Objects on the Move
Unpacking the Narratives of Circulating Exhibitions 1900–1952
Published on Wednesday, April 24, 2024
Abstract
The MMD Museum Materials Discussions Journal welcomes article submissions to be published in a special theme issue exploring traveling exhibitions. The call for papers aims to encourage a transdisciplinary discussion on how touring exhibitions contributed to the knowledge growth within the circuit of arts, decorative arts, handicrafts, fashion, and design. The MMD issue aims to address the topic within a broader framework, providing new insights or a different way of understanding artifacts, people, and ideas detached from their original contexts, how and why they circulated, and the ways specific ideas, forms, and displays were perceived out of their original context. The chronological boundaries range from the beginning of the 20th century to 1952 (inception of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service).
Announcement
Argument
In the 1950s, interest emerged among scholars and museum professionals in circulating exhibitions as a distinct format with its own theoretical principles, goals and technical issues. The 1950 publication of a themed issue of ICOM’s Museum Journal attests to growing interest in the international framework. Tracing the origins of such practices back to Great Britain, museologist Grace L. McCann Morley Osborne noted how the phenomenon expanded in Canada, the United States, South Africa, and Australia, acknowledging the importance of such practices in disseminating knowledge and encouraging cultural exchanges. Three years later, Elodie Courter Osborn – a former director of circulating exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York – authored the UNESCO Handbook of Circulating Exhibitions, discussing organizational and design issues posed by circulating exhibitions and providing professionals with technical advice based on her decennial experience at MoMA.
Traveling exhibitions could benefit from the availability of a broader range of items, locations, or professionals beyond traditional museums and/or galleries. Sometimes, exhibited works included those that could not be permanently displayed, such as drawings, or prints. Reproductions and facsimiles were sometimes added alongside original art works to include objects that could not circulate because of their nature or to avoid damage risks. Exhibit locations ranged from museums, libraries, schools, and stores. Traditional and “unconventional” players – including politicians, diplomats, museum directors and curators, private collectors, businesspeople, buyers, art critics, and journalists – were all involved in a complex network, engaged in new organizational challenges to the events’ success.
While promoting a deeper knowledge and understanding of different cultures among broad audiences, traveling shows helped strengthen cultural and political ties and significant networks of exchange while increasing attendance in hosting museums. Though scale and elaborateness might vary, exhibitions could count on a tightly organized schedule, enabling participating institutions to share production costs, organizational efforts, installation philosophy, display strategies, and marketing campaigns.
Some of these shows have already been the object of investigations. For instance, recent studies have focused on specific traveling exhibitions that played prominent roles within a diplomatic and commercial context – e.g., Italy at Work (United States), Weberpackung in America, Tapeten in USA, and Textilien aus USA (Germany) – or that championed an explicit (and sometimes noxious) political and ideological agenda – e.g., Die Entartete Kunst Ausstellung (Germany).
Yet few studies have explored traveling exhibitions in a broader context, as part and parcel of a modern era that drew its impulses and ideas from transcultural research and ambitions and as a legacy of today’s challenges.
This call for papers aims to encourage a transdisciplinary discussion on how touring exhibitions contributed to the knowledge growth within the circuit of arts, decorative arts, handicrafts, fashion, and design.
The MMD issue aims to address the topic within a broader framework, providing new insights or a different way of understanding artifacts, people, and ideas detached from their original contexts, how and why they circulated, and the ways specific ideas, forms, and displays were perceived out of their original context. The chronological boundaries range from the beginning of the 20th century to 1952 (inception of the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service).
Topics
Submissions may address, but are not limited to, the following topics:
- Case studies related to specific traveling exhibitions and the way they impacted on local or global communities;
- Institutions or individuals (collectors or museum curators and directors) involved with traveling exhibitions;
- Case studies detailing shared display strategies;
- Comparison of different narratives addressing the same events;
- Approaches to conservation, publication and communication of the memory of traveling exhibitions;
- Historical risk-management practices for packing and shipping items to ensure safety and installation quality under diverse conditions.
Submission guidelines
Submissions will be sent as abstracts (maximum 3,000 characters, spaces included) in Italian, English or French and a short author biography (maximum 1,000 characters, spaces included) to the editorial board (mmdjournal@unibo.it) and the guest editor (paola.cordera@polimi.it)
by 1 July 2024.
Should they be accepted, full papers must be submitted for peer review by 15 January 2025.
Key Dates
- Abstract submission: 1 July 2024
- Notification of acceptance: 1 September 2024
- Full paper submission (including images): 15 January 2025
- Reviewers report to authors for amendments: 1 April 2025
- Final text submission: 15 May 2025
Editorial Team
Guest editor
- Paola Cordera
Editor-in-Chief
- Sandra Costa Università di Bologna, IT
Associate Editors
- Anna Rosellini ENSA Paris-Est, Université Gustave Eiffel, FR
- Paola Cordera Politecnico di Milano, IT
Editorial Board
- Irene Di Pietro PhD Università di Bologna, IT
- Federico Maria Giorgi PhD candidate Politecnico di Milano and Paris Cité, IT FR
- Alessandro Paolo Lena PhD candidate Université Paris 1 (Una-Her-Doc Programme), FR EU
Journal Manager
- Alessandro Paolo Lena PhD candidate Université Paris 1 (Una-Her-Doc Programme), FR EU
Graphic Design
- Federico Maria Giorgi PhD candidate Politecnico di Milano and Paris Cité, IT FR
Scientific Committee
- Javier Arnaldo Atlas Museo, Museo del Prado, ES
- Ruth Baumeiste Aarhus School of Architecture, DK
- Alexander Damianisch Director Center Focus Research, University of Applied Arts Vienna, AT
- Emilie D’Orgeix Directrice de recherche EPHE, Université PSL, FR
- Giancarla Periti University of Toronto, CA
- Marco Pizzo Museo del Risorgimento, Roma, IT
- Dominique Poulot Université Paris 1, FR
- Naoki Sato University of the Arts, Tokyo, JP
Subjects
Date(s)
- Monday, July 01, 2024
Attached files
Keywords
- circulating exhibitions, cultural exchanges, display strategies, conservation practices, logistics challenges
Contact(s)
- Paola Cordera
courriel : paola [dot] cordera [at] polimi [dot] it
Reference Urls
Information source
- Paola Cordera
courriel : paola [dot] cordera [at] polimi [dot] it
License
This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.
To cite this announcement
« Objects on the Move », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Wednesday, April 24, 2024, https://doi.org/10.58079/w9j4