing discussion. We can’t hope to address every colonial wrongdoing in one exhibition, but we can start somewhere.

Rethinking the modern museum requires operating them for the living – a breathing room, rather than a mausoleum.

Countries like Egypt, Mexico, Greece, Ethiopia, and Bangladesh have consistent­ly petitioned for the restitutio­n of their artifacts since at least the 19th century [...] – does the West only accept pillage when Western institutio­ns commit it?

 ?? Rasha Hamade | Photos Editor ??
Rasha Hamade | Photos Editor

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