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Tate Modern courses

The Art Museum: Past, Present, Future

13 January – 23 March 2020

Yinka Shonibare CBE, The British Library 2014. Tate. © Yinka Shonibare. Co-commissioned by HOUSE 2014 and Brighton Festival. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London.

Discuss the past, present and future of the art museum

Examine the historical development, contemporary status and future priorities of the art museum over the course of ten sessions, held at Tate Modern and Tate Britain. We'll consider the major activities undertaken by museums, how their conception and execution have evolved over the last 200 years, and how they sit within a broader social, political and cultural landscape.

Organised around a series of presentations by Tate staff on emerging programmes and practices, the course introduces and analyses key themes concerning the past, present and future directions of the art museum. Topics of discussion include collection strategies, curatorial methods, learning programmes, the impact of digital technology, and how institutions engage with a diverse range of publics.

Led by independent curator Nina Trivedi, this course will critically engage with reflections on past and existing institutional models and will investigate what practical steps towards creating new approaches might look like.

A Brief History of the Art Museum

Week :1 Mapping the Museum: Origins and Definitions
Week 2: Working with a Collection: Acquisition, Exhibition, Conservation
Week 3: The Politics of Space: Museum Architecture

Contemporary Programmes and Practices

Week 4: The Changing Role of Curators
Week 5: Experiments in Learning
Week 6: Reading Week
Week 7: Funding the Museum: Dilemmas and Opportunities

Planning for the Future

Week 8: Artists and Institutions
Week 9: New Modes of Engagement: Content, Communication, Participation
Week 10: Reimaging Audiences: The Role of Digital Technology
Week 11: Manifesto for a Museum of the Future

Biography

Nina Trivedi

Nina Trivedi was awarded a BFA from Parsons School of Design and an MFA from Goldsmiths, University of London. She is currently completing a PhD at the Royal College of Art about Critical Race Studies and Feminist New Materialisms in New Media Installations. Nina teaches at The Royal College of Art, Goldsmiths and Syracuse University. She has recently produce a symposium for the Science Museum and prior public projects include those for MK Gallery and Tenderbooks. Nina is the managing editor for the Journal of Visual Culture and has published essays in exhibition catalogues for Whitechapel Gallery as well as a recent text for the Design Journal.

Organised in collaboration with the Department of Culture, Media and Creative Industries, King’s College London.

Tate Modern

McAulay StudioLevel 0, Natalie Bell Building

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
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Dates

13 January – 23 March 2020

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