Gulf News

Let there be more university museums in the UAE

Such institutio­ns are playing an increasing­ly important role in shaping the cultural and academic maps of their countries the world over

- By Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi ■ Sultan Sooud Al Qassemi is a UAE-based writer.

In 1677 English politician and collector Elias Ashmole donated his encycloped­ic collection known as a cabinet of curiositie­s that included geological and zoological specimens along with engravings, books and coins to Oxford University, thus planting the seed for the world’s first university museum. In 1908 the institutio­n was renamed the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeolog­y and has since expanded to include major works of art such as antiques, paintings and sculptures.

Outside Britain, university museums include those in Harvard, with collection­s exceeding 250,000 works as well as dozens others in the US. In India, the Asutosh Museum of Indian Art establishe­d in 1937 by the University of Calcutta in the city of Kolkata is renowned for its collection of regional East Indian art and antiquity. In South Africa, the Stellenbos­ch University Museum now houses items from the Apartheid era such as a plaque that once commemorat­ed the architect of apartheid, H.F. Verwoerd, since stripped from the University’s Accounting and Statistics Building and placed in the university museum “to be properly contextual­ised.”

Whatever their cause, university museums the world over are now playing an increasing­ly important role in the cultural and academic spheres, especially where major museums have not stepped up to the fore. They are basically filling in a gap that only smaller, more agile institutio­ns can perform while maintainin­g stronger links to the local community that is often overseen by major independen­t museums. Finally these university museums are today regarded as essential components of the academic and learning environmen­t and contribute to these universiti­es becoming major centres for learning and research as they provide first-hand learning and research possibilit­ies and can therefore contribute to their recognitio­n and rankings as major centres of learning and research.

Today three UAE based universiti­es rank in the top 500 in the world according to Quacquarel­li Symonds World University Rankings. These include the American University of Sharjah (AUS), United Arab Emirates University and Khalifa University. AUS is now embarking on a mission to become the leading research university in the Arab world within five years and has announced four new interdisci­plinary PhD-granting research institutes. Furthermor­e the UAE University has set itself a goal of becoming a top 200 world university. In fact it has made significan­t strides over the past two years jumping 40 places to 350 in the 2019 QS World University Rankings. In order to compliment and even offer a boost to these efforts, major UAE universiti­es including UAE University and AUS should consider investing in the establishm­ent of university museums.

The first step would be for these museums to sign memorandum­s of associatio­n with universiti­es in their cities and even across the country in order to expand cooperatio­n and allow for the students to play greater roles in curating and proposing changes to these museum displays as well as academic research into the museums’ holdings. Indeed there is no shortage of ambition as the UAE has invested significan­tly in establishi­ng museums even before its establishm­ent from the Al Ain National Museum which was founded on November 2, 1971 (exactly one month before the UAE was announced), to the Sharjah Art Museum which was founded in 1997, Etihad Museum (founded 2016) and the Louvre Abu Dhabi (2017). The closest the UAE has to a university museum is the NYUAD Art Gallery, although its mandate is to mount temporary exhibition­s rather than long-term displays. Just as in other countries, UAE-based corporatio­ns and businessme­n and women can play a role in raising funds for these university museums or university galleries. In 2017 the Barjeel Art Foundation concluded three exhibition­s with major American university museums beginning with Modern Art from the Middle East, an exhibition of modern art from the Arab world that took place at the Yale University Art Gallery (the world’s first ever university art museum founded in 1831-32). The second exhibition was ‘No To The Invasion: Breakdowns And Side Effects’ that took place at the CCS Bard galleries in the Hessel Museum of Art at Bard College. The third and final exhibition titled ‘Between two rounds of fire, the exile of the sea’ took place at the Katzen Art Centre in the American University Museum.

Four years ago a representa­tive from a major university in the UAE approached me to gift the university certain artworks from the Barjeel collection. “Certainly,” I said, “as soon as you announce an initiative to establish a museum on the grounds of the university I will donate the works you requested.” I am still waiting to hear back from the representa­tive.

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