This was my speech yesterday at the ICOM Europe Annual Conference, which took place in Bologna, Italy. The theme was "The role of local and regional museums in the building of a people's Europe". Read more
Wednesday, 15 November 2017
Tuesday, 31 October 2017
The person we need to listen to
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| Grada Kilomba, The Kosmos 2 (Detail) © Esra Rotthoff, courtesy of Maxim Gorki Theatre. (image taken from the website Contemporary And) |
A few weeks ago, there was an artice in the newspaper Público entitled Grada Kilomba is the artist Portugal needs to listen to. Until then, I had never heard of Grada Kilomba. Last week we had the opening of two exhibitions, apparently the first two in her homeland, although Grada Kilomba has already got an intense career abroad. A fact which is "perversely coherent", according to the Público, "as getting into the work of Grada Kilomba - in her video and sound installations, in her performances, in her rehearsed readings, in her texts - is having to deal with the violent history of colonialism and post-colonialism, a history in which Portugal is deeply ingrained, but is stubbornly pretending that it has nothing to do with it."
Tuesday, 12 September 2017
That's mine too!
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| Eden Condoms, Esther Pi & Timo Waag, Spain. Shortlisted for the 2017 Rijksstudio Awards (source: Rijksmuseum website) |
Should people be allowed to use images from museum collections on birthday cakes, sneakers, condoms or toilet paper? Who will protect the dignity of the objects from this 'assault'? And how about the income museums are losing by not charging for the images?
Monday, 11 September 2017
A question of relevance
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| The cover of Story, August 2017. |
My article "A question of relevance" was published in August 2017 in Story, the Queensland Performing Arts Center magazine, part of its learn strategy and edited by Rebecca Lamoin. In this edition, QPAC seeks to look at the concept of resistance in the cultural sector from multiple points of view and is inspired by QPAC's July - December programme. Read here
Wednesday, 21 June 2017
A national tragedy: what does "Culture" have to do with it?
On Sunday morning, the news surpassed our worst nightmare.
The great fire in the area of Pedrógão Grande (central Portugal) had taken
the lives of 19 people. Throughout the day, this number kept rising. The
country was in shock.
The Maria Matos Municipal Theater in Lisbon was the first
to react. Not only did it announce the cancellation of that day’s performance, as
a result of the declaration of national mourning, but it also informed its
followers on Facebook about possible ways to help and kept updating this
information. It remained solidarious and involved.
Saturday, 17 June 2017
What is happening to the Transport and Communications Museum in Porto?
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| Transport and Communications Museum, "The automobile in Space and Time" exhibition, 2015 (Photo: Maria Vlachou) |
This week, I was at the
Transport and Communications Museum in Porto for a pre-conference workshop of ECSITE
(the European Network of Science Centres and Museums). I like to go back to the
Alfândega (customs building), I carry good memories, both as a visitor and as a
professional. Two years ago, I had been there for a very interesting conference
of the International Association of Museums of Transport and Communications,
which really marked me, and I took the opportunity to revisit the exhibition of
the automobile ("The Automobile in Space and Time") and to get to
know the exhibition "Communicate".
Thursday, 15 June 2017
Why us?! Then who?
My presentation yesterday at the ECSITE pre-conference workshop "Social inclusion and diversity – from goodwill to institutional change". Here
Sunday, 4 June 2017
Resonance
It’s always a pleasure and
an inspiration reading Nina Simon’s posts. But the ones I’ve always liked the
most were those where she shares her learnings from being in a position of responsibility, such as Year One as a Museum Director… Survived! or her latest Why We Moved the Abbott Square Opening - A Mistake, a Tough Call and a Pivot.
We’re all too used to
museum directors – or other people with a responsibility to lead in our field – available
to discuss happy endings. Rarely the process, never the failures. Even when
they feel compelled to comment on actions and situations that receive negative
criticism, there always seems to be a way of getting around the whole thing,
finding justifications, concentrating on irrelevant details, offering alternative
truths. Anything that can take our attention away from what should essentially
be discussed. Anything but a clear “It’s true, we were wrong about this, we’re
here to discuss it.”
Tuesday, 4 April 2017
To charge or not to charge: the data
As far as I am aware of, decisions to charge or not to charge and how in Portuguese national museums are never based on research. Those who scrap admission fees do it in the name of “democratisation” and “accessibility” and state that the loss of income is not significant (never mentioning how much it is, though). Those who reinstate them usually speak of the need to generate some income.
Although previous research
and summative evaluation is not part of our practice in Portugal, this is not
the case in other countries. And even though we seem to lack our own specific
data, we can always learn from the experience and shared knowledge of others.
Thursday, 9 March 2017
Friday, 10 February 2017
What if it was here?
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| Harvard Books created a special section on its shelves in response to a Trump spokeswoman's reference to a massacre that never happened (image taken from the Harvard Books Instagram account) |
I must admit that it is
with great emotion and admiration that I see American cultural organisations
taking a (political) stand and criticising their President’s policies. Some
rather mild in their reactions, others quite affirmative and outspoken (see
here), it is nevertheless a great lesson for us all and
very probably the proof that cultural organisations are anything but neutral,
they are actually inevitably political.
Saturday, 4 February 2017
Looking for sandy ground
"Free access to museums for under 30s", one reads
in portuguese newspapers. The measure was approved in parliament yesterday.
"Can anyone explain to me the logic of under
30s?", asks a Brazilian colleague.
"Is it to stimulate young families, like couples with
small children?", replies another colleague. "Is it because it was
found that unemployment is higher among the under 30s?"
Is it worth looking for the logic? Was there a logic? Was
the measure based on any management report? Was it based on some audience
survey? Were the professionals of the sector consulted? Are there concrete
objectives that can be evaluated in one or two years’ time?
Saturday, 31 December 2016
End-of-year readings
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| Contemplating the lake and mountains of Ioannina, Greece. |
Four texts I read in these last weeks and have stayed with me:
Patti Smith, How does it feel
Achille Mbembe, The age of humanism is ending
Adam Curtis on Why self expression is tearing society apart
Sarah Swong and Jennifer Gersten, Notes towards a movement: classical music in Trump's America
Wishing for a humane 2017.
Thursday, 8 December 2016
Unwilling actors in centre stage
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| The New Americans Museum. Panel vandalised. (image taken from the museum's Facebook page) |
Not surprisingly, after the elections, the Tenement Museum in New York, a
museum that tells America’s urban immigrant story has seen an “unprecedented
number” of negative comments by visitors about immigrants. It’s not an
isolated incident. Other museums, such as the Idaho Black History Museum or The New Americans Museum, recently suffered racially charged vandalism on their
premises.
Beware politicians who
bring out the worst in us, one might think. But one might also add, beware
museums which fail to see the politics in what they do. This was what I thought
when reading the first paragraph in Zach Aaron’s (a Tenement Museum board
member) response to the negative comments from visitors:
Sunday, 13 November 2016
Diplomatic silences
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| Nicola Sturgeon, Scottish First Minister |
As the the Web Summit was coming to
a close in Lisbon, a day after the results of the American elections became
known, the Municipality of Lisbon placed some outdoors that read: “In the free
world you can still find a city to live, invest and build your future, making
brigdes [sic], not walls. We call it Lisbon”. The outdoors were classified as “anti-Trump”
by the opposition, which preferred to think that this was “an abusive
interpretation and that [the mayor’s] intention was not to disrespect the
democratic choice of the American people, it was not a demonstration of
ideological arrogance, it was not an opportunistic precipitation as a result of
becoming dazzled with the international attention." In short, the opposition
asked for explanations (read the article).
Sunday, 30 October 2016
MAAT, a generator of expectations
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| Image taken from the website of MAAT. |
I am still amazed at the
way the recently inaugurated MAAT - Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology,
designed by Amanda Levete, is integrated into the landscape. When I approach
that area or when I cross the bridge from Lisbon, I always expect to see a huge
building overlapping or hiding the Central Tejo power plant. But no... The
Central Tejo still emerges majestically and the new building stands at its side
as a smooth and fluid note.
My first contact with
the new museum was back in June. In fact, it was the reopening of the
"old" museum (Museum of Electricity in Central Tejo), after its renovation,
and the MAAT brand was launched. Afterwards, I followed the campaign for the
inauguration of the new building and I read some interviews of the museum director,
Pedro Gadanho, thus forming an initial opinion / expectation. The various
criticisms that arose with the opening of the building, as well as some discussions
with colleagues, brought me more "food for thought", just like my
first visit to the new building.
Saturday, 22 October 2016
Unlimited
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| "Uma menina perdida no seu século à procura do pai", CRINABEL Theatre (Photo: Paulo Pimenta, courtesy of National Theatre D. Maria II) |
Two years ago, I was questioning here the
purpose of festivals that present the art of specific groups of people (gay,
black, disabled, etc). It was September 2014 and the second edition of
Unlimited festival was taking place at Southbank in London. “I keep
questioning myself”, I was writing at the time, “who attends these festivals,
exhibitions, activities and what happens after? Do they attract the already ‘converted’
or they appeal to a wider audience? Do gay or disabled or black artists become
more acknowledged by the sector and the public? Are they seen as the professionals
they are? Are we moving towards an inclusive representation, where they are
seen first and above all as artists, or rather curators and audiences still go
to see something ‘special’, confined in a specific space and time, its ‘own’
space and time? Do these festivals help us move towards caring more and more
about the art and less and less about ‘the rest’?”
Monday, 3 October 2016
Justin Bieber and the fight against islamic extremism
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A recent NPR article, entitled Italy's 'CulturalAllowance' For Teens Aims To Educate, Counter Extremism is a clear demonstration of the confusion existing, at various levels and in
various contexts, in relation to access to culture and to culture as a panacea
for many ills of this world.
The title is not an exaggeration of the newspaper. It was
the Italian Prime-Minister himself who said, when announcing this culture
allowance (€500 for every 18-year-old to spend on cultural products), shortly
after the Paris terrorist attacks in November 2015: "They destroy statues,
we protect them. They burn books, we are the country of libraries. They
envision terror, we respond with culture."
Sunday, 25 September 2016
Naming the impact: it may be Telmo or Rafael or Gustavo…
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| Telmo Martins, member of the Orquestra Geração (Photo: Maria Vlachou) |
A few
years ago, I saw the documentary Waste Land. It is about the work the Brazilian visual artist Vic Moniz created together with
garbage pickers at the world’s largest garbage dump, Jardim Gramacho, in the outskirts
of Rio de Janeiro. Moniz said that he wished to change the lives of a group of
people with the same materials they deal with every day. So, together they used
garbage to create large-size portraits of the garbage pickers, which were later
sold in auction and the money was distributed among the garbage pickers. The
works were presented in exhibitions in a number of contemporary art museums.
Tuesday, 23 August 2016
Choices
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| Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro, 2016 (image taken from You Tube) |
Having followed the
heated discussion regarding the appearance of Muslim women athletes in the
Olympics with full-body suits, as well as the ban of the burkini on some French
beaches, I find that some facts are – deliberately or not – left out of the equation.
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